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Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)] After some days spent in negotiation a treaty was concluded on the 25th, and the chiefs dismissed with presents and solicited to bring to the fort the chiefs of the river families " who had lost so…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…u In testimony whereof we have sett our markes to two several writings, the one to remaine in the hands of the Sopes Sachems, the other upon record, this 7th day of October, 1665." The parties to the treaty on…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…292 j makes treaty of Greenville, 292 Weapons of war, 25 Weckquaesgeeks, location of, 78; a warrior of, killed, 101 j attacked by the Dutch, 1035 murder Ann Hutch-inson, 1125 castles of, destroyed, 114; treaty with, 117 Weckquaesgeek territory…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…In Breeden had gone " two days' journey off among Raedt they are called Hogelanders, while the Tankitekes 5 "Pacham, the subtle in the treaty of 1644 ( 0' Callaghan, i, chief of the Tankitekes near Haver-302), they are called Nochpeems…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
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…Y., xiv, 60.) Whiteneymen, whose name is written Mayawetinnemin in treaty of 1645, and "Meantinnemen, alias Tapousagh, chief of Marsepinck and Rechawyck," in 1660 (Col. Hist. N. Y., xiii, 58), was son of Mechowodt, sachem of Marsepingh, and probably succeeded…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…208 THE INDIAN TRIBES CHAPTER IX. THE WAR OF 1755 — REHABILITATION OF THE LENAPES AND SHAWANOES — THE CONSPIRACY OF PONTIAC. HE treaty of Aix la Chapelle was a very imperfect paper. By its stipulations "all Nova Scotia, or Acadia, with…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…Ponus, sachem of Toquams, 80, 82 Ponupahowhelbshelen, sachem of Weck-quaesgeeks, 79 Pos, Captain, taken prisoner, 123; ne gotiates treaty of peace, 124 Potick, a Mahican village, 63, 395 5 fugi tives from King Philip's war at, 63 Poughkeepsie…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…than to wage war losses." — O'Callagbans Indian War of against the savages on the east end of 1655. Long Island. We have come to this 2 The following is the treaty referred to : conclusion from various reasons too long…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…We will never take it up again." At the conclusion of these ceremonies, Stuyvesant submitted the following as the conditions of the treaty : " i. All hostilities shall cease on both sides, and all injuries shall be mutually forgiven and forgotten…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…The treaty which was 3 The terms Minquas, Minsis, Monseys, concluded by the one was concluded by and Munsies are convertible. The Min-the other. -quas who sold lands on the Delaware 70 THE INDIAN TRIBES natchet in my hand…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)] The totem of the Wappingers as well as that of the Esopus clans, was the Wolf, as already stated, while below the Highlands came the Turkey of the 1 " Daniel Nimham, a native Indian have always…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…delivered up, and on this basis a treaty, as it was called, was concluded with them. But it was not fulfilled by either of the contracting parties; the arrest of an Indian, whose action had been in strict accordance with…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…208 valley, French endeavor to secure possession of the, 208, 209, 210 Onackatin, sachem of Warranawonkongs, 95; party to treaty of 1665, 165 j lands of, 165, 387 Oneidas, a tribal division of Iroquois, 97; assign lands to Tuscaroras, 190…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…under the treaty of 1664, had further illustration at this time. In August, 1702, Minichque, one of their sachems, while visiting Albany, was mortally wounded by a party of four 1 Ante, p. 63. 186 THE INDIAN TRIBES negroes. The…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…By the treaty of peace between the United States and Great Britain — which was without stipulation in regard to the Indian allies of the latter government — " the ancient country of the Six Nations, the residence of their ancestors from the…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…negotiate a peace between them and the Mohawks, for which purpose a conference was held at Narrington and a treaty concluded on the 24th. The day of thanksgiving was a day of peace through out the settlements of New Netherland…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…are mentioned in the treaty, a fact which nearly all their troubles were with that indicates the local character of both titles, tribe. 2 Doc. Hist., iv, i z. The Dutch were 112 ' THE INDIAN TRIBES attacking the fourth boat…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…accordingly secured the intercession of Goethals, the chief sachem of the Wappingers, that they might be included in the treaty which had been made. with that tribe. Stuyvesant doubted their sincerity, and Goethals replied : " The Indians say the same of…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
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…The clan bearing the name was party to the treaty with the Massachusetts people in 1637, and to the sale of the East Hampton lands. Their earliest sachem was Momoweta, who acknowledged the primacy of Wyandanch. Tuckahoe, a level tract…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
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…as a test of enduring friendship. [FN-2] It was the only treaty with the Indians in Orange County of which there is record. Aside from its Indian occupants the town is historic as the point forming the old northwest…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…aid of u four hundred horse and four hundred foot " if 170 THE INDIAN TRIBES they were attacked. The only fruit of his expedition was a treaty which he concluded with the Onondagas, Oneidas and Cayugas, the force of which…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…158 THE INDIAN TRIBES CHAPTER VII. THE INDIANS UNDER THE ENGLISH. — TREATIES WITH THE FIVE NATIONS, THE MAHICANS AND THE ESOPUS INDIANS. — THE JESUITS AND THE WAR OF 1689. HE English, under Richard Nicolls, took possession of Fort Amsterdam on…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)] In 1718, he headed the deputation of Indian chieftains at Philadelphia, who signed an absolute release to the proprietaries *for the lands " situate between Delaware and Sus'quehanna, from Duck creek to the mountains on this…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…Two days after, the force reached Fort Amsterdam, where joy bells rang their welcome.1 The Indians now solicited peace, and a treaty was brought about through the intervention of Underhill. Mamaranack, chief of the Sint-Sings^ Mongockonone of the…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…most effective soldiers that could be pro-64 THE INDIAN TRIBES difficulty, and subsequently the Indian fortresses of the High lands became the receptable of Dutch prisoners. The Dutch knew very little of tribal organizations or tribal laws. To each…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
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…It is a tradition that conferences were held with them on a plain subsequently owned by Johannes Knickerbocker, some six miles east of the Hudson, and that a veritable treaty tree was planted there by Governor Andros in 1676-7…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…appear to be the fact, except as they were 258 THE INDIAN 7RIBES vited the northern and western Indians thither and delivered to them speeches " setting forth the danger all their nations were in, from the designs of the English…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…That question was satisfactorily in all its details by Minor and Stone, and settled by the treaty of 1768. The only others, and is repeated by Lossing in his question in dispute was that between the
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
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…Land Papers, 699; Cushietunk in the proceedings of the Treaty of Easton, 1758, and in other New Jersey records: Cashighton in 1744; Kishigton in N. Y. records in 1737, and Cashiektunk by Cadwallader Colden in 1737, as the name of…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…George, makes treaty with Iroquois, 158 Castles, mode of constructing, 25 Catholic priests, labors of, 166, 168; law in relation to, 176 Cayugas, one of the Iroquois nations, 35; village of, 98 j accept the war belts of the English…