Friday, October 11, 2024

Vermilion Creek: Revolutionary War and Spending Time With the Native Culture

Sons of the American Revolution -
West Michigan Chapter
is celebrating America's 250th~








This post is dedicated to the United States of America,  land that I love,  whose 250th birthday celebrations have just begun...

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It's a bit of a drive to travel from where I live to Laingsburg,  Michigan.   I mean,  not extremely far - only about an hour and a half - but it's far enough with high gas prices.  And it's in the middle of nowhere - true rural Michigan.   It is well worth the drive because reenactor host,  Scott Mann,  is always upping the game for this Revolutionary War event,  taking it beyond the average reenactment,  and the good folks at Peacock Road Family Farm,  a haven for fall lovers,  allows this event on their land.  
So my son,  Robbie,  and I arrived around nine in the morning,  the autumn sun shining down,  cooler temps,  low humidity.   Perfect weather for this hobby. 
A great camp shot by B & K Photography

We arrived in time for Robbie to participate in the morning colors.

Morning colors is a military ceremony that involves raising the national flag in the morning.

It's a time-honored tradition that's part of the daily routine for military personnel and civilians.

At Revolutionary War reenactments,  you can expect to see soldiers wearing a variety of uniforms,  depending on the period and era of the war,  the unit,  and the soldier's role.

I very much enjoy this time-honored tradition.
And it is done here with great respect.

Throughout the day there were a variety of historic activities to witness.
Tom,  2nd from right,  was learning more on firing the cannon.
He had recently acquired one and has gained an interest.

My son,  Robbie.  1st Pennsylvania.

There were two battles that took place on Saturday,  with the first beginning at 11 in the morning.
There is a little cabin in the woods in the area where the battle was going to occur.
Peacock Road Family Farm is so much more than a cider mill destination,  for they have a cabin and an altar  (for weddings),  pumpkins,  a petting zoo,  and,  though I've not gone there at Christmas,  I read that they really do the Holidays festively.  

So once I was settled in on the cabin porch,  out of the way and unobtrusive,  I could take some photos,  capturing the Continentals as they marched down the rocky road.
I only have a point-and-shoot camera for easy concealing,  but I think it does very well for the most part - sometimes as good as those highfalutin professional cameras  (lol). 

I think battle scenarios are so very important.  Mock battles help both reenactor and audience to have a better understanding of the the hows and whys of warfare in numerous ways,  the biggest of which is to learn our history - to learn what the men in battles had to go through,  and what the women & children left at home had to go through as well.  It is not a promotion of war,  but more of an education.
As per usual with many reenactments,  this was not any one particular battle,  just more of a skirmish in the back woods when two opposing sides collide.

This is one of my favorite shots:
Looks like I captured nothing but flames coming from the muskets!
Even without being loaded with musket balls,  you still wouldn't want to be standing in front of one of these weapons - not with the flames shooting out.

Yes you see the muskets aimed at high elevation.
You can never be too cautious when it comes to guns.

The skirmish lasted about a half hour. 
This one was more for the reenactors than for the general public.

Chris Hanley.
When I was a teen back in the 1970s,  I knew nothing about reenactments.  As far as I knew,  those guys who portrayed the soldiers were paid museum interpreters.  I had absolutely no idea anything like this existed.  I believe it was in the early 1990s before I made it to my first bonafide reenactment.  And even then,  I wasn't quite sure what to make of it.  I only knew it was cool and I,  somehow,  wanted to be a part.
"Where Robbie fits,  Robbie sits!"
That's my son!

Something I very much enjoy at the Vermillion Creek event is that there is a Native American presence.  And they play a large role in the reenactment in a variety of ways.
Our Native ladies recalled utilizing the pumpkin patch a few years back,  so they were very willing to recreate the scenario again this year for me.

The ladies here are either from the Odawa  (Ottawa)  tribe or are portraying the tribe.
Pumpkins are native to the Americas.  European settlers were not aware of the fruit until they first sailed across the Atlantic,  and it was the Indians - the Natives here - that introduced the Europeans to the fruit  (yes,  pumpkins are a fruit!).  
On the other hand,  the Indigenousness peoples were unaware of apples until the adventurers brought them over from Europe.  As one of the American Indians said to me on this day:  "It was a good trade."
 
