Prophet
Wabokishieks village, at the mouth of the Coon Creek where the Prophetstown
State Park is now, was the largest village along the Rock River.
There was a second, smaller village where Walkers Slough enters the river
about halfway between Prophetstown and Lyndon. A third village was
downstream about a mile and a half from the Prophet s village near a bluff
called Fisks Point. Large artifact collections found north of the
river about two miles west of Lyndon suggest that a settlement may have
existed there also. Farther down river in Portland township is Thunderbolt
Hill, once a large camp and Indian cemetery.
Much of the
Tampico area was swampy and probably good hunting and fishing ground, especially
Big Slough north of town. Artifacts have been found west of Tampico
at the site of the blowout, a seven-acre natural sand-blown basin.
A large red cedar tree in the center of the blowout was thought to have
been planted there by the Indians. Many spearpoints and stone tools
have been found on a farm north of Deer Grove and also south at the Rt
4o-92 mound site, which suggest that camps or small villages may have been
located nearby.