Home / Bolton, Reginald Pelham. Indian Paths in the Great Metropolis. Indian Notes and Monographs, Vol. II, No. 7. New York: Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation, 1922. / Passage

Indian Paths in the Great Metropolis

Bolton, Reginald Pelham. Indian Paths in the Great Metropolis. Indian Notes and Monographs, Vol. II, No. 7. New York: Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation, 1922. 252 words

The exact location of the latter has not been recorded, but it would seem likely to have been at the intersection of the important paths which met at Flushing avenue and Fulton street.

In the town of Flushing (53) some traces of native occupancy have been recorded. There was a tract on the north side of Broadway, cultivated in the eighteenth century as a horticultural establishment, which was known as the Linnsean gardens. Within this area skeletons were uncovered indicating its use as a burying-ground. Probably it was a station, and its plantinggrounds were extended over the same tract that afterward formed the garden.

A mile to the east, on the Duryea farm, objects of native manufacture evidenced the presence of the Indians. The Flushing station appears to have been the headquarters at one time of the leading sachem of this part of Long Island, for in 1664 Tackapoosa.

INDIAN NOTES

BOROUGH OF QUEENS

son and survivor of the great Mechowodt, the Ancient One, was resident there.

The Matinecock were at one time numerous, and their villages and contiguous cultivated fields were scattered all over the territory they occupied, but disease and warfare so reduced their number that their planting land became waste and their homes were abandoned. The line of Broadway was evidently a natural line of travel between their Flushing settlement and their stations on the North shore. Armbruster states that at the time of the arrival of the first white settlers an Indian trail existed where now Broadway runs.