“The most popular pumpkins today are grown to be porch décor rather than pie filling,”  says history professor James E.  McWilliams of Texas State University and the author of Revolution in Eating. “They dominate the industry because of their durability,  uniform size  (about 15 pounds),  orange color,  wart-less texture,  and oval shape.”  Mass production of these poor-tasting pumpkins is a  $5 billion a year industry today.  McWilliams calls them  “a culinary trick without the treat”  and accuses them of being  “food in name only.”
Edible pumpkins have not been entirely forgotten.  Heirloom pumpkin seeds are available for those who want to grow the old-fashioned kind,  and farmer’s markets and upscale grocery stores sometimes carry older,  tasty varieties.
(from THIS site)
The pumpkin selected for their camp.
As pumpkins turned into holiday decorations instead of food,  Americans largely forgot how to eat them.  Save for the occasional pumpkin pie  (which these days mostly comes from store-bought processed pie filling in a can),  the fruit wasn’t seen much on dining tables other than as the aforementioned decoration.  But recent years have seen a modest pumpkin revival.  
Pumpkin pie originated in the early 17th century,  but the original pumpkin pie was not as neat and aesthetically pleasing as the modern pumpkin pie.  The first pumpkin pies were hollowed-out pumpkins filled with milk,  spices,  and honey,  and were roasted by the fire.  It wasn’t until the late 18th century that the modern pumpkin pie began to take its form.  In 1796,  Amelia Simmons published a cookbook titled American Cookery.  Simmons’  pumpkin puddings were baked in a crust thus creating an early recipe for the present-day pumpkin pie.
(from THIS site)

I enjoyed the opportunities to visit with friends.

As part of the day's activities,  a trading council / scenario took place between soldiers of England and the local Odawa tribe:
A blanket and trunk were loaded with trade items.
The council at Vermilion Creek was stemmed on the reaffirmation of alliance and trade with British and local Anishnabek  (plural for Anishnabe -  i.e.,  the Odawa,  Ojibwa,  Botawatomi,  and other Algonquian-speaking groups).  Their dialects are similar and generally grouped and called Anishnabemowehn.  
Tom  (Black Mouth,  Mukaday N'doon),  speaking for the local natives,  and Maynard,  who is representing and speaking on behalf of the English soldiers,  both men being versed in the language of the Odawa / Ojibwa,  as were others there,  and that gave this the realism in an emersion manner.
Maynard Lockwood,  an Englishman,  would take the lead for the English as 
Black Mouth,  Mukaday N'doon moves up to speak.
They both spoke to each other in the native tongue of the Odawa.  And as they spoke,  Maynard explained to the audience what they were saying and what they were doing.
It was fascinating to see this.  This was not Hollywood - - this was a historically accurate presentation.  As it would have been.
This council was based on the diplomatic and protocol which seems to be Iroquoian  (Hodenosaunee)  origins which became a developing pattern through the 18th century.  
The council was opened with the a council fire and presentation of wampum strings by Maynard:  "With the strings I wiped the sweat & dust from their bodies,  opened their eyes,  ears,  and minds,  and offered condolences for those that had passed since our last meeting."
This was fascinating to watch as it unfolded.

Then introductions of the principle speakers and subalterns. 

The presentation of the first wampum belt signifying  "The dish with one spoon"  i.e., 
we all eat from same dish...a metaphor that we all share territory in common.

The second belt signifying the four locations where food and trade goods can be found.  Maynard wrote:  "I added Lockwood Hall,  Ft.  Michilimackinac,  and Ft.  Niagara!"

The third belt is the covenant chain belt that signified the colonial governors and the Six Nations.  This belt I used to  "brighten the chain of friendship"  between the British and the Anishnabe.
A request by Maynard was that the Anishnabe continue to trade and ally with the British who will take care of them for there wants and needs.  Their French father has grown old and infirm,  has been conquered by the British,  and will not be able to care for his children,  the Anishnabe.  Therefore,  they are to think of the British King as their father.
Their father has sent many gifts for his children that was gladly distributed.
The Odawa people's relationship with the English has been complex,  with periods of cooperation as well as periods of conflict.  In 1763,  Odawa Chief Pontiac led an uprising against the British occupation of Indigenous lands.  The rebellion was unsuccessful,  but it led to the Royal Proclamation of 1763,  which recognized Indigenous land rights.  In the American Revolution,  the Odawa sided with the British.  Chief Egushawa led the Odawa in the American Revolution.
A pipe was presented to solidify the proceedings.
The Odawa people use sacred peace pipes,  or ceremonial pipes,  in ceremonies to honor spirits and ask for peace.  The pipes are traditionally made of wood and covered with rawhide or buckskin,  and are often decorated with fringe.
Although many people associate Native American pipes with the term  'peace pipe,'  this is a misnomer.  Early American settlers and soldiers took note of the pipe being smoked at treaty signings,  resulting in their misunderstanding of the pipe as something done only to symbolize peace.
Upon conclusion the wampum belts,  gifts,  were accepted with the cry of Yo haa. 
The Anishnabe stated that they will return with an answer whether to side with the British for an upcoming skirmish.
The council was concluded.
The information Maynard gave to me very much clarifies the council they presented.  "True councils can be extended time and impossible for a modern historical reenactment.  So a basic format of diplomacy and protocol was followed.
All in all,  I think it went very well.  Next year's council will be even better!"
I'm sure it will!
My hat is off to Maynard and Tom for the splendid and well-researched
reenactment / living history of the trade council.
And many thanks to Maynard for the council information you have
just read - most of the words in the description are from him.

