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🏹 Indigenous Peoples & Archaeology

The Kitchawank, Wappinger, and Lenape peoples who lived here for 7,000+ years

926Passages
7Source Documents

Sources

SourcePassagesWordsLink
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872) 401 76,522 Original →
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906) 223 40,085 Original →
Various (1971) 98 18,630 Original →
Herbert C. Kraft et al. (1994) 73 12,771 Original →
Various (1967) 42 8,829 Original →
Louis A. Brennan et al. (1962) 39 7,958 Original →
Reginald Pelham Bolton (1922) 50 5,568 Original →

Passages

Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] * * * * * [FN] The equivalent Mass. word is _paug,_ "Where water is," or "Place of water." (Trumbull.) Quassa-paug or Quas-paug, is the largest lake in Woodbury, Ct. Dr. Trumbull failed to detect the derivative of _Q…
214 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] They are from the root _Mawe,_ "Meeting," _Mawewi,_ "Assembly" (Zeisb.), _i. e._ "Brought together," as "Where paths or streams or boundaries come together." The reference may have been to the place where the stream …
206 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] Land Papers, 162.) The south side of Stony Point was then accepted as the "North side of the land called Haverstraw." The hills in immediate proximity, at varying points of compass, are the Bochberg (Dutch, _Bochelbe…
239 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] Dongan in 1694, and vacated by act of the Colonial Assembly in 1708, approved by the Queen in 1708. It included Gov. Dongan's two purchases of 1784-85. {_sic_} It was not surveyed; its southeast, or properly its nort…
242 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] Reckgawank, of record in 1645 as the name of Haverstraw, appears in several later forms. Dr. O'Callaghan (Hist. New Neth.) noted: "Sessegehout, chief of Rewechnong of Haverstraw." In Col. Hist. N. Y., "Keseshout [FN-…
231 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] The deed reads: "A piece of land and meadow lying upon Hudson's River in several parcels, called by the Indians Nawasink, Yan Dakah, Caquaney, and Aquamack, within the limits of Averstraw, bounded on the east and nor…
232 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] The tract was known for years as "The end place." Sankapogh, Indian deed to Van Cortlandt, 1683--Sinkapogh, Songepogh, Tongapogh--is given as the name of a small stream flowing to the Hudson south of the stream calle…
146 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] Papers, 99.) Long known as Buttermilk Falls and more recently as Highland Falls. In early days the falls were one of the most noted features on the lower Hudson. They were formed by the discharge over a precipice of …
210 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] the traditionary abundance of rattle-snakes on it, though few have been seen there in later years. * * * * * [FN] "I think your reading of _Muchattoos_ as an orthography of original _Matchatchu's,_ is very plausible.…
232 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] Tans Kamer," or River of the Dance Chamber, and the point immediately south of its mouth, "de Bedrieghlyke Hoek" (Dutch, Bedrieglijk), meaning "a deceitful, fraudulent hook," or corner, cape, or angle. Presumably the…
84 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] as "The High Hills to the west of the Highlands." 'In a legal brief in the controversy to determine finally the northwest line of the Evans Patent, the name is written Skonanake, and the claim made that it was the hi…
242 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] McKnight (1898) on the north side of the Cornwall and Monroe line and very near the present road past the Houghton farm, near which the castle stood. The later "cabin" of the early sachem is plainly located. * * * * …
128 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] opposite the house where John McLean now (1756) dwells, near the said hill, and also lived on the north bank of Murderers' Creek, where Colonel Mathews lives. The first station of his boundaries is a stone set in the…
252 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] the chief may have resided. _Rombout_ (Dutch) means "Bull-fly." It could hardly have been the name of a run of water. Mistucky, the name of a small stream in the town of Warwick, has lost some of its letters. _Mishqu…
173 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] [FN] * * * * * [FN] The traditional places of residence of several of the sachems who signed the Wawayanda deed is stated by a writer in "Magazine of American History," and may be repeated on that authority, viz: "Os…
245 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] Y.--the first form, one of the most familiar names in Orange County, is preserved as that of a town, a stream of water, and of a large district of country known as the Wawayanda Patent, in which latter connection it …
94 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] Orange County and is now in Vernon, New Jersey, where it is still known as the "Wawayanda Homestead." Within a musket-shot of the site of the ancient dwelling flows Wawayanda Creek, and with the exception of the mead…
211 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] _Waway,_ "Winding around many times";--_-anda,_ "action, motion" (radical _-an,_ "to move, to go"), and, inferentially, the place where the action of the verb is performed, as in _Guttanda,_ "Taste it," the action of…
57 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] [FN-7] From Jacobus Bruyn came the ancient hamlet still known as Bruynswick. He erected a stone mansion on the tract, in the front wall of which was cut on a marble tablet, "Jacobus Bruyn. 1724." The house was destro…
237 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] Soc." Memorasink, Kahogh, Gatawanuk, and Ghittatawagh, names handed down in the Indian deed to Governor Dongan in 1684, have no other record, nor were they ever specifically located. The lands conveyed to him extende…
234 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] The name, probably, describes this ridge as "High lands," an equivalent of _Esquatak_ and _Eskwatack_ on the Upper Hudson; _Ashpotag,_
20 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] a line from "about the Dancing Chamber" on the Hudson to Sam's Point on the Shawongunk range on the southwest, and on the west by that range and the river Peakadasank. The Peakadasank is now known as Shawangunk Kill.…
209 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] _Awoss_ means "Beyond," surely, but must be followed by a substantive telling what it is that is "beyond." The particular features of the Shawongunk range covered by the boundary line of the deed are "The Traps," a c…
93 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] "These are to certify, that the inhabitants of the town of New Paltz, being desirous that the first station of their patent, named Moggonck, might be kept in remembrance, did desire us, Joseph Horsbrouck, John Harden…
235 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] Locations of boundmarks were then frequently changed by patentees who desired to increase their holdings, by "Taking some Indians in a public manner to show such places as they might name to them," wrote Sir William …
250 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] Trumbull: "From _Mogki,_ 'Great,' and _-unk,_ 'A tree while standing.'" It is met as the name of a boundmark on the Connecticut, and on the east side of the Hudson, within forty miles of the locative here, _Moghongh-…
228 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] The first word, _Maggean,_ is an orthography of _Machen_ (_Meechin,_ Zeisb.; _Mashkan,_ Chippeway), meaning "Great," big, large, strong, hard, occupying chief position, etc., and the second, _-apogh,_ written in othe…
134 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] word of the Indian name, _Magaat,_ stands for _Maghaak_ (Moh.), _Machak_ (Zeisb., the hard surd mutes _k_ and _t_ exchanged), meaning "Great," large, extended, occupying chief position. The second word, _Ramis_ is ob…
220 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] Rappoos, which formed the northeast boundmark of the Paltz Patent, is specifically located in the Indian deed "Thence north [from Juffrou's Hook] along the river to the island called Rappoos, lying in the Kromme Elbo…
47 words
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] A good parallel are the _Wawenocks_ of S. W. Maine, now living at St. Francis, who call themselves _Walinaki,_ or those living on a cove--'cove dwellers'--in referring to their old home on the Atlantic coast near Por…
184 words
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