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FIRST GLIMPSE OF THE OHIO
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beautiful;" a league further down they passed another. "They are both south of la Belle Rivière. On the heights there are villages of Loups and Iroquois of the Five Nations. I encamped early to give time to Mr. de Joncaire to arrive at the village Attické."[1]

After having journeyed about five leagues on the sixth they reached Attiqué where they found Joncaire and his chiefs awaiting their arrival; all the inhabitants of the village had fled to the woods. "I reëmbarked and I passed the same day the ancient village of the Chaouanons [Shawanese], which has been abandoned since the departure of Chartier and his band, who were removed from this place by the orders of the Marquis de Beauharnois, and conducted to the river Vermillon, in the Wabash, in 1745."[2] At this place Céloron "encountered" six English traders with fifty horses and about one hundred

  1. Id., p. 25. Parkman places Attiqué on the site of Kittanning, Pennsylvania (See Parkman's Montcalm and Wolfe, vol. i, p. 45). This view is supported by Lambing (Catholic Historical Researches, January 1886, pp. 105–107, note 6).
  2. Céloron's Journal in Darlington's Fort Pitt, p. 26.