I
Immigration of Scotch Highlanders in 1711, [564.]
Imleberg, in New York--Encampment upon, in 1776, [817.]
Independence of United States acknowledged by France in 1718, [346;] Opposed by Earl of Chatham (Pitt), [347.]
Indians, American--Mohegans and Narraganset--, War between--Uncas forms Treaty of Amity with Whites--Miantonômoh lays secret Plan to take Uncas by Surprise--Conflict--Narragansets routed--Miantonômoh pursued and captured, [028;] Surrender into Custody of English, at Hartford--Imprisoned, tried, and executed--Mohegan Country re-invaded by Lessacus, Miantonômoh's Brother, in 1645--Uncas, with his Warriors, driven to Shantock--Receives Succor from Captain Mason--Provisions from Thomas Leffingwell--Narragansets raise Siege, and return Home, [029;] Pequots--English Expedition against, in 1637--Extent of their Territory--Sassacus the Terror of other Tribes, [047;] Their Destruction. [048;] Pequots, Canonicus, and Miantonomoh grant Lands to Roger Williams in 1636, [054;] Council of Pequots and Narragansets on Williams, [055;] Watnpanoags--Extent of their Domain--Massasoit--Alexander--Pometacom, or Metacnmrt (King Philip), [090;] His Treaties with the Whites--Curtailment of his Domains--His chief Captains, [091;] Mortgages Land to Constant Southworth near Taunton, in 1672--Signatures of Munashum (Nunrod), Wonckoinpawhan, Anuawan--Number of Warriors in the United States--Number in New England, [091;] Sasamon--Educated at Cambridge--Secretary to King Philip--Accuses his Chief of Treason--Slain--Rising of New England Tribes, [092;] King Philip's Appeal--Condition of his Tribes--Wages War upon the Whites., [093;] Method of Warfare--Destruction of New England Villages--Capture and Death of Canonchet--Retaliation of Whites, [094;] Dispersion of Indians--Philip a Fugitive--Capture and Death--His Son sold to toil in Bermuda as a Slave, [095;] Narragansets--Their Cruelties to Whites--Witamo, Squaw Sachem of Pocasset, Fate of, [095;] Depredations of, in Orange County, in 1779; Brant at Battle of Minisink, [101;] Skirmish with Hudson and Half Moon, in 1609, [174;] Ramapaughs, [210;] St, Tammany. Delaware Chief--His Character--Grave of--Societies named after, [247;] Lenni Lenapes--Extent of their Territory, [249,] [250;] Assumed to be the original People--Divided into three Tribes, "Turtle." "Turkey," and "Wolf"--Account of, [249;] Their Character portrayed by Penn--Teedyuscung extorts from Chiefs of Six Nations an Acknowledgment of Independence in 1716--Captain White Eyes (Sachem) espouses Patriot Cause in 1776-- Biographical Sketch of--Captain Pipe (Sachem) favors the British-- Frustrated in his Plans by White Eyes, [350;] Trouble early European Settlers on the Delaware, [351;] Remain Friends of the Swedes in 1656, [259;] Delawares, Shawnees, and Senecas at War with Penn--Sue for Peace in 1764, [257;] James Logan, Cayuga Chief, Extract from Speech, [313;] Chippewa Chief, Quotation from, [411;] Pocahontas, Notice of, [446;] Story ol Gold Region at Head of Roanoke, [449,] [453;] Manteo Chief, baptized by command of Raleigh--Invested by White with Title of "Lord of Roanoke"--First American Peer, [450;] Hatteras supposed to have intermarried with Raleigh's lost Colonists, [450;] Powhatan visited by Captains Newport and Smith in 1607, [452;] Opechancauough, King of Pumunkcy, captures Captain John Smith, [453;] Condemns Smith to Death--Pocahontas saves Life of Captain John Smith, [454;] Warns him of Conspiracy to destroy Settlers-- Kept as a Hostage by Captain Argali--Released--Receives Baptism--Marries