Early Western Travels, 1748-1846: A Series of Annotated Reprints of Some of the Best and Rarest Contemporary Volumes of Travel, Descriptive of the Aborigines and Social and Economic Conditions in the Middle and Far West, During the Period of Early American Settlement, Band 3Reuben Gold Thwaites A. H. Clark Company, 1904 |
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Seite 70
... live and the majority of them are clothed in the manner of the Savages . They wear no breeches but pass between their thighs a piece of cloth of about one third of an ell [ in length ] which is kept in place before and behind above the ...
... live and the majority of them are clothed in the manner of the Savages . They wear no breeches but pass between their thighs a piece of cloth of about one third of an ell [ in length ] which is kept in place before and behind above the ...
Seite 85
... lives near there and her house is better for travelers . The 18th passed the Ridges , 15 Miles , without seeing any houses as far as White Creek . Old Stumps11 lives 5 miles from White Creek . The 19th started from Stump's and arrived ...
... lives near there and her house is better for travelers . The 18th passed the Ridges , 15 Miles , without seeing any houses as far as White Creek . Old Stumps11 lives 5 miles from White Creek . The 19th started from Stump's and arrived ...
Seite 94
... lives in the Trade with the Savages and asked the Terms on which I could obtain a Guide to go up the Missouri river . One of them named told me he would willingly engage for a year for the sum of 500 dollars in furs that is to say 1000 ...
... lives in the Trade with the Savages and asked the Terms on which I could obtain a Guide to go up the Missouri river . One of them named told me he would willingly engage for a year for the sum of 500 dollars in furs that is to say 1000 ...
Seite 122
... Charleston are well stocked with live sea - fish , which are brought from the northern part of the United States in vessels so constructed as to keep them in a continual supply of water . The 122 [ Vol . 3 Early Western Travels.
... Charleston are well stocked with live sea - fish , which are brought from the northern part of the United States in vessels so constructed as to keep them in a continual supply of water . The 122 [ Vol . 3 Early Western Travels.
Seite 150
... live in the greatest comfort ; yet he resides in a miserable log - house about twenty feet long , subject to the inclem- ency of the weather . Four large beds , two of which are very low , are placed underneath the others in the day ...
... live in the greatest comfort ; yet he resides in a miserable log - house about twenty feet long , subject to the inclem- ency of the weather . Four large beds , two of which are very low , are placed underneath the others in the day ...
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acres Alleghany Mountains American André Michaux appearance arrived banks Barrens boats borders built Carolina chalky CHAP Charleston cotton Creek crossed cultivated Cumberland Cumberland River distance dollars eight embouchure emigrants exported fame place fathoms broad feet ferry fertile fifteen five forests formed Fort Blount Fort Massac forty four French ginseng grow herborised hills Holston horses houses hundred and fifty hundred miles Illinois Indian corn Indian wheat inhabitants Jonesborough journey Kentucky kind Knoxville land Lexinton Liberty Town Limestone Lincolnton log-houses Louisville Marietta meadows Michaux Mississippi Monongahela Morganton Nasheville navigation nearly North North Carolina notwithstanding obliged observed Ohio Orleans passed Pennsylvania Philadelphia piastres Pittſburg Pittsburgh plantations plants population produce quercus ridges river road rocks salt Scioto settled settlements situated slept soil species spring Sunday Tennessea thirty thousand tion town trade trees tucky twelve twenty Ulmus viscosa United Virginia West western country Wheeling wood