Home / Reginald Pelham Bolton, 1922 / Passage

Indian Paths in the Great Metropolis

Reginald Pelham Bolton, 1922 182 words 📕 Download Full PDF

In addition to their position of advantage in regard to this line of production at the great wampum-making stations of the Canarsee, that chieftaincy controlled its export by reason of its situation on the main line of travel, and by its close relationship with the Manhattan chief- taincy. It looks very much as though this powerful group at the one end of the island of Manhattan and the aggressive Weckquaesgeek at the upper end had so entrenched themselves as to control on the one hand the flow of the money, and on the other hand the goods of the north and east that were purchasable with it.

The narrow space and the rugged character of the lower part of the Island of Manhattan lent itself but poorly to the support of any considerable population, except in its trading facilities. There could have been but little wild life in its restricted area of woodlands, and no such broad and level acreage suited to cultivation as in the flat lands of Long Island.