Rollfe--Accompanies him to England--Dies--Her Descendants, [454,] [545;] Death of Powhatan in 1621--Massacre of Men, Women, and Children, at Jamestown, in 1622--Opechancanough succeeds Powhatan, [458;] Made Prisoner in 1646--Dies in Captivity, [459;] Necotowance succeeds Opichaneanough-- Compelled to acknowledge the Sovereignty of England--Cedes all Lands between Pamunkey and James Rivers, [459;] Susquehannas, Hostilities in Virginia and Maryland, in 1675, [461;] Sachems of Ohio Valley send Messenger to confer with Gist, [472;] Twightwees of Ohio Valley supposed originally to have been the Ottawas, [473;] Tanacharison, Jeskakake, and White Thunder (Half King), accompany Washington to Fort Le Bouf, in 1753--Extract from Speech of Tanacharison, [474;] In Expedition to Fort Duquesne in 1711, [475;] Chief who attempted to shoot Washington at Battle of Fort Duquesne, [479;] Compelled to agree to Treaty by Boquet in 1764-- Shawnees and Delawares hostile toward British--Expedition against, under Dunmore, in 1774--Cum-stalk, attack on Colonel Lewis, at Point Pleasant, [487;] Treats with Dunmore for Peace--Murder of Family of Logan, at Baker's Cabin, in 1774--Letter to Cresap, [489;] Disdains to treat with Dunmore--Biographical Sketch of, [490;] Attack Forts Logan and Boone in 1776, [493;] Chiefs, Fidelity of, in American Cause, [497;] Southern, Hostility to Whites--Tuscaroras attacked by Cherokees, Creeks, Catawbas, and Yamnsees, under Barnwell, in 1715--Corees, Hostility toward Whites, [562;] Southern, different Tribes of, [643;] Massacre Virginia Rangers, on the Tennessee, in 1760, [646;] Present Condition of the Cherokees, [648;] Catawbas, present Condition of, [655;] Petition of Peter Harris (Chief), [656;] Tomo Chichi, Chief of the Yamacraws, Interview with Oglethorpe-- His Speech, [721;] Creeks encounter Wayne, under Guristersigo, in 1782, [740;] Treaty with Pickens, in Georgia, in 1782, [741;] Depredations of, in South Carolina, in 1767, [031.]
Ingersoll, Stamp Distributor for Connecticut, burned in Effigy, at Norwich, in 1767, [031.]
Innis, Colonel, wounded in Battle, at Musgrove's Mill, in 1786;, [650.]
Inscription on Trumbull's Monument, [036;] On Dighton Rock, [066;] Runic, at Orkney islands, and elsewhere, [067;] On Silver Tankard, in old Church at Fishkill, [124;] On Grenough's Statue of Washington, [411;] On Washington's Tomb, at Mount Vernon, [417;] Below Statue of Washington, at Richmond Capitol, [437;] On Nelson Tombs, Yorktown, [508;] On Jefferson's Tomb, at Montieello, [548;] On Cenotaph of Mrs. Draper, near Bristol, England, [571;] On Monument at King's Mountain, [634;] On De Kalb's Monument, [668;] On Monument of General Nash, [675;] On Monument of General Marion, [684;] On Monument of Colonel Maham, [707;] On Stuyvesant's Tomb, [784;] On Pitt's Statue at New York, [790;] On Putnam's Monument, [805.]
Institution, National, at Washington, Notice of, [a]406.]
Insurrection, Scotch (Rebellion of '45), [564;] In South Carolina, among early Settlers, [745.]
Iredell, Mrs. Author's Interview with, at Crosswirka, [219.]
Iron Works, Stirling, manufactured great Chain for the Hudson, in 1778, [137;] In North Carolina, [643.]
Irvine, General at Battle of Germantown, in 1777, [320;] Wounded, and taken Prisoner at Whitemarsh, [321.]
Irving, Washington, Quotations from, [185,] [186,] [191,] 193--Residence of, [193.]
Israel, Israel, and Wife, Patriotism and Heroism of, in 1777--Made Prisoner on board Roebuck Frigate--Anecdote of--His Trial--Life saved because he was a Free-mason, [385.]