Footnotes to Long Island History
The Indians of Long Island
by
Thomas R. Bayles
As there is no authentic data on the life of the Indians in Brookhaven
town, I am going to quote from Munsell’s History of Suffolk County,
1882, written by my father, Richard M. Bayles. This is interesting
reading and probably as a accurate a picture as can be found of the
Indians before the coming of the white man.
“On the
shores of the different villages we find the Indians congregating in
villages. These locations are the most favorable to their convenience
and habits of life. From the nearby waters the fish, clams and oysters
which constitute an important part of their bill of fare may be
obtained, as well as shells from which they make wampum. The numerous
springs bursting from the pebbled shores provide them with an abundant
supply of water.
“Approaching
one of these rude settlements unobserved we may take refuge for the
purpose behind one of these old oaks, which unmolested by the
destructive hand of what we call improvement, has braved the storms of
heaven and the decay of time for more than a century; or if we choose,
hide ourselves within the hollow trunk of its neighboring ancestor, and
from this covert watch the movement of the savages before us. They know
nothing of the existence of any race of beings in the shape of man
besides themselves. Their lives, habits, religion and language are
unmixed, and shall we say uncorrupted, by contact with the white man.
“From the
elevated position which we have taken we look down upon a quiet Indian
village in the immediate foreground, located upon a low bluff, rising
from the shore of a bay, which with its partially encircling belt of
white sand and the verdure clothed hills arising from it in beautiful
undulations, presents a landscape scene of surpassing loveliness. Beyond
the glimmer of the nearer waters, the view takes in the wider expense
which loses itself in the hazy veil that obscures the distant horizon.
On the placid water before us half a dozen canoes are paddling lazily
about, some containing a single Indian each, others with several,
neighborly errand to another tribe, or different villages of the same
tribe, or it may be from some hunting or fishing expedition.
“There comes
one canoe containing three half-grown boys and a quantity of long coarse
grass or rushes which they have gathered from the bog just across the
cove.
They are bringing them to
be made in mats by that group of women seated on the slope just in front
of us. That rude manufacture in which they are engaged is to them one of
the fine arts. But a much finer art is being practiced by that little
company which you see to the right of them, hovering about the heap of
shells. They are working out from the shells they have gathered, by a
slow and tedious process, the details of which we are not near enough to
see, those curious little beads which when strung are called wampum. The
facilities of the Island Indians for obtaining desirable materials are
superior to those of many living on the mainland; hence, this is an
article of export, as far as their relations with those tribes allow
commercial transactions. T h e n there are others about that shell heap,
kept busy opening clams which they have taken from the flats not far
away, and which when opened they expose in the sun until they are
thoroughly dried. These dried clams are an important commodity with
them, being in demand for home consumption, and exportation as well. The
great quantities of them found benearth the waters here afford and
exhaustless supply to the moderate wants and industry of the Indians.
“Back on the
rolling elevation to the right of us and in the rear of the little
cluster of wigwams lay their corn field. In it six or eight women are at
work pulling weeds or turning the soil with some rude implements. Just
here on our left two men are digging clay from the side of the very hill
upon which we stand. This clay they are forming roughly into some kind
of primitive dishes, which they will presently harden by baking in a hot
fire when all is ready.”