
A
hundred years before the white men set up their trading-posts on the
Arkansas and Platte, a band of mountain hunters made a descent on what
they took to be a small company of plainsmen, but who proved to be the
enemy in force, and who, in turn, drove the Utes--for the aggressors
were of that tribe--into the hills. Most of them took refuge on a
castellated rock on the south side of Boulder Canon, where they held
their own for several days, rolling down huge rocks whenever an
attempt was made to storm the height; wherefore, seeing that the
mountain was too secure a stronghold to be taken in that way, the
besiegers camped about it, and, by cutting off the access of the
beleaguered party to game and to water, starved every one of them to
death.
This, too, is
the story of Starved Rock, on
Illinois
River, near Ottawa,
Illinois.
It is a sandstone bluff, one hundred and fifty feet high, with a slope
on one side only. Its summit is an acre in extent, and at the order of
La Salle his
Indian lieutenant, Tonti, fortified the
place and mounted a small cannon on it.
He died there afterward. After the killing
of Pontiac at
Cahokia,
some of his people--the Ottawas--charged the crime against their
enemies, the
Illinois.
The latter, being few in number, entrenched themselves on Starved
Rock,
where they kept their enemies at bay, but were unable
to break their line to reach supp vessels into the river at the end of
thongs, but the Ottawas came under the bluff in canoes and cut the
cords. Unwilling to surrender, the
Illinois
remained there until all had died of starvation. Bones and relics are
found occasionally at the top.
There is
yet another place of which a similar narrative is extant-- namely,
Crow Butte,
Nebraska,
which is two hundred feet high and vertical on all sides save one, but
on that a horseman may ascend in safety.
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