Indian Trading Paths | NCpedia (2024)

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This article is from the Encyclopedia of North Carolina edited by William S. Powell. Copyright © 2006 by the University of North Carolina Press. Used by permission of the publisher. For personal use and not for further distribution. Please submit permission requests for other use directly to the publisher.

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by Tom Magnuson, 2006
Additional research provided by Wiley J. Williams.

See also: Great Trading Path; Trading Ford.

Indian Trading Paths | NCpedia (1)The oldest paths and trails in the area that became North Carolina were made by animals in search of food, water, and salt; and native Indians adopted these paths for the same purpose. As agriculture evolved, life became more settled for many groups, and paths developed between major settlements and villages. Long before Europeans approached the New World, these paths were traveled by Indian ambassadors, war parties, couriers, traders, families, and even whole communities.

Precisely when trading began among native peoples is not known, but it is clear that the Indians of the area traveled widely. As tribal groups established territories they considered their own, exchanges developed on a more or less regular basis, with traders traveling by foot, carrying those items most in demand. The Coastal Plain, Piedmont, and Mountains each produced items desirable for trade, generating contact among the native peoples of the three regions as they exchanged goods, often at feasts and ceremonies. From the coastal regions, shell beads, especially conch shell beads known as wampum or roanoke, had relatively fixed values and served as a medium of exchange. Leaves of certain hollies found along the coast were a standard trade item, and coastal salt was frequently traded inland. Coastal and piedmont Indians also supplied hardwoods for bows, minerals for paint, and stone for weapons and tools. The Catawba exchanged skins and mica with coastal tribes in return for fish and salt. From the mountains came heavy bear and buffalo skins, copper, and mica. In addition to raw materials, some man-made goods were traded. The Tuscarora, for example, made wooden utensils to exchange with other tribes for uncured deerhides, which they tanned and traded elsewhere. The Cherokee became known for their carved stone pipes.

A new trading era began when Indians were exposed to European goods: guns and ammunition, hatchets, kettles, metal tools, liquor, woolen cloth and blankets, trinkets, and glass beads. In return for these goods, Europeans traders wanted furs and hides from beavers, otters, deer, muskrats, and raccoons. As long as there were plenty of animals, the Indians fared well in bargaining, often trading hides for firearms. But when animals became scarce, Indians were left without a medium of exchange for the trade goods on which they were increasingly dependent. The historic record makes it apparent that the Europeans often took advantage of the Indians in trade transactions.

English traders often named Indian paths and trails after their destinations. Thus, the primary trails crossing North Carolina along the north-south axis were the Peedee, Catawba, and Cherokee Trails. One part of the Catawba Trail was called the Occaneechi Trail (sometimes referred to as the Great Trading Path), and another was called the Waxhaw Trail. The Peedee, Catawba, and Cherokee Trails generally correspond to portions of modern-day interstate highways 95, 85, and 40, respectively.

Watersheds and river crossings, more than any other factors, dictated the route of Indian trading paths. For travelers who moved north and south-as did most of the English traders, explorers, and adventurers who first encountered the native peoples of North Carolina-rivers were unavoidable barriers. Fording them, the act of crossing streams without bridges, was a daily risk. Some of the river fords employed earned lasting place-names, such as Nations Ford on the Catawba River, Trading Ford and Shallow Ford on the Yadkin River, Piney Ford on the Haw River, Fish Dam Ford on the Neuse River, and Moniseep or Horse Ford on the Roanoke River.

Many of North Carolina's modern highways lie within mere feet of the ancient Indian trading paths. For example, Highway 158, which runs from Kill Devil Hills on the Outer Banks to the mountains at Mocksville in Davie County, once connected the natives of the Albemarle with the Cherokee and all the tribes in between. East of the Haw River, Highways 10 and 70 run along the course of the Great Central Coast Road, down the watershed between the Neuse and Cape Fear basins; Highways 1, 15, 29, 64, and 74 likewise follow lines forged by people far beyond memory.

Eighteen Indian trading paths have been identified as having lain totally or partially within the present boundaries of North Carolina, including the Unicoi Turnpike, the Catawba Trail, the Saura-Saponi Trail, and the Lower Cherokee Traders' Path prior to 1775. Many of these paths extended into the states of Georgia, South Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky, and Virginia, knitting the peoples of North Carolina together with those of the rest of the Southeast and North America. Beginning in 1941, the Department of Archives and History erected highway historical markers for many of these paths.

References:

William E. Myer, "Indian Trails of the Southeast," in U.S. Bureau of American Ethnology, 42nd Annual Report, 1924, 1925 (1928).

Theda Perdue, Native Carolinians: The Indians of North Carolina (1985).

Douglas L. Rights, The American Indian in North Carolina (2nd ed., 1957).

Ruth Y. Wetmore, First on the Land: The North Carolina Indians (1975).

