[96] For “Shawanos” read “Nanticokes.”
[97] [In 1726, John Harris, a Yorkshireman, settled at the mouth of the Paxton Creek, traded largely with the neighboring Indians, cleared a farm, and kept a ferry. John Harris, Jr., his son, born on the Paxton in the above-mentioned year, inherited from his father 700 acres of land, on a part of which Harrisburg was laid out in 1785.]
[98] Zeningi, according to Loskiel.
[99] For “Schschequon” read “Shechschequon.”
[100] [For “Christian” read “Christopher.”]
[101] Loskiel, part I., ch. 9.
[102] For “Tawachguáno” read “Tayachguáno.”
[103] [Now the Clinton, on whose banks New Gnadenhütten was built by David Zeisberger in the summer of 1782.]
[104] [The first mission established by the Moravians among the northern tribes of Indians, was among a clan of Mohegans, in the town of Pine Plains, Dutchess County, New York, where Christian Henry Rauch, of Bethlehem, began his labors as an evangelist in July of 1740.]
[105] Collections Massach. Histor. Soc., vol. I., p. 195; vol. IV., p. 67; vol. IX., p. 92.