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Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
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…In the treaty of 1745, Sessekemick represented them and appears to have acted under the counsel of Oritany. In the sale of Staten island, Taghkospemo appeared as their sachem, and there is 1 '* I, Oratum, am sagamore, and sole der…
Robert S. Grumet (2014)
…Munsee Indian Cemetery, is located southwest of Kansas City in Franklin County (Hahn 2006). The site is located within the portion of the Chippewa Reservation on the Marais des Cygnes River set aside under the terms of a treaty signed…
Robert S. Grumet (2014)
…A simroads bearing names significant in Delaware Indian history in a part ilar-looking Chippewa name adorns Lake Tomicko, a popular resort of the original Six Nation Reserve mostly inhabited by Delaware located above Lake Nipissing. Indian people. LENAPEEUW (The…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
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[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)] Y., xiii.) Supposed to have been at LeFever's Falls in Rosendale. (Schoonmaker.) Frudyachkamik, so written in treaty--deed of 1677 as the name of a place on the Hudson at the mouth of Esopus (now…
E.B. O'Callaghan (ed.) (1856)
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…from the Colonial authorities to the Home government; correspondence with the neighboring English Colonies; reports of interviews with the Indian tribes; plans of campaigns and details of battles and skirmishes, &c., &c. "' The documents relating to Canada and New-York…
Robert S. Grumet (2014)
…Treaty renewal meeting held on April 27, 1677 (Christoph, Christoph, and Gehring 1989-1991 2:57-59). A 60-acre tract noted as “Kahakasins, being the first land at said Kahankisins,” was subsequently identified in an April 18, 1683, Indian…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
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…The name appears in many orthographies; in 1621, _Wyeck;_ in treaty of 1645, _Wiquaeshex;_ in other connections, _Witqueschreek, Weaquassick,_ and Van der Donck's _Wickquaskeek._ Bolton translated it from the form, _Weicquasguck,_ "Place of the bark kettle," which is obviously…
Robert S. Grumet (2014)
…hattan by an “Indian from Mechagachkamic” at a treaty meeting held in New Amsterdam on July 19, 1649 (O’Callaghan and Fernow MAMAKATING (Sullivan County). Whritenour thinks that Ma1853-1887 13:25). Two adjoining groups of rectangle-shaped sym- makating…
Robert S. Grumet (2014)
…Most of the town’s population moved to the Brotherton Indian Reservation established under the terms of the treaty (see Indian Mills above). Many of these people remained there until 1801, when most moved to New Stockbridge (see in New…
J. Thomas Scharf (1886)
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…Meanwhile, doubtless anticipating this decisiou, the inhabitants of Rye, on the 22d of November, only six days before, the date of that agreement, concluded a treaty with the Indian pro-prietors of the White Plains for the purchase of that…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
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…The first treaty, "offensive and defensive," which was made was by the English with the Five Nations in 1664-5. The Mahicans had then sold their lands and retired to the Housatenuk, and the Mohawks and their alliant nations had…
Robert S. Grumet (2014)
…of intensive Indian settlements along the lower course of the creek first noted in a Dutch map drawn in 1616. Violent encounters between Indians and settlers in the area between 1658 and 1664, and the Nicolls Treaty made in 1665…
Robert Bolton, Jr. (1848)
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…Mohegans signed a treaty of peace in behalf of the Kitchawanghs.a On the 15th of September, 1663, occurs the name of Meghte-sewakes, chief of Kitchawan, and in 1699, that of Sackama ^^'icker. The next Indian village north of…
Robert S. Grumet (2014)
…History of the Indian Tribes of Hudson’s berger on the Ohio Frontier. Kent State University Press, Kent, River. J. Munsell, Albany, New York. Ohio. Ruttenber, E. M. 1906a. Footprints of the Red Men: Indian GeoO’Meara, J. 1996. Delaware…
Robert S. Grumet (2014)
…The stream was subse- sented at the meeting, the elm treaty tree preserved until 1810 on quently noted as Pocaupsing Creek in a survey of land in the area land where the city of Philadelphia built Penn Treaty Park in…
Robert Bolton, Jr. (1848)
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…The Indian grantors were Tackarew, Claes, and seven others.
