My mother told me
that many Native Americans passed over the place where we live. There’s a place
called the Portage Path. They used the path when they were switching
rivers—from the Cuyahoga River to the Tuscarawas River and they traded with
white men there as well. There is a statue in Akron, Ohio that depicts a Native
American lugging his canoe over his head as he switches rivers.
Cuyahoga supposedly means
"crooked river" from the Mohawk name "Cayagaga." But the
Mohawk people have no relation to this region so this connection has no factual
backing. This is interesting to me because my teachers, parents, and
the internet pass on this theory as the correct one. There are many possible
origins of "Cuyahoga." It is said to come from the Seneca word "GayĆ³'ha'geh"
meaning "on your chin," the Wyandot language words
"kaye'ska" and "hake'nya'a," "here, small," or
the combination of two Cayuga Iroquois words: "Gihe'hoga," meaning
"Elm Tree River." It fascinates me that there are so many
possible answers to this question.
The Tuscarawas River means "open
mouth of a steam." The name is commonly attributed to the
Delaware Native Americans, but it is originally a Wyandot word. The Tuscarawas
River was named in 1760 by foreign settlers. Before it was named
"Naguerre-Konnan" an Iroquois or Wyandot word meaning "place of
the beaver." When I was in seventh grade, I went to CVEEC (Cuyahoga
Valley Environmental Education Center). I saw the chiseled stump of a tree that
was made by a beaver. I was amazed at the little ‘c’ shaped wood chips made by
the creature’s teeth. Before that, I wasn't even aware that beavers lived in Ohio. I'm sure I read about it somewhere but experiencing the wonders of nature in the wild was something that deeply moved me.