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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing). Search the whole document.
Found 41 total hits in 20 results.
Manlius (New York, United States) (search for this): entry oneida-indians
Oneida Indians,
The second of the five nations that composed the original Iroquois Confederacy (q. v.). Their domain extended from a point east of Utica to Deep Spring, near Manlius, south of Syracuse, in Onondaga county, N. Y. Divided into three clans—the Wolf, Bear, and Turtle—their tribal totem was a stone in a forked stick, and their name meant tribe of the granite rock.
Tradition says that when the great confederacy was formed, Hiawatha said to them: You, Oneidas, a people who recline your bodies against the Everlasting Stone, that cannot be moved, shall be the second nation, because you give wise counsel.
Very soon after the settlement of Canada they became involved in wars with the French and their Huron and Montagnais allies.
In 1653 they joined their neighbors, the Onondagas, in a treaty of peace with the French, and received missionaries from the latter.
At that time they had been so reduced by war with southern tribes that they had only 150 warriors.
In the genera
Oneida (New York, United States) (search for this): entry oneida-indians
United States (United States) (search for this): entry oneida-indians
Green Bay (Wisconsin, United States) (search for this): entry oneida-indians
New York State (New York, United States) (search for this): entry oneida-indians
Deep Spring (Arizona, United States) (search for this): entry oneida-indians
Oneida Indians,
The second of the five nations that composed the original Iroquois Confederacy (q. v.). Their domain extended from a point east of Utica to Deep Spring, near Manlius, south of Syracuse, in Onondaga county, N. Y. Divided into three clans—the Wolf, Bear, and Turtle—their tribal totem was a stone in a forked stick, and their name meant tribe of the granite rock.
Tradition says that when the great confederacy was formed, Hiawatha said to them: You, Oneidas, a people who recline your bodies against the Everlasting Stone, that cannot be moved, shall be the second nation, because you give wise counsel.
Very soon after the settlement of Canada they became involved in wars with the French and their Huron and Montagnais allies.
In 1653 they joined their neighbors, the Onondagas, in a treaty of peace with the French, and received missionaries from the latter.
At that time they had been so reduced by war with southern tribes that they had only 150 warriors.
In the genera
Syracuse (New York, United States) (search for this): entry oneida-indians
Oneida Indians,
The second of the five nations that composed the original Iroquois Confederacy (q. v.). Their domain extended from a point east of Utica to Deep Spring, near Manlius, south of Syracuse, in Onondaga county, N. Y. Divided into three clans—the Wolf, Bear, and Turtle—their tribal totem was a stone in a forked stick, and their name meant tribe of the granite rock.
Tradition says that when the great confederacy was formed, Hiawatha said to them: You, Oneidas, a people who recline your bodies against the Everlasting Stone, that cannot be moved, shall be the second nation, because you give wise counsel.
Very soon after the settlement of Canada they became involved in wars with the French and their Huron and Montagnais allies.
In 1653 they joined their neighbors, the Onondagas, in a treaty of peace with the French, and received missionaries from the latter.
At that time they had been so reduced by war with southern tribes that they had only 150 warriors.
In the genera
Canada (Canada) (search for this): entry oneida-indians
Utica (New York, United States) (search for this): entry oneida-indians
Oneida Indians,
The second of the five nations that composed the original Iroquois Confederacy (q. v.). Their domain extended from a point east of Utica to Deep Spring, near Manlius, south of Syracuse, in Onondaga county, N. Y. Divided into three clans—the Wolf, Bear, and Turtle—their tribal totem was a stone in a forked stick, and their name meant tribe of the granite rock.
Tradition says that when the great confederacy was formed, Hiawatha said to them: You, Oneidas, a people who recline your bodies against the Everlasting Stone, that cannot be moved, shall be the second nation, because you give wise counsel.
Very soon after the settlement of Canada they became involved in wars with the French and their Huron and Montagnais allies.
In 1653 they joined their neighbors, the Onondagas, in a treaty of peace with the French, and received missionaries from the latter.
At that time they had been so reduced by war with southern tribes that they had only 150 warriors.
In the genera
Philip Schuyler (search for this): entry oneida-indians