MORGAN.] PALISADED IROQUOIS VILLAGE. 25 
interlocked the one with the other, with an interval of not more than half a 
foot between them, with galleries in the form of parapets, defended with 
double pieces of timber, proof against our arquebuses, and on one side they 
had a pond with a never-failing supply of water, from which proceeded a 
number of gutters which they had laid along the intermediate space, throw- 
ing the water without, and rendering it effectual inside for the purpose of 
extinguishing the fire. Such was their mode of fortification and defence, 
which was much stronger than the villages of the Attigouatuans (Hurons) 
and others.”? 
Although Champlain attacked this place with fire-arms, then first heard 
by the Onondagas, and by means of a rude tower of his invention, and 
with a considerable force of French and Indians, he was unable to capture 
it, and retired. The use of water, with gutters to flood the ground upon 
an outer palisade when attacked with fire, as imperfectly shown in the en- 
graving, was certainly ingenious. General Clarke has investigated the 
defensive works of the Iroquois, and it is to be hoped that he will soon give 
the results to the public. 
Knowing, as we now do, that the space inclosed within the palisades 
was about six acres of land, the houses are not only seen to be log houses, 
but arranged or constructed side by side in blocks, and the whole thrown 
together in the form of a square, with an open space in the center. ‘The 
houses seem to be in threes and fours, and even sixes, side by side, and 
from sixty to one hundred feet in length; but if this conclusion is fairly 
warranted by the engraving, it might well be that each house was sepa- 
rated from its neighbor by a narrow open space or lane. It is the only 
representation I have ever seen of a palisaded village of the Iroquois of 
the period of their discovery. It covered about fifty-four acres of land. 
The Mandans and Minnetarees of the Upper Missouri constructed a 
timber-framed house, superior in design and in mechanical execution to 
to those of the Indians north of New Mexico. In 1862 I saw the remains 
of the old Mandan village shortly after its abandonment by the Arickarees, 
its last occupants. The houses, nearly all of which were of the same model, 
were falling into decay—for the village was then deserted of inhabitants— 
1Doc. Hist. New York, iii, 14. 
