MossRoad
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 58,111
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
There's also a continental divide here, just south of South Bend. There's an area near the AM General plant on the south side of town, where the water drains off of two hillsides. One side, all the water flows south down to the Mississippi and out to the Gulf of Mexico. The other side, all the water flows north to the St. Joseph River, into Lake Michigan, 3 other great lakes, and the St. Lawrence river out to the north Atlantic.
So this area was a great portage between those two watersheds. The French explorer Bad title - Wikipedia called locally just LaSalle, was one of the first Europeans to come through the great lakes and up the St. Joe to the area that is now South Bend. At a bend in the river, in the backyard of my parents' house, there is a ravine that he walked up. Then they walked about a mile and a half over to the headwaters of the Kankakee, and down south they went.
There used to be a tree about 400 yards from my parents' house called the Council Oak Tree. It was located in a cemetery. Supposedly, that's where LaSalle met with the local Native Americans, the Potawatomi, and did a treaty with them...
The Potawatomi at Council Oak – Citizen Potawatomi Nation
Anyhow, I could go on and on. The tree fell down in the early 90's. My father ran over and cut off a short piece before the city blocked it off from other souvenir hunters. I still have it today. There are hundreds of descendants of that tree in the cemetery and around town. My parents are buried in that cemetery, where if I stand, I can see the tree stump, my childhood house, and the spot where LaSalle came up from the river. Neat history.
So this area was a great portage between those two watersheds. The French explorer Bad title - Wikipedia called locally just LaSalle, was one of the first Europeans to come through the great lakes and up the St. Joe to the area that is now South Bend. At a bend in the river, in the backyard of my parents' house, there is a ravine that he walked up. Then they walked about a mile and a half over to the headwaters of the Kankakee, and down south they went.
There used to be a tree about 400 yards from my parents' house called the Council Oak Tree. It was located in a cemetery. Supposedly, that's where LaSalle met with the local Native Americans, the Potawatomi, and did a treaty with them...
The Potawatomi at Council Oak – Citizen Potawatomi Nation
Anyhow, I could go on and on. The tree fell down in the early 90's. My father ran over and cut off a short piece before the city blocked it off from other souvenir hunters. I still have it today. There are hundreds of descendants of that tree in the cemetery and around town. My parents are buried in that cemetery, where if I stand, I can see the tree stump, my childhood house, and the spot where LaSalle came up from the river. Neat history.