INDEX. 



369 



Bushy Run, ii. 60; severe battle 

 there with tlie Inchans, 61 et seq. ; 

 the enemy re))ulsed, 65 ; and 

 totally routed, 68 ; the losses on 

 both sides, ib. See Appendix D. 



Cadillac, La Motte, founds Detr-oit, 

 i. 213. 



Cahokia on the Illinois, a French 

 settlement; i. 62, 156, ii. 258 ; de- 

 scribed, 309 ; Pontiac killed the.e, 

 310, 811. 



Calhoun, a trader, betrayed by the 

 Indians, but escapes, ii. 6, 7. 



Campbell, Lieutenant George,killed 

 with all his command at Niagara, 

 ii. 7'J note. 



Campbell, Captain, commands at 

 Detroit, i. 180 ; discovers an In- 

 dian plot, 180, 181 ; second in 

 command, 230 ; treacherously de- 

 tained in captivity by Pontiac, 

 240, 241 ; exposed by Indians to 

 the fire of English guns, 261 ; 

 cruelly murdered by the Indians, 

 2y7, 2J8. 



Canada, a child of the church, i. 

 50; settled under reUgious im- 

 pulses, 51 ; characteristics of the 

 population, 48, 214 ; the fur-trade, 

 49 ; tiie true interest of the colony 

 neglected, ib. ; Jesuit missionaries 

 in, 52; want of energy in the 

 common people, 56, 68; advan- 

 tages for intercourse with the 

 Indian tribes, 66 ; the colony suf- 

 fers from the hostility of the 

 Iroquois, 68, 69 ; Canada an ob- 

 ject of the bitterest hatred to the 

 English colonies, and why, 95; 

 surrendered to the English arms, 

 140 ; Canadians excite the Indians 

 to attack the English, 177, 178, 

 326. 

 Canadians compared with the peo- 

 ple of New England, i. 47-50 ; 

 their talse representations of the 

 English colonists, 186; their 

 character, 214 ; unfriendly to the 

 English after the conquest, 177, 

 178, 326. 

 Cannibahsm of the Indians, i. 357. 

 Captives taken in war by the In- 



dians, their treatment, i. 10, 20, 

 68, 289 note, ii. 235-289, 262 note;- 

 sometimes they prefer to remain 

 with the Indians, 287, 288. 

 Carhsle, Pa., a frontier town in 

 1760, ii. 4 ; panic among the in- 

 habitants, 50; deplorable scenes 

 there, 53 ; many leave the place 

 for Lancaster and Philadeljihia, 

 52; it becomes the outer settle- 

 ment, 85 7ioie. 

 Carver, Capt. Jonathan, th.e travel- 

 ler, i. 220 ; his account of the 

 conspiracy of Pontiac, 220 note, 

 221 ; other statements made by 

 him, 320, 821 note ; his descrip- 

 tion of Minavavana, the Ojibwa 

 chief, 361 note; his account of 

 the death of Pontiac, ii. 311 note. 

 Cayucjas, one of the Five Nations, 



i. 9. See Iroquois. 

 Champlain, Samuel de, attacks the 

 Iroquois, i. 66; the baleful con- 

 sequences, 67. 

 Clierokees attacked by the Iroquois, 

 i 88; remain quiet during the 

 Pontiac war, ii. 114. 

 Chippewa Indians. See Ojibwa 



nation. 

 Chouteau, Pierre, one of the first 

 settlers of St. Louis, ii. 258 ; sur- 

 prising changes witnessed by 

 him, ib. ; the author visits him, ib. 

 note; remembers seeing Pontiac, 

 258 note, 308. 

 Christie, Ensign, defends the fort at 

 Presqu' Isle, i. 280-284 ; surren- 

 ders, 285 ; escapes and arrives at 

 Detroit, ib ; a further account of 

 the matter, ii. 16 note. 

 Church, Roman Catholic, its zeal 

 for the conversion of the Indians, 

 i. 51. 

 Clapham, Colonel, murdered by the 



Indians, ii. 5, 6 note. 

 Colden, Governor of New York, 

 refuses to have the Moravian 

 Indian converts brought within 

 his province, ii. 140. 

 Colonies of France and England, 



their distinctive traits, i. 46, 65. 

 Compton, Henry, bishop of London, 

 advises William Penn to buy 

 land of the Indians, i. 81. 

 Conestoga. a settlement of friendly 

 Indians, ii. 119; their manner of 

 Ufe, ib. ; suspected of hostile prac- 



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