Wisconsin Antiquities
The mounds and antiquities of this State
are similar to those in other Western States. I. A. Lapham,
Esq., who has made this subject his study for several years, in
speaking of them in his work on the Geography and Topography of
Wisconsin, says:
Wisconsin does not fall behind the other
portions of the western country in the monuments it affords of
the existence of an ancient people who once inhabited North
America, but of whom nothing is known except what can be
gathered from some of the results of their labors. The works at
Aztalan, in Jefferson County, are most known and visited, but
there are many other localities which are said to equal them in
interest and importance. The substance called brick at this
place is evidently burned clay, showing marks of having been
mixed with straw, but they were not molded into regular forms.
There is a class of ancient earth-works in Wisconsin, not before
found in any other country, being made to represent quadrupeds,
birds, reptiles, and even the human form. These representations
are rather rude, and it is often difficult to decide for what
species of animal they are intended; but the effects of time may
have modified their appearance very much since they were
originally formed. Some have a resemblance to the buffalo, the
eagle, or crane, or to the turtle or lizard. One representing
the human form, near the Blue Mounds, is, according to K. O.
Taylor, Esq., one hundred and twenty feet in length: it lies in
an east and west direction, the head towards the west, with the
arms and legs extended. The body or trunk is thirty feet in
breadth, the head twenty-five, and its elevation above the
general surface of the prairie is about six feet. Its
conformation is so distinct that there can be no possibility of
mistake in assigning it to the human figure.1
A mound at Prairieville, representing a turtle, is about five
feet high; the body is fifty-six feet in length; it represents
the animal with its legs extended, and its feet turned
backwards. It is to be regretted that this interesting mound is
now nearly destroyed. The ancient works are found in all parts
of the Territory, but are most abundant at Aztalan, on Rock
River, near the Blue Mounds, along the Wisconsin, the Neenah and
the Pishtaka Rivers, and near Lake Winnebago.
The mounds are generally scattered about
without any apparent order or arrangement, but are occasionally
arranged in irregular rows, the animals appearing as if drawn up
in a line of march. An instance of this kind is seen near the
road seven miles east from the Blue Mounds, in Iowa County. At
one place near the Four Lakes, it is said that one hundred
tumuli, of various shapes and dimensions, may be counted, those
representing animals being among others that are round or
oblong.
Fragments of ancient pottery of a very
rude kind are often found in various localities. They were
formed by hand, or molded, as their appearance shows evidently
that these vessels were not turned on a 'potter's wheel.' Parts
of the rim of vessels usually ornamented with small notches or
figures are most abundant.
A mound is said to have been discovered
near Cassville, on the Mississippi, which is supposed to
represent an animal having a trunk like the elephant, or the now
extinct Mastodon. Should this prove true, it will show that the
people who made these animal earthworks, were contemporaries
with that huge monster whose bones are still occasionally found;
or that they had then but recently emigrated from Asia, and had
not lost their knowledge of the elephant."
Footnote:
1. The reader is referred
to the "Notice of Indian Mounds, & in Wisconsin," in Silliman's
Journal, vol. 34, p. 88, by R. O. Taylor; and to the
"Description of Ancient Remains in Wisconsin' by S. Taylor, vol.
44, p. 21, of the same work, for more detailed descriptions and
drawings of these interesting animal mounds.
Source: Wisconsin Gazetteer, By
John Warren Hunt. Madison: Beriah Brown, Printer, 1853
Back to
Wisconsin
|