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Indians who are Citizens of the United States
The citizen Indians are scattered over 44 states and 5 territories, as shown
by the tables in this introduction, and are employed in various pursuits.
As a rule the modern Mississippi valley, western, and Pacific coast Indians can
be easily accounted for. The settlement of those regions by whites is large
numbers is recent, and a fairly good record of the whereabouts of the several
tribes of Indians known has been kept.
The Six Nations of New York and The Five Civilized Tribes of Indian territory
are not citizens of the United States.
Civilized Indians off
Reservations, Taxed, At Censuses of
1890,1880, 1870, and 1860.

(a) (b)
Locations and
Stocks of Indian Tribes
at Several Dates
During the, early settlement
of the Atlantic coast and of the South
Pacific coast the Europeans were led to
believe by the natives that the interior of
the present United States teemed with an
aggressive, enterprising, and ingenious
aboriginal population. Based upon these
stories estimates of Indian population were
made and names of tribes given which had
only imagination for authority. Many early
European writers chronicled these legends as
facts. Investigation shows that the
aboriginal population within the present
United States at the beginning of the
Columbian period could not have exceeded
much over 500,000, that portions of families
or stocks of Indians were given as original
tribes, and that many small bands of the
same tribe were given as separate tribes.
Probably no Indian tribe in the lists given
bears its own name. The tribes are generally
known by names given them by white people.
This is one of the most singular facts in
history. Indian tribes have within
themselves several names, just as individual
Indians have frequently half a dozen names;
some have signed treaties with several
names. Prior to colonial times, the lists of
names of Indian tribes were kept by the
foreign nations who had control and by
missionaries. In colonial times the lists of
names were kept by the local or colonial
authorities. Just prior to and during the
Revolutionary war officers of the army kept
them. In 1812-1813, and after the
publication of the report of Lewis and
Clarke's expedition, a list of the tribes
(some 86) these explorers had met along the
Missouri and Yellowstone and branches and
the Columbia and its waters was prepared by
them. Other explorers, traders, and hunters
had made lists also, but they were generally
partial and incomplete. The lists were kept
in the office of the Commissioner of Indian
Affairs, War Department, from 1813 to 1849,
when the Indians passed under the control of
the Home or Interior Department.
Indians North and
West of Virginia, in 1782
The following, furnished by
Mr. Charles Thompson, Secretary of Congress,
and published in Mr. Thomas Jefferson's
"Notes on Virginia", 1782, seems to be an
epitome of the knowledge then possessed by
publicists as to the Indians in the region
of country lying north and west of Virginia:
As far as I have been able to learn the
country from the seacoast to the Alleghany
and from the most southern waters of the
James River up to Petuxen River, now in the
state of Maryland, was occupied by three
nations of Indians, each of which spoke a
different language, and were under separate
and distinct government. What the original
or real names of those nations were I have
not been aide to learn with certainty; but
by us they are distinguished by the names of
Powhatans, Mannahocs and Minancans, now
commonly called Tuscaroras. The Powhatans,
who occupied the country from the seashore
up to the falls of the river, were a
powerful nation, and seem to have consisted
of seven tribes, five on the western and two
on the eastern shore. Each of these tribes
was subdivided into towns, families or
clans, who lived together. All the nations
of Indians in North America lived in the
hunter state and depended for subsistence on
hunting, fishing, and the spontaneous fruits
of the earth, and a kind of grain which was
planted and gathered by the women, and is
now known by the mime of Indian corn. Long
potatoes, pumpkins or various kinds, and
squashes were also found in use among them.
