Little is known about the indigenous population around the river before the 17th century; it was likely inhabited by either the
Erie or the
Wenro.
Étienne Brûlé, the first European to explore the area, did not document what tribes lived there when he passed through in 1615. The
Seneca people of the
Iroquois League invaded the region in the 1650s as part of the
Beaver Wars. The Chadakoin was part of their water route system that connected the Great Lakes and Canada with Pennsylvania and destinations further south. The first recorded European exploration of the Chadakoin was by
Pierre Joseph Céloron de Blainville. To strengthen France's claim to the Ohio Valley, Céloron carried out an expedition in the summer of 1749. The expedition from Montreal landed on the shore of Lake Erie, at the mouth of Chautauqua Creek in present-day
Westfield, New York. The expedition carried their boats and equipment overland to Chautauqua Lake, then followed the Chadakoin River and Conewango Creek to the Allegheny River, reaching it on July 29, 1749. The name
Chadakoin is an English transliteration of the French word
Tchadakoin, which is the French pronunciation of Seneca/Erie word
Jahdahgwah, the base word from which we get
Chautauqua. The site for Jamestown was chosen in the early 1800s on the Chadakoin as a source of water power for mills. Later, flat-bottomed boats brought manufactured goods from downstream to the growing village. Jamestown's mills shipped lumber downstream. Upstream traffic stopped about 1825, and by 1840, downstream commerce had ended. As Jamestown became more populated, the area around the Chadakoin became the city's industrial core. The river, especially below Warner Dam, was hidden by factories, and buildings covered sections of the river. Neglected, the river became polluted and its banks were littered with trash. The first few miles of the river, from Chautauqua Lake to Jamestown at the Fairmount Avenue bridge, are locally referred to as "The Outlet" and have been continuously used for water recreation, such as boating, canoeing, and kayaking. The marsh areas along this length of the Chadakoin hold many birds and other animals. Revitalizing the riverfront that runs through Jamestown has recently received more attention to increasing public access to the Chadakoin River by creating small parks and a pedestrian trail. Recent cleanup efforts and the demolition of abandoned factory buildings have opened up the Chadakoin below Warner Dam to limited kayaking. Historically, the river has been dyed green for
Saint Patrick's Day celebrations in the city, a tradition that ended after the 2012 event due to budget cuts. The dyeing of the river resumed in 2018. The Greater Jamestown Riverwalk is a series of parks and hiking trails along the Chadakoin River in the City of Jamestown. ==Course==