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
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…They did sign deeds for possessions which were admitted to be their own, but never a treaty on the part of the nation. Caughnawaga, probably the best known of the Mohawk castles of what may be called the middle era…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
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…The "tribe" was the sachem's family. * * * * * [FN-1] Aepjin's name appears of record first in 1645 as the representative of the Westchester County clans in negotiating a treaty of peace with the Dutch.
Wikipedia
…They signed the 1645 peace treaty ending Kieft's War, and their shell middens at Croton Point date back 7,000 years. Wecquaesgeek: Southwestern Westchester/western Bronx, centered on the Saeck Kill (Saw Mill River) mouth in present-day Yonkers…
Robert S. Grumet (2014)
…one of the three Munsee signatories (the others were the Munsee Indian Reorganization Act. chief, Captain Porter, and their war chief, James Rain) to the September 3, 1839, treaty in which the Stockbridges and Brothertowns STOCKBRIDGE (Calumet County). The Village…
Robert S. Grumet (2014)
…The Ketchums are a prominent Delaware Indian family that traces descent to Captain Ketchum, Tah-whee-lalen, “catch him” (Weslager 1972:372). A supporter of the Americans during the War of 1812, a signatory to the Treaty of St. Mary…
Robert S. Grumet (2014)
…Grumet (2014)] a tributary of the Red just north of the present-day Village of Stockbridge, contains the River that flows through Stockbridge-Munsee Indian Reservation final resting places of many Stockbridge-Munsee Indian people. land into Lower Red Lake…
Robert S. Grumet (2014)
…Treaty renewal meeting held on April 27, 1677 (Christoph, Christoph, and Gehring 1989-1991 2:57-59). A 60-acre tract noted as “Kahakasins, being the first land at said Kahankisins,” was subsequently identified in an April 18, 1683, Indian…
Robert S. Grumet (2014)
…Map A), sounds very much like a Delaware Indian Shore to Delaware adorns Sockorockets Ditch, a small headwater of Indian Creek within land traditionally identified as Nanticoke territory. WHITE CLAY (New Castle County). The 3,300-acre White Clay Creek…
Robert S. Grumet (2014)
…Massapequa has been on maps since Mechoswodt, the sachem of Marossepinck, signed the January 15, 1639, treaty deed that granted the Dutch West India Company the sole right to purchase Indian land in western Long Island (Gehring 1980:9). Massapequa…
Robert S. Grumet (2014)
…The Indian Place-Names on Long Island and Islands Adjacent with their Probable Significations. G. P. Putnam’s risburg. Sons, New York. Stockton, M. n.d. John Redmond Ketchum Interview. Indian Pio242 Beyond Manhattan, Robert S. Grumet Toomey, N. 1917…
Robert S. Grumet (2014)
…in an Indian deed to land in the area dated June 8, 1696 (Ulster County Records, Deed Book CC:145). A group of native people from the area later identified themselves as Nappaner Indians at a Nicolls Treaty renewal meeting…
Robert S. Grumet (2014)
…those of his nation already living in Miami Indian territory along Indiana’s White River valley after reluctantly signing away most of his people’s land in Ohio at the 1795 Treaty of Greenville (see in Ohio above), signed one…
Robert S. Grumet (2014)
…Grumet (2014)] warriors against the British in 1755, a year after fighting broke out in western Pennsylvania that led to the last French and Indian War. The Delaware leader subsequently played a prominent part in treaty conferences mostly held at…
Robert S. Grumet (2014)
…More than a few embittered refugees from Indian communities in present-day Westchester County that had been shattered by the war remained in Raritan country after most Indian adversaries fighting the Dutch signed a treaty restoring peace to the region…