Showing posts with label Native American. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Native American. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Indians #3 Mohawk and Seneca tribes


This group I have designated as from the Mohawk tribe, or in their own language, Kanien’kehá:ka (People of the Flint"). The Easternmost of the Iroquois (Haudenosaunee)  tribes, they were traditionally referred to as "Keepers of the Eastern Door" of the Confederacy. 

 The Iroquois tried to remain neutral during the Revolutionary War, but the war ultimately wound up splitting the Confederacy as much as it di the Europeans; The Oneida and Tuscarora supported the Americans, and the other four tribes the British. 

A key figure of the Mohawks during this time, was Joseph Brant. whose Indian name was Thayendanegea. He formed a good relationship with the British, and especially Sir William Johnson, who was the British superintendent of the Indians of North America. In 1759, Johnson married Brant's sister, Molly. Johnson selected Brant and several other Mohawks to attend Moor’s Charity School for Indians, a school which would later develop into Dartmouth College. At school, Brant converted to the Anglican faith and learned to read and write English. While Brant’s education at Moor’s gave him the skills which made him prosperous, most students at Moor’s were not nearly as successful as Brant. The school’s administrators and employees used their power to force students who were not of top caliber into exploitive manual labor.

After receiving his education, Brant accompanied Johnson during the French and Indian War. After the war concluded, Brant stayed with his brother in law and assisted in running the British “Indian Department.” During this time, he traveled throughout the Iroquois land, mainly as a missionary. Throughout his travels, Brant learned to speak at least three languages of the different Iroquois tribes and likely spoke all six tribal languages. These early missionary years established Brant as a trusted and respected leader of both natives and settlers.

This second group I have designated as being from the Seneca tribe (Onondowagah in their language, "Great Hill People"). They were the Westernmost of the Iroquois tribes, the "Keepers of the Western Door", and the largest of the Six Nations. 

Returning to the story of Joseph Brant, in 1775 he Six Nations met to discuss their role in the burgeoning War for independence. While many advocated for neutrality, almost prophetically, Brant predicted that independence for the colonists meant that the natives across the North American continent would lose their land. Brant’s argument, along with Johnson’s influence, succeeded in convincing four of the six nations to fight for the British cause, the Mohawks, Onondagas, Cayugas, and the Senecas.

In November 1775, Brant traveled to England to discuss native roles in the War along with land disputes. Brant returned to America in July of 1776 and participated in the British campaign to retake New York.  It is likely he served with General Hugh Percy during the British push through Jamaica Pass, which was a key phase of the Battle of Long Island.  Brant and Percy quickly formed a lifelong friendship. Percy would be the only white man which Brant would remain close with after the war. Following the New York campaign, Brant returned to the Six Nations, and rallied the tribes for war against the American colonists.

Throughout 1777 and 1778, Brant’s forces were exclusively involved in the Mohawk Valley. Brant’s army participated at the Battle of Oriskany, in attacks on Cobleskill, and in raids on German Flatts. While Brant’s forces were on a raid, continental troops attacked Brant’s Onoquaga base. The continentals razed the city, leaving buildings burned, cattle dead, and crops reaped. Brant, as a response, led the attack which became known as the Cherry Valley Massacre. During the attack, Seneca forces sought out innocents killing at least thirty civilians. This action gave Brant a reputation for brutality and the nickname “Monster Brant;” however, Brant, although active in the valley, was not present at the Cherry Valley Massacre, primary sources from British leaders and Brant showing that he instead attempted to contain the Seneca’s’ violence.


  By 1779, the British  granted him the rank of “Captain of the Northern Confederated Indians” and promised provisions for his men but no pay for the native troops. Because of his new salary and wartimes despoiling, Brant became moderately wealthy. This wealth caused jealousy among rival chiefs and even his unpaid volunteers. When a commission to make Brant a colonel came, British colonial officers did not tell Brant in order to preserve his negotiating power with other tribes. In late 1779, the Sullivan Campaign devastated Mohawk lands, forcing Brant and the Iroquois out of New York and pushing them back to Fort Niagara.

