 What I was told was that the Ojibwe people migrated from the east There are oral histories that I've heard that said that we come from Like the ocean so the area of the Atlantic Ocean other people say around the St. Lawrence River But there was a migration that had taken place about 500 years and And there was a important geographical location, Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario where the Ojibwe people continued their migration, but they were migrating based on a prophecy that was being told And for the people to follow the Amiga Shell which is the shell that is in the water drums, but also to follow To travel to the place where the food was on the water and what they meant By that was that they were following To go to where the wild rice grew so During that migration when they got to Sault Ste. Marie I was told that our people had come from that area, but the people either went north of the Great Lakes and traveled towards the Lake of the Woods and then the other bands of Ojibwe traveled south of the Great Lakes and came into the Wisconsin, Minnesota territories, but our ancestors traveled the northern route and came up the Winnipeg River system and And that's when these people I imagine they came down here and they set up camps somewhere here they set up camp and then they When they were finished setting up camp they went hunting at the mouth of the river and when they were around there The Sun was going down they said and they saw a creature standing with the Sun behind this creature big horns It looked like a wolf. So they asked the medicine man to shoot this creature with a bow and arrow so the medicine man shot And hit the when the arrow hit that creature in the head it split open and went down the men went paddling over there But they didn't find anything And that's when when they called it It started calling it broken head river Now that's what I was told but like I said different elders