They had no flocks, herds, or tamed animals
of any kind. Their government is a kind of
patriarchal confederacy. Every town or
family has a chief, who is distinguished by
to particular title, and whom we commonly
call "sachem". The several towns or families
that compose a tribe have a chief who
preside over it, and the several tribes
composing a nation have a chief who presides
over the whole nation. These chiefs are
generally men advanced in years, and
distinguished by their prudence and
abilities in council. The matters which
merely regard a town or family are settled
by the chief and principal man of the town;
those which regard a tribe, such as the
appointment of head warriors or captains and
settling differences between different towns
and families, are regulated at a meting or
council of the elders from the several
towns; and those which the whole nation,
such as the making war, concluding peace, or
forming alliances with the neighboring
nations, are deliberated on and determined
in a national commit composed of the chiefs
of the tribe, attended by head warriors and
a number of the chiefs from the towns, who
are his counselors. In every town there is a
council house where the elder and old men of
the town assemble when occasion requires,
and commit what is proper to be done. Every
tribe has a fixed place for the chiefs of
the town to moot and consult on the business
of the tribe, and in every nation there is
what they call the central counsel house, or
central council fire, where the chiefs of
the several tribes, with the principal
warriors, convene to consult and determine
on their national affairs. When any matter
is proposed in the national council it is
common for the chiefs of the several tribes
to consult thereon apart with their
counselors, and when they have agreed, to
deliver the opinion of the tribe at the
national council, and its their government
seems to rest wholly on persuasion, they
endeavor, by mutual concessions, to obtain
unanimity. Such is the government that still
subsists among the, Indian nations bordering
on the United States. Some historians seem
to think that the dignity of office of
sachem was hereditary but that opinion does
not appear to be well founded, The sachem or
chief of the tribe seems to be by election;
and sometimes persons who are strangers and
adopted into the tribe are promoted to this
dignity on account of their abilities. Thus,
on the arrival of Captain Smith, the first
founder of the colony of Virginia,
Opechanganough, who was sachem or chief of
the Chickahominies, one of the tribes of the
Powhatans, is said to have been of another
tribe, and. even of another nation, so that
no certain account could be obtained of his
origin or descent. The chiefs of the nation
seem to have been by a rotation among the
tribes; thus, when Captain Smith, in the
year 1609, questioned. Powhatan (who was the
chief of the nation, and whose proper name
is said to have been Wohunsonacock)
respecting the succession, the old chief
informed hint "that he was very old, and had
seen the death of all his people thrice; not
one of these generations was then living
except himself; that he must, soon die, and
the succession descend in order to his
brothers, Opichapan, Opechaneanough, and
Catataugh, and then to his two sisters and
their two daughters". But those were
appellations designating the tribes in the
confederacy, for the persons named are not
his real brothers, but the chiefs of
different tribes, Accordingly, in 1618, when
Powhatan died, he was succeeded by
Opichapan, and after his decease
Opechaneanough became chief of the nation. I
need only mention another instance to show
that the chiefs of the nation claimed this
kindred with the head of the nation, in
1622, when Raleigh Crashaw was with Japazaw,
the sachem or chief of the Patowmacs,
Opechaucanough, who had great power and
influence, being the second man in the
nation and next in succession to Opichapan,
and who was a bitter but secret enemy to the
English and wanted to engage the nation in a
war with them, sent two baskets of beads to
the Patowmac chief, and desired him to kill
the Englishmen that were with him. Japazaw
replied that the English were his friends
and Opichapan his brother, and that
therefore there should be no blood shed
between them by his means. It is also to be
observed, that when the English first came
over, in all their conferences with any of
the chiefs, they constantly heard him make
mention of his brother, with whom he must
consult or to whom he referred them, meaning
thereby either the chief of the nation or
the tribes in confederacy. The Manahoacs are
said to have been a confederacy of four
tribes, and in alliance with the Monacans in
the war which they were carrying out against
the Powhatans.
To the northward of these there was another
powerful nation, which occupied the country
from the head of the Chesapeake Bay up to
the Kittatinney Mountain, and as far
eastward as Connecticut River, comprehending
that part of New York which lies between the
Highlands and the ocean, all the state of
New Jersey, that part of Pennsylvania, which
is watered below the range of the
Kittatinney Mountains by the rivers or
streams falling into the Delaware, and the
county of Newcastle in the state of
Delaware, as far as Duck Creek. It is to be
observed that the nations of Indians
distinguished their countries one from
another by natural boundaries, such is
ranges of mountains or streams of water; but
as the heads of rivers frequently interlock
or approach near to each other, and those
who live upon a stream claim the country
watered by it, they often encroached on each
other, and this is a constant source of war
between the different nations. The nation
occupying the tract of country last
described called themselves Lenopi; the
French writers call them Loups; and among
the English they are now commonly called
Delaware. This nation or confederacy
consisted of five tribes, who all spoke one
language:
(1) the Chihohocki, who
dwelt on the west side of the river now
called Delaware, a name which it took from
Lord De la War, who put into it on his
passage from Virginia., but which by the
Indians was called Chihohocki;