In 1781, Brant was sent west to the Ohio Country. During this campaign, Brant was seriously injured in the leg and was forced to recover at Fort Detroit. During this time he tried to keep western tribes loyal to the British, even after the catastrophic defeat of the British at Yorktown. 

The 1783 Treaty of Paris did not acknowledge the Six Tribes or any indigenous groups independence. The British had failed to accomplish the promise which prompted many native tribes to join their cause, the protection of indigenous land. Brant would spend the rest of his life fighting for the land rights of his people and other disaffected indigenous tribes in America. His first attempt at protecting the land was forming the Western Confederacy, a group of thirty native nations which agreed to fight for the Fort Stanwix Treaty line. Brant sought British support in 1785, and while the British compensated Mohawk losses in the war and gave Brant a pension, they refused to join in support of the thirty tribes. Brant and Washington both made attempts at peace. Brant sought a peace treaty but failed. Washington tried to create a reservation for the Mohawks and give Brant a large pension, but Brant refused. The American forces overwhelmed the Western Confederacy resulting in the thirty tribes’ alliance disintegrating.

Sunday, December 21, 2025

Native Americans #2

 


I have arbitrarily designated this unit as being from the Oneida tribe of the Iroquois Confederacy. 


The Oneida supported the Colonies during the Revolutionary War, unlike most of the rest of the Six Nations of the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois). 

The Hiawatha (Hayewate) Belt; Wampum (made from white and purple clamshell beads) were used to commemorate important events and principles. This one represents the Confederacy: To the far left (East) the smaller rep[resents the Mohawk Nation, "Keepers of the Eastern Door", then the larger square represents the Oneida nation to the left, in the Center, the pine tree represents the Onondaga Nation, where the Council Fire burns, and where the Great Tree of Peace is firmly rooted in the heart of the Confederacy, then to its left is the square representing the Cayuga Nation, and finally the sqaure of the Seneca Nation, "Keepers of the Western Door". 

During the Revolution, both sides sought the alliance, or at least the neutrality, of the Confederation.

The Oneida Belt, dating from shortly after the American Revolutionary War - the six squares present the nations of the confederacy, each with its own Council Fire (the diamond in the center); the 6th, farthest left square, represents the latest addition to the Confederacy, the Tuscarora Nation. 


Oneida, New York (the small city) is famous for high quality Silverware, and for a Free Love community started in the 1830's by John Humphrey Noyes.

The Oneida Community House. This 93,000 square foot mansion was the residence of the Community, which was one of the longest existing Utopian communities in the US. It was economically successful, with members rotating various jobs un restricted by gender. The community later used stock within its membership, and owned the famous silverware company. An outcast member shot President James Garfield in 1881, who died of his wounds 2 months later, accelerating the decline of the community. 


I have once again, arbitrarily, assigned this unit to be Cayuga warriors. 

The territory of the Cayuga, "People of the Great Swamp", was centered around Cayuga Lake (which we have visited extensively, returning again this past October).

As previously noted, "Haudenosaunee", the Iroquois name for themselves, means "People of the Longhouse"

Artists rendition of a longhouse village.


A modern reconstruction of a longhouse village

Interior of a reconstructed longhouse

Artifacts of Cayuga settlements have been found in multiple areas around Cayuga lake. 

The Cayuga, like most Indian Nations, were displaced from their ancestral lands, and only re-established some territory in the Finger Lakes region of New York this century. 

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Native Americans #1

 The various native American tribes were an important factor in the development of the British (and French) colonies in North America, and in the wars between them, and the later American Revolution.


Perhaps the most important was the Six Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy.

The name they used for themselves was the Haudnosaunee  ("People of the Longhouse", after their characteristic dwellings) Confederacy, 

I have, entirely arbitrarily, assigned this unit as being of the Onadaga nation.

The date of origin of the  Confederacy in uncertain, but was most probably somewhere between 1570 and 1600, and was composed of the Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, and Seneca nations. 




In 1722,the Tusacarora nation, which had migrated Northward top escape the expansions of the Southern colonies, joined the Confederacy. 

I have arbitrarily designated this unit as being of the Tuscarora. The figures are by Perry Miniastures.