Page:Historic highways of America (Volume 9).djvu/60

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54
WATERWAYS OF WESTWARD EXPANSION

they somehow conceived the notion that they were as much entitled as any one to the splendid lands from which they had driven the Indians. Heretofore the states and the Government had done everything in reason to encourage the western movement and protect it. No one perhaps realized that the Ohio River was to be considered, in any sense, a boundary line. Yet the United States recognized the Indian right and took such means as were possible to accomplish an utterly impossible thing. The lands on the northern side of the Ohio River were to be preserved to the Indians until purchased from them. It was even decreed that retaliatory raids of the whites should not cross the Ohio. As early as 1779 "trespassers" of a law as inherently impossible as the Proclamation of 1763, made settlements on the Indian Side of the Ohio "from the river Muskingum to Fort McIntosh, and thirty miles up some of the branches of the Ohio river."[1] Colonel Brodhead at Fort Pitt immediately despatched Captain Clark to drive off the intruders.

  1. The St. Clair Papers, vol. ii, p. 1.