Scott County ArArchives History - Books .....The First Inhabitants, Chapter 1 1922 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/ar/arfiles.html ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Joy Fisher http://www.genrecords.net/emailregistry/vols/00001.html#0000031 August 29, 2009, 8:53 pm Book Title: See Comments Below CHAPTER I. The First Inhabitants When the New World first became known to Europeans at the end of the fifteenth century, the entire country was inhabited by a barbarous people which later came to be called Indians. They lived in tribes or bands, and at intervals moved from place to place in search of game or for other reasons. They lived by hunting and fishing mainly, but practiced a rude agriculture. In some parts of the New World, notably in Mexico and Peru, they had reached a comparatively high state of civilization. These early inhabitants had spread over the whole of the territory now comprised in what is Arkansas and Scott County, where they had settled along the creeks and rivers. The numerous mounds along the small streams of the county, especially in Lewis Township, indicate the early occupancy of this region by very populous tribes. On the farms now owned by William Chitwood and J. P. McCutchen no less than two scores of these prominent mounds are situated. They are circular in shape, being on an average about twenty yards in diameter, and generally rise to a height of eight or ten feet. They lie along the course of the Little Petit Jean creek. On the McCutchen farm is a large burial ground. It occupies the south bank of the Little Petit Jean directly across from the mound area, and was evidently used by all the numerous peoples along this stream for many miles. It is situated on the highest point of land on that side of the stream. The soil of this burial ground is of a black, murky, greasy character, and after a rain on a hot day it gives off an offensive odor. It is filled with arrow heads, broken pottery, remains of mussel shells used in making their earthenware, skeletal fragments and other evidences of the use by the Indians of this vicinity, of this plot as a place to bury their dead. Game was abundant in this part of the country during its occupancy by the Indians. Buffalo and elk abounded, as did deer and turkey. Besides, the forests teemed with wolves, bears and panthers and the lesser animals and birds. But it was principally the buffalo, of the animals, that helped to determine the tribal dwelling place. This animal had well defined trails over which it, yearly migrated, and these usually led along the river courses and the higher land or the crests of ridges, where the traveling would be free of the swamps and mire in all seasons. A trail of this sort was the old Indian trail that ran from the northeastern part of the State to the southwestern corner near where Texarkana now stands. Its course was almost parallel with that of the present line of the Iron Mountain Railway across the State. It led along the edge of the high ground that commences there and rises to the mountainous portions of the northwest. By these game trails the Indians settled, and they came to be his roads, as later they were to become the highways and railways of the white men who succeeded the savages in dominion over these realms. In Scott County, these trails found the mountain passes through which our roads of the present day lead. There were the passes of Cedar Creek and Mill Creek and Forem through the mountains of the south, while Petit Jean Pass and Lookout Gap gave the game and its Indian pursuers passage to the north. And today the white man uses these selfsame passes in negotiating the mountain barriers on these two sides of the county. When De Soto pased through the county in 1541-42, he found the region fairly thickly settled by the Indians. They lived in cities—probably on the mounds before described—and tilled the soil. The abundance of high ground in the county made it suitable for Indian occupancy and the grazing of the buffalo. And De Soto found these people well supplied with food and living comfortably. Additional Comments: HISTORY of Scott County Arkansas By Henry Grady McCutchen Printed in Arkansas U. S. A. Copyright, 1922, by H. G. McCutchen File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/ar/scott/history/1922/seecomme/firstinh11nms.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.net/arfiles/ File size: 4.6 Kb