What is a pipe ceremony? 
First Nations believe that the most powerful way of communicating with the spirit world is to smoke tobacco in a sacred pipe.  Even before the tobacco is put into the pipe,  the prayers have already begun. 
There are sacred rules that come with a pipe.  A pipe should be kept away from alcohol,  and no alcohol should be drunk for twenty four hours before a pipe ceremony is held.
Mukaday N'doon and the pipe he made.
The Indians typically smoked a mixture of tobacco and herbs in the peace pipe during ceremonial occasions.  The specific contents varied by tribe,  but commonly included kinnikinnick,  which was a blend of dried tobacco leaves,  bearberry leaves,  and other plants.
I was told this pipe is a prayer pipe.
After exhaling,  the participants would wave the hand through
the smoke,  waving / bringing it to their body.

For the Natives it is a religious experience.

 A pipe should always be shown great physical respect.
Since I do not smoke at all,  I did not take part in that respect,  though I
was told what to do in the non-smoking situation.

Members of the 1st Pennsylvania in a moment of relaxation.

Thanks to Scott Mann and all who helped to make this such a great reenactment - Vermillion Creek is truly a bang up event - no pun intended - and,  for many,  it's the last of the season.  But what a way to end:  in the fall at a cider mill in rural Michigan!
Yep---it's true,  to many reenactors,  the end of summer signifies the end of the reenacting season---the major Revolutionary War reenactments are done and over for 2024,  though you will still see me live history in the coming weeks and months,  for I have numerous other opportunities coming up,  and then the new year begins with more smaller events.
Of course,  stay tuned for updates for our 250th commemoration of  our version of  Patriot's Day  (Lexington & Concord)  coming up in April.
The one thing I am very happy about is the fact that we continue to share our historical knowledge and to entice others to study our nation's past.  And I delve and strive for the truth,  as far as current knowledge  (and not opinion)  allows.
I hope you'll come along for the ride right here on Passion For the Past!

Until next time,  see you in time.

















































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Friday, October 4, 2024

Waterloo Cabin: A September Kitchen-Garden Harvest

Agriculture is our wisest pursuit,  because it will,  in the end,  contribute most to real wealth,  good morals,  and happiness.” – Thomas Jefferson

Living out my dream each and every visit to Waterloo Cabin.
Taking colonial living history to a whole  'nother level...
.     .     .

A living historian's dream come true.  That's what my time spent at the Waterloo Cabin has been for me.  These past four years,  with all of our experiences,  have put my head in a different zone,  so to speak.  And now,  to add to our accomplishments,  we have a successful colonial-era kitchen garden!
Our garden this year has had its best yield ever.  In 2021,  our first time gardening here,  we grew  (successfully,  I might add)  flax.  The year following two years - 2022 and 2023 - everything,  including a replanting of flax,  faltered.  But we did not venture the 90 minute drive from our home to the cabin very often for those two years,  so the weeds were out-of-control and, well,  the garden did not get the care needed for success.
Things were different this year.  After our spring planting,  Patty & I took the drive at least every two weeks to weed and care for our plants as we've not done before.
The extra effort was well worth it.  And by spending more days at the cabin and caring for the garden in the way we have,  the cabin has become sort of our pseudo-colonial home...a touch beyond the living history world.
A number of these extra visits were documented here in Passion for the Past  (HEREHEREHERE),  and there were even a few other times we went that I did not write about in this blog.
Our care paid off;  from mid-summer onward,  we'd been blessed with green beans and squash and pumpkins and zucchini,,,
So,  I'd like to show you our mid-September day where my wife & I  (and,  this time even our good friend,  Norm),  harvested more from our Waterloo kitchen garden. 
There's the cabin we often call  "home."
It certainly feels like it more and more.
In the distance,  toward the right,  is our kitchen garden.