Image Credit:

"Photo of a group in the U. S. National Museum, Washington, D. C. Captain John Smith and companions trading with the Indians in Virginia, 1607. The colonists seek corn and furs from the natives in exchange for beads, trinkets, utensils and cloth." Image courtesy of Project Gutenberg book "Domestic Life in Virginia in the Seventeenth Century", by Annie Lash Jester. Available from http://www.gutenberg.org/files/27482/27482-h/27482-h.htm (accessed May 23, 2012).

Subjects:

American Indians

Transportation

Authors:

Magnuson, Tom

Williams, Wiley J.

From:

Encyclopedia of North Carolina, University of North Carolina Press.

1 January 2006 | Magnuson, Tom; Williams, Wiley J.

Indian Trading Paths | NCpedia (2024)

FAQs

What was the trading path to the Indians? ›

The Great Trading Path, sometimes called the Occaneechi Path, was one of two major Indian trading paths that passed through what would become North Carolina, the other being the Warrior's Path, later called the Great Philadelphia Wagon Road.

What were the trade routes for Native Americans? ›

The trade route included bridges, causeways, stairways and crossed plains, deserts and mountains. The route was used for trade, to move armies, connect communities and included bridges, causeways and stairways; substantial portions of the network survive today.

What is the great Indian War and Trading Path? ›

The Great Indian Warpath (GIW)—also known as the Great Indian War and Trading Path, or the Seneca Trail—was that part of the network of trails in eastern North America developed and used by Native Americans which ran through the Great Appalachian Valley.

Why did Native American trade routes run north to south? ›

Most trade routes ran North to South, I believe the most plausible cause for this was traveling from East to West required Native Americans to cover much greater distances to reach different trade hubs. Thus moving North to South allowed the ability to trade at significantly less distance.

Why was the Indian trade route successful? ›

Technological innovations Increased Trade in the Indian Ocean. New technologies helped merchants more safely navigate across the Indian Ocean. New or improved maritime technologies made trade across the Indian Ocean safer, quicker, and more profitable.

Why was the Indian trade route important? ›

Indian Ocean Trade transformed Roman society, allowing the elites and commoners access to never-before-seen luxuries. In fact, the demand for exotic commodities was so high that it drained Rome's coffers. It also enriched those involved in the business, from merchants to the government.

What did the natives trade for? ›

They harvested a wide variety of furs (beaver being the most valuable) in the region's woodlands and waterways. In exchange for these furs, French, British, and US traders provided goods such as blankets, firearms and ammunition, cloth, metal tools, and brass kettles.

What did the trade routes do? ›

The trade routes served principally to transfer raw materials, foodstuffs, and luxury goods from areas with surpluses to others where they were in short supply.

What did the tribe trade? ›

Trade was nothing new to the Plains Tribes; the various cultures that occupied this land at different times had exchanged produce, dried meat, tools, and weapons for thousands of years.

Who did the Indian civilization trade with? ›

Answer and Explanation: One of India's major trade partners was Mesopotamia; India is mentioned consistently in ancient Mesopotamian documents. India also traded with Rome, Egypt, China, Sumeria, and Greece.

What was the Lower Cherokee Traders Path? ›

The Lower Cherokee Traders' Path was an important trade route on the Piedmont connecting the Cherokee and other interior tribes with the Occaneechi tribe, middlemen traders in southern Virginia, to the early European colonists on the Chesapeake Bay.

Which of the following were the first to come to India for trading? ›

The correct answer is Portuguese. Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama was the first European to reach India via the Atlantic Ocean at Calicut in India. Portuguese were followed by the Dutch when they tried to enter the Indian market in the middle of the 16th century.

Was the fur trade good or bad? ›

The fur trade was both very good and very bad for American Indians who participated in the trade. The fur trade gave Indians steady and reliable access to manufactured goods, but the trade also forced them into dependency on European Americans and created an epidemic of alcoholism.

What was the item that natives most often traded to Europeans? ›

Early Trade

The first Europeans to purchase furs from Indians were French and English fishermen who, during the 1500s, fished off the coast of northeastern Canada and occasionally traded with the Indians. In exchange, the Indians received European-manufactured goods such as guns, metal cooking utensils, and cloth.

Did Indian tribes trade with each other? ›

Leaders of different bands or tribes adopted each other as father or son, allowing trade to take place even between traditional enemies. In such exchanges, tribes gained access to foodstuffs that would otherwise have been difficult to acquire. However, Native peoples often exchanged corn for corn, or meat for meat.

What did the Indian Empire trade? ›

The Gupta Empire had been benefiting greatly from Indo-Roman trade. They had been exporting numerous luxury products such as silk, leather goods, fur, iron products, ivory, pearl or pepper from the ports of Bharutkutccha, Kalyan, Sind and the city of Ujjaini.

What trade route crossed the Indian Ocean? ›

The Strait of Malacca was the fastest route for maritime trade between China and the Indian Ocean. Parameswara, the founder and ruler of Malacca converted to Islam and took the name “Iskandar Shah” sometime around 1400. By WHP, CC BY-NC 4.0. Explore full map here.

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