(2) the Wanami, who inhabit the country
called Now Jersey, from the Rariton to the
sea; (3) the Munsey, who dwelt on the upper
streams of the Delaware, from the
Kittatinney Mountains down to the Lehigh or
western branch of the Delaware;
(4) the Wabinga, who are sometimes called
River Indians, sometimes Mohickanders, who
had their dwelling between the west branch
or Delaware and Hudson River, from the
Kittatinney Ridge down to the Rariton; and
(5) the Mehiccon, or Mahattlon, who occupied
Staten Island, York Island (which, from its
being the principal seat of their residence,
was formerly called Mahatton), Long Island,
and that part of New York and Connecticut
which lies between Hudson and Connecticut
Rivers, from the highland, which is a
continuation of the Kittatinney Ridge down
to the sound. This nation had a close
alliance with the Shawanese, who lived on
the Susquehanna and to the westward of that
river, as far as the Allegheny Mountains,
and carried on a long war with another
powerful nation or confederacy of Indians
which lived to the north of them, between
the Kittatinney Mountains or Highlands and
the lake Ontario, lied who called themselves
Mingos, and are called by the French writers
Iroquois, by the English the Five Nations,
and by the Indiums to the southward, with
whom they were at war, Massawonacs,
This war was carrying on in its greatest
fury when Captain Smith first arrived in
Virginia. The Mingo warriors had penetrated
down the Susquehanna to the mouth of it. In
one of his excursions up the bay, at the
mouth of Susquehanna, in 1608, Captain Smith
met with six or seven of their canoes full
of warriors, who were coining to attack
their enemies in the rear. In an excursion
which he had made a few weeks before up the
Rappahannock, and in which he had [had] a
skirmish with a party of the Manahoacs and
taken a brother of one of their chiefs
prisoner, he first heard of this nation; for
when he asked the prisoner why his nation
attacked the English, the prisoner said
because his nation had heard that the
English came from under the world to take
their world from them. Being asked how many
worlds he know, he said he knew but one,
which was under the sky that covered him,
and which consisted of Powhatans, the
Manakins, and the Massawonacs. Being
questioned concerning the latter, he said
they dwelt on a great water to the north;
that they had many boats; and so many men
that they waged [war] with all the rest of
the world. The Mingo confederacy then
consisted of five tribes; three, who are the
elder, to wit, the Senecas, who live to the
west; the Mohawks, to the east; and the
Onondagas between them; and two who are
called the younger tribes, namely, the
Cayugas and Oneidas, All of these tribes
speak one language, and were then united in
a close confederacy, and occupied the tract
of country from the east end of Lake Eric to
Lake Champlain, and from the Kittatinney and
Highlands to the lake Ontario and the river
Cadaraqui, or St. Laurence. They had some
time before that carried on a war with a
nation who lived beyond the lakes and were
called Adirondacs. In this war they were
worsted; but having made a peace with them,
through the intercession with the French who
were then settling Canada, they turned their
arms against the Lenopi; and as the war was
long and doubtful, they, in the course of
it, not only exerted their whole force; but
put into practice every measure which
prudence or policy could devise to bring it
to a successful issue. For this purpose they
bent their course down the Susquehanna, and
warring with the Indians in their way, and
having penetrated as far as the mouth of it,
they, by the terror of their arms, engaged a
nation now known by the name of Nanticocks,
Conoys, and Tuteloes, who lived between
Chesapeake and Delaware Bays and bordering
on the tribe of Chihohocki, to enter into an
alliance with them. They also formed an
alliance with the Monacans and stimulated
them to a war with the Lenopi and their
confederates. At the same time the Mohawks
carried on a furious war down the Hudson,
against the Mehiccon and River Indians, and
compelled them to purchase it temporary and
precarious peace, by acknowledging them to
be their superiors and paying an annual
tribute. The Lenopi being surrounded with
enemies and hard pressed, and having lost
many of their warriors, were at last
compelled to sue for peace, which was
granted them on the condition that they
should put themselves under the protection
of the Mingos, confine themselves to raising
corn, hunting for the subsistence of their
families, and no longer have the power of
making war. This is what the Indians call
making them women; and in this condition the
Lenopis were when William Penn first arrived
and. began the settlement of Pennsylvania in
1682.
The Oswegatchies, Connosedagos, and
Cohunnegagoes, or, as they are commonly
called, Caghnewagos, are of the Mingo or Six
Nation Indians, who, by the influence of the
French missionaries, have been separated
from their nation and induced to settle
there,
I do not know of what nation the Augquagahs
are, but suspect they are a family of the
Senecas.
The Nanticocks and Conoies were formerly of
a nation that lived at the head of
Chesapeake Bay, and who of late years have
been adopted into the Mingo or Iroquois
confederacy, and make a seventh nation, the
Monacans or Tuscaroras, who were taken into
the confederacy in 1712, making the sixth.
The Saponies are families of the Wanamies,
who removed from New Jersey, and, with the
Mohiccons, Munsies, and Delawares, belong to
the Lenopi nation. The Mingos are a war
colony from the Six Nations; so are the
Cohnnuegagos. Of the rest of the northern
tribes, I have never been able to learn
anything certain; but all accounts seem to
agree in this: that there is a very powerful
nation, distinguished by a variety of names
taken from the several towns or families,
but commonly called Tawas or Outawas, who
speak one language and live round and on the
waters that fall into the western lakes, and
extend from the waters of the Ohio quite to
the waters falling into Hudson bay.
Indians in the 11th (1890) Census of the
United States
a Dakota
Territory in