To the far left you see where our kitchen garden is located in comparison to where the cabin is on the far right.
In Colonial times,  the kitchen garden was filled with certain types of plants with varying uses,  including for food  (vegetables),  medicine  (medical plants),  cloth  (flax),  and for dyeing wool/cloth.  
Patty & I out in the kitchen garden.
We have plants for food such as pumpkins,  green beans,  zucchini,  summer squash...we did try and grow corn and cabbage,  but that was eaten by the deer.  Our beets didn't do very well either.  Perhaps next year we'll expand our selection to include medical and a greater variety of vegetables.  Maybe even some for the textile arts,  such as flax  (again)  and other plants that can be used for dyeing purposes.
When we travel out there for our garden excursions,  we're usually the only ones there,  and,  aside from a car moving by every-so-often,  it is quiet and peaceful.  We have no furnace or air-conditioning there.  No electric anything.  And that reminds me of a quote from Old Sturbridge Village:
"If the only light and heat comes from candles and fireplaces because of a power outage at your house,  it is frustrating and annoying - but when it comes in the form of intimate tours of a historic village,  it is charming and peaceful."
The green beans did phenomenal!
Our preacher Norm in the garden with my wife,  Patty.
In the spring he blessed our crop during Rogation Sunday.

Driving the 90 minute journey to the cabin was worth the while.
We were always excited at what we could harvest.

I was most proud of the pumpkin patch we planted.  I've always wanted to have one,  but my city yard is much too small.  But this place,  however,  gives us plenty of room.
I consider the pumpkin patch this year to be a trial run.
Next year I'd like to grow two to three times as many!

A couple of the pumpkins were falling off the vine.
They were ready for picking.
“The most popular pumpkins today are grown to be porch décor rather than pie filling,”  says history professor James E.  McWilliams of Texas State University and the author of Revolution in Eating. “They dominate the industry because of their durability,  uniform size  (about 15 pounds),  orange color,  wart-less texture,  and oval shape.”  Mass production of these poor-tasting pumpkins is a  $5 billion a year industry today.  McWilliams calls them  “a culinary trick without the treat”  and accuses them of being  “food in name only.”
Edible pumpkins have not been entirely forgotten.  Heirloom pumpkin seeds are available for those who want to grow the old-fashioned kind,  and farmer’s markets and upscale grocery stores sometimes carry older,  tasty varieties.
(from THIS site)
As pumpkins turned into holiday decorations instead of food,  Americans
largely forgot how to eat them.  Save for the occasional pumpkin pie 
(which these days mostly comes from store-bought processed pie filling in a can), 
the fruit wasn’t seen much on dining tables other than as the aforementioned
decoration.  But recent years have seen a modest pumpkin revival. 
 
Pumpkin pie originated in the early 17th century,  but the original pumpkin pie was not as neat and aesthetically pleasing as the modern pumpkin pie.  The first pumpkin pies were hollowed-out pumpkins filled with milk,  spices,  and honey,  and were roasted by the fire.  It wasn’t until the late 18th century that the modern pumpkin pie began to take its form.  In 1796,  Amelia Simmons published a cookbook titled American Cookery.  Simmons’  pumpkin puddings were baked in a crust thus creating an early recipe for the present-day pumpkin pie.
(from THIS site)
Norm with Patty.
We picked most of the pumpkins.  There were only a few.
I was hoping they'd've lasted on the vine through Waterloo's Pioneer Day event in early October  (October 6th this year),  but it was not to be. 
Perhaps next year I'll plant them maybe a month later...

Zucchini...

Coming from the stream with buckets filled with water...

Rather than dump the water on the plants straight from the buckets
we,  instead,  used the watering jug.
I am filling it up with the water in the bucket.

The water released like a gentle rain shower.

A portion of our mid-September harvest.
A small vignette I made at our home of some of our yield!
Sadly,  our corn/maize did not do very well - we believe the deer ate it down before it even had a chance to grow much.  Nor did our cabbage or beets.  But nearly everything else that was planted did.
Try,  try again next year!  Already planning~ 
No fires in the hearth on this day - just a room-temperature late morning snack including zucchini bread my wife had made from the zucchini grown here
in the kitchen garden.  The cucumbers were grown at the garden at our home.
I believe we have a very unique form of living history here.  I don't place it above or below those who present history in,  perhaps,  a more traditional or a more familiar manner,  as far as this hobby goes.  Nor are we better or worse,  for there's room for all;  we are simply on a different path in our journey to the past.
From left to right:  myself,  my dear wife Patty,  and good friend Norm.
Mid-September 1774

