The
Norfolk County Aborigines
The following article is
extracted from St. Williams: The History, an out-of-print publication
by R. Robert Mutrie (1988). The book will be republished by the author in
PDF format on CD-ROM during 2011.
One of St. Williams’ favourite
sons was historian Clayton W. McCall (1891-1973), a grandson of the nineteenth
century
merchant Daniel McCall. He spent a lifetime researching and writing
about the early days in Norfolk County. Many of
his articles appeared in the Simcoe
Reformer carrying his by line for half a century from 1920 to 1970. One area
of particular
interest was the district’s native heritage. McCall was an avid
collector of native artifacts. The following is excerpted from
an unpublished
history written by McCall in 1960, “The Indian History of St. Williams and its
vicinity.”
The Mound Builders
The
first aborigines to occupy southwestern Ontario were probably the
Mound-Building Indians who had reached their peak chiefly in Ohio, and had
trickled from there into the peninsula [Ontario] about the time of Christ. They
were a people of high culture. Though no mounds attributed to them have so far
been discovered in Norfolk County, nevertheless many of their artifacts have
been discovered there. These people disappeared just as mysteriously as they
originated.
The Algonquins
Then
came—probably from the north—the Woodland Algonquin, the particular tribe in
the region being unknown. Their habits were nomadic, and they did not till the
soil. Whether by force of arms or voluntarily, they completely withdrew from
the area upon the coming of the Iroquois.
The Attiwandaron
The
Attiwandaron (“people with speech a little different” as they were termed by
their kin, the Hurons) formed the van of the Iroquoian migration that first
entered Canada via the Detroit River circa 1200 A.D. (an apparently accurate
estimate of the period by Parker the historian). They were the mother nation of
the Iroquois and were so well satisfied with southwestern Ontario that they
chose it as their permanent home. The Petuns and Hurons to the northward (from
and including the Bruce Peninsula to Lake Simcoe), the Five Nations of the
Iroquois in what is now New York State and the Iroquoian tribes temporarily
living along the St. Lawrence in [French explorer Jacques] Cartier’s time were
all offshoots.
The
Attiwandaron occupied that part of the southwestern Ontario which lies south of
an imaginary line drawn from Goderich on Lake Huron to Oakville on Lake
Ontario.
The most
important aboriginal site near St. Williams is that of the Attiwandaron village
that covered probably the whole of the present Newkirk Cemetery [St. Williams]
and the field east and southeast of the same. Its location was ideal—close to
Long Point Bay, but far enough inland to be protected from enemies prowling
about in canoes. Not only was it mostly on sandy soil, but it was well
watered—the never failing spring creek at the east. Mud Creek at the south and
the latter’s northern bend at the west. To the northward was endless fairly level
ground on which corn, beans, squashes, and tobacco could be planted. The
surface of the field is still marked with blackened spots from the fires in the
long-houses. A quantity of potsherds and many artifacts have been ploughed up
on and around the long-house sites.

But few inhabitants of St.
Williams would know that a beaver pond was right in the limits of the village.
It was in Mud Creek in the area covered with scrub trees north of Queen Street
East. The dam was immediately south-east of the Johnson Cemetery. This is
certain for Pearl Johnson told me that he had found very old small tree trunks
below the surface of the ground there with evidence of beaver tooth marks. Many
arrowheads (mostly broken) used by Attiwandaron beaver hunters have been picked
up north of Queen Street East from the lot of Wm. Swick eastward. The earliest
houses built on the knoll were naturally on the highest part of it, so the camp
of the hunters—selected for the same reason—would now be covered up.
Fewer inhabitants yet would be
able to point out a spot near the village where chert artifacts were actually
manufactured. This aboriginal manufacturing plant was on the east end of the
sand ridge (reforested about 1920) along Mud Creek at the southern boundary of
the old Cov. Johnson farm. Many broken arrowheads, partially finish ones
(rejects) and innumerable chert chips are still there. My collection contains
two completed chert drills, as well as one completed arrowhead—never having
been used still retains a needle-sharp point.
Miss. Matilda Procunier
informed me that she could remember a slough in a field on the western border
of the Procunier (Dedrick) farm that was a seasonal attraction to flocks of
birds and the regular haunt of small animals. The slough, of course, was drained
long ago. The camp used by the hunters at the slough was on a sand-bank on the
south edge of the road running westward from St. Williams in the triangular
field where the railway tracks bisect. I have found potsherds and a broken Attiwandaran A sketch of the Attiwandaran lands pottery pipe-bowl there.
In the Ontario Archaeological
Report for 1912 (long out of print) is an article by myself entitled
“Aboriginal Net Fishing in Long Point Bay. These (Indian fishing sinkers) are
nearly all from the beach at the mouth of Cope’s Gully and at Woodward’s
Landing, the two principal fishing grounds in Long Point Bay. Owing to every
available square foot of treless land at the former ground being required for
hauling purposes and the drying racks for both the nets and the fish, the camp
was, of necessity, at the top of the side-hill where the Dease Inn now stands.
This is proved by my having found a few sinkers (amongst pot-sherds and other
artifacts on the site. The camp at Woodward’s Landing was on a spit of
land—long since washed away, but said to have been planted with an orchard in
pioneer times. Proof that the camp was on the spit is that pot-sherds have been
found by myself at the edge of the present day shore line.
The Iroquois
Following the destruction of
the Attiwandaron, the whole of their former territory became a hunting ground
of the Five Nations of the Iroquois—principally the Seneca—by right of
conquest. No villages were established by the conquerors. Nothing has been
found, to my knowledge, in St. Williams or the vicinity that could be
associated with the Five Nations of the Iroquois. This scarcity can be
accounted for by their not having been in the Stone Age at the time of their
conquest of the Attiwandaron (1650), nor of course in their subsequent hunting
expeditions.
The Mississauga
The first
mention of the Mississauga in the Norfolk area was in Sir William Johnson’s
diary, and is in connection with his expedition of 1761 (the first British one
of a military nature up the north shore of Lake Erie). The natives probably lived
on the nearest dry land to the mouth of the nearby Indian Creek (Turkey Point).
No other members of the tribe are known to have dwelt nearer St. Williams than
Indian Creek or the village on Lot 5, 5th Concession of Charlotteville, where
the Smith family settled in 1793 and where “Uncle” Billy Smith had lived with
the Mississauga from 1786.
Probably
all the Mississauga relics extant in Norfolk could be loaded onto a
wheelbarrow. By the time it reached the region the tribe was no longer in the
Stone Age. No pottery was made by it. Few white pioneers in all of Canada ever
collected or studied Indian artifacts, so it can be presumed that Mississauga
baskets and beaded-leather work that came into the possession of Norfolk
settlers were all regarded as being simply utilitarian and were discarded when
worn out with usage.
The
land included in the Six Nations Reserve was purchased from the Mississauga.
Not only was the reserve bought from that tribe, but also the Norfolk County
townships of Charlotteville, Houghton, Walsingham, and Woodhouse—just prior to
the survey of the county for the settlement of the United Empire Loyalists.
The Clayton W. McCall Collection
During his
lifetime, Clayton McCall accumulated an impressive collection of Norfolk County
memorabilia in his Vancouver home. Following his death, the collection was
disbursed. McCall took the following pictures of the native artifacts in his
possession.