Notes on the Iroquois / or, Contributions to the Statistics, Aboriginal History, Antiquities and General Ethnology of Western New-York

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By HENRY R. SCHOOLCRAFT, Hon. Mem. of the Royal Society of Northern Antiquaries, Copenhagen; Hon. Mem. of the Royal Geographical Society of London; Vice-President of the American Ethnological Society at New-York; Member of the American Philosophical, of the American Antiquarian, and of the American Geological Societies; Hon. Mem. of the New-York Historical, of the Georgia Historical, and of the Rhode-Island Historical Societies, &c., &c., &c.
NEW-YORK: BARTLETT & WELFORD, ASTOR HOUSE. 1846.
In giving a more permanent form to the original edition of this document, a more convenient reference title has been prefixed to it.
The aboriginal nation, whose statistics and history, past and present, are brought into discussion in the following report, stand out prominently in the foreground of our own history. They have sustained themselves, for more than three centuries and a half, against the intruding and progressive races of Europe. During the period of the planting of the colonies, their military exploits gave them a name and a reputation which are coeval with Europe. These events are intermingled, more or less, with the history of each of the colonies, and impart to them much of their interest. But while we have made an extraordinary progress in population and resources, and gone far to build up a nationality, and commenced a national literature, very little, if any, progress has been made in clearing up and narrowing the boundaries of historical mystery, which shroud the Indian period prior to 1492. This forms, indeed, the true period of American Ethnology.
It was a desideratum in American statistics, that a complete census of one of these primary stocks, who had lived in our neighborhood all this time, and still preserved their nationality, should be taken. This task New-York executed in 1845. It appeared desirable to the agent appointed to carry the act of the legislature, embracing this feature, into effect, that the opportunity should not be lost of making some notes of the kind here indicated; and it is in this feature, indeed, if any thing, in the report now presented, that it aspires to the character of research, though it be intended only to shadow forth outlines to be filled up hereafter.

Henry Rowe Schoolcraft
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SENATE DOCUMENT, TWENTY-FOUR.


MEMORANDUM OF PAPERS.


COMMUNICATION


REPORT


CENSUS OF THE IROQUOIS.


ANTIQUITIES—HISTORY—ETHNOLOGY.


II. ORIGIN AND HISTORY OF THE IROQUOIS, AS A DISTINCT PEOPLE.


III. EPOCH AND PRINCIPLES OF THE IROQUOIS LEAGUE.


IV. ARCHÆOLOGY.


V. ANCIENT STATE OF INDIAN ART.


NOTE.


Class Second.—MEDÄEKA.


Class Fourth.—OPOAGUNA.


Class Seventh.—MUDWÄMINA.


Class Eighth.—OTOAUGUNA.


VII. ORAL TRADITIONS OF THE IROQUOIS—HISTORICAL AND SYMBOLICAL.


[c.] Exploit of Hi-a-de-o-ni.


VIII. TOPICAL INQUIRIES.


IX. MISCELLANEOUS TRAITS.


X. MORAL AND SOCIAL CONDITION AND PROSPECTS.


RETURN


AGRICULTURAL AND HORTICULTURAL STATISTICS.


DEAF AND DUMB, IDIOTS, LUNATICS AND BLIND.


APPENDIX.


Oneida Language.


Origin of the Oneidas.


Etymology.


Antique Corn Hills.


Onondaga Castle.


Onondaga. [Jackson’s.]


Kasonda.


Tradition.


Cherokees.


Tonewanda.


Osteological Remains.


Present Means of living on the Reservation.


Bones.


Opinion of a Chief of the Word Seneca.


Lewiston. [Frontier House.]


Niagara Falls.


Buffalo.


Eries.


Mission Station, Buffalo Reservation.


Kah-Kwahs, Eries, Alleghans,—who were they?


Irving, Cattaraugus Creek.


Indians in Canada.


Horts’ Corners, Catt.


Cold spring, Allegany river. [Sep. 3.]


Napoli Centre.


Lodi.


Irving, Mouth of Cattaraugus.


Eighteen-Mile Creek.


Buffalo.


Batavia.


Auburn.


Syracuse.


Utica.


Mouth of the Norman’s Kill, or Tawasentha, Albany.


New-York.


Indian Election.


Sketches of an Indian Council.


Account of the Settlement of North America.


Origin of the Five Nations.


Vocabulary of the Tuscarora, from William Chew, written out and transmitted by the Rev. Gilbert Rockwood.


TUSCARORA.


Inquiries.


Mohawk.


Cayuga.


Oneida.


NOTE.


Transcriber's Note:

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Язык

Английский

Год издания

2015-09-25

Темы

Iroquois Indians; Indians of North America -- New York (State)

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