What began four years ago as a sort of unique living history project/experiment that came to me initially in a dream continues on into its fifth year.  
Preacher Gerring
had his image captured
in a painting.
We continue to do our best to live and work and look and function as we would have 250 years earlier,  before the colonies became states,  before Independence became our focus.  Even before the American Revolutionary War.  We try to utilize only ancient techniques in our activities,  though sometimes we falter.  This whole cabin experiment and experience has been to help us to live - not reenact - the time past.  I do not want to lose that,  for the minute we willingly allow the 21st century to seep in,  it's over...we're cheating.  And if I'm going to continue on with this,  there will be no cheating.
Our garden here has raised the bar for us once again - this year was a success.  And,  with God's blessings,  next year will be even more of a success.  And in these past four years I've been able to experience chores a colonial man might have done,  such as processing flax and working at the shaving horse.  I've also threshed wheat with a hand-flail/thresher,  helped to chop down a tree with an ax,  and experience numerous other period activities,  now,  of which,  includes gardening and harvesting.
I want us who are involved in this time-travel experiment to visit and experience a lost and somewhat forgotten period in human history without help from modernisms.  By putting into practice what others only read or write about,  we have ventured to the very heart of history - of people's lives 250 years ago.
We are not perfect,  but I believe we are on the right path.

Until next time,  see you in time.


The importance of agriculture in human history cannot be over-stated,  and I have written about historic farming/agriculture quite often throughout the history of this Passion for the Past blog,  and the links I have listed below here are only a tiny blip on what I've written about on the subject.  
More often than not,  at the bottom of each post linked here there are links to other postings of the same subject matter:
Ancient Farming & Daily Life Practices from the B.C. Era Through the Early A.D. Period is a general summary of ancient farming practices & basics of daily life  (lol)   just like the title suggests.

The 1790 census showed that about 4 million people were employed in agriculture,  which made up roughly 90 percent of the American population.  Colonial farmers were typically able to produce everything they needed for their survival including food,  clothing,  house furnishings,  and farm implements.  This post gives an overview of what it was like,  month by month,  for our colonial-American ancestors.

From the Tudors through the 20th century,  these are a wonderful collection of very well done and historically researched docu-dramas on agricultural life in the past.

Here's a post on 18th century farming:
HERE

My presentation partner,  Larissa,  and I have done plenty of colonial farming presentations:
and
We've also done Victorian farm presentations at Port Oneida:
click 2016  (our first time at Port Oneida!)
click 2017 
2020 and 2021 were covid years,  so nothing happened here.
But,  we were back in 2022 - click 2022
In 2023 we did not participate,  but we returned in 2024  (click HERE)

If you are interested in our other colonial cabin excursions,  most of which entails the colonial farming life,  please click the links below to the many posts I wrote,  all of which are filled with photographs:
To read about our 2020/1770 our first autumn excursion at the cabin,  click HERE
To read about our 2021/1771 wintertime excursion at the cabin,  click HERE
To read about our 2021/1771 springtime excursion at the cabin,  click HERE
To read about our 2021/1771 summertime excursion at the cabin,  click HERE
To read about our 2021/1771 summer harvesting of the flax at the cabin,  click HERE
To read about our 2021/1771 autumn excursion making candles at the cabin,  click HERE
To read about our 2022/1772 winter excursion at the cabin,  please click HERE
To read about our 2022/1772 spring excursion at the cabin,  please click HERE
To read about our 2022/1772 summer excursion at the cabin,  please click HERE
To read about our 2022/1772 autumn excursion at the cabin  (Pioneer Day),  please click HERE
To read about our 2023/1773 winter excursion at the cabin - Candlemas,  please click HERE
To read about our 2023/1773 spring excursion at the cabin - Rogation Sunday,  please click HERE
To read about our 2023/1773 late spring - more planting at the cabin,  click HERE
To read about the 2023/1773 early summer weeding at the cabin,  please click HERE
To read about the 2023/1773 mid-summer Lammas Day Celebration,  please click HERE
To read about the 2023/1773 autumn Pioneer Day event we participated in,  please click HERE
To read about our 2023/1773 Thanksgiving celebration in early November,  please click HERE
To read about our 2024/1774 Winter experience at the cabin,  please click HERE
To read about our 2024/1774 spring excursion at the cabin,  please click HERE
To read about our 2024/1774 late spring gardening with just Patty & I,  click HERE 
To read about our 2024/1774 summer Lammas Day celebration,  please click HERE
To read about our 2024/1774 two separate mid-summer garden visits,  please click HERE
~And that brings us up to today's colonial cabin post.
If you are keeping count,  that's 21  times  (22 if we are to include today's post)  we've experience colonial life in a very real way,  and each time we've experienced it a little differently.

To visit the Waterloo Farm website,  click HERE




































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