Thursday, April 4, 2019

Down the Ohio River

Once travelers moving to the Old Northwest reached the Ohio River, their journey was only half finished.  There they engaged passage on some form of river craft (or built one themselves) to carry their possessions and them to the "promised land."  Those styles of river craft varied from canoes, rafts, skiffs, dugouts, galleys, keelboats, flatboats, barges - eventually even steamboats and schooners.  It was quite a parade!

The flatboat was probably the most popular for reasons explained later.  At that time the river bed was as nature had made it, and was continually remaking it.  Yearly floods washed out new channels and formed new reefs and sandbars.  Logs and brush carried from the heavily forested banks,  built new obstructions.  A constant lookout person was a necessity and the pilot had to be skilled and lucky to complete the trip without mishap.  In good days the trip from Pittsburgh to Cincinnati took six days, in bad days it took a month.

The biggest danger was not the river, but the Indian.  Once the flatboat passed white settlement territory, it was fair game.  Even though the Indians rarely left the water's edge, they liked to use captured or renegade whites to run alongside the bank calling out to be saved.  Once the flatboat was lured to shore, the Indians would set fire to the boats. Neither the whites, not the Indians had much use for those that lured pioneers.  The Indians wouldn't allow them into their tribes or villages, and the travelers sure won't allow them to join in their journey, so they were left to wander alone in the wilderness.

Once the flatboat reached their destination, the boat sometimes became a floating store or schoolhouse.  Usually, however, it was broken up and the materials used to build houses.  There were no sawmills, so lumber was precious and many pioneer cabins in the Ohio Valley were built out of the timber of the flatboats.  Later on the flatboats were used for trading down the Mississippi River to New Orleans, but in the early days, just as with the later prairie schooners, they provided the beginning of their homes in the new West.

Next time...Choosing a Homestead
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Today in Pioneer History: "On April 4,  1975, at a time when most of us were using typewriters, childhood friends, Bill Gates and Paul Allen founded Microsoft, a company that made computer software by the name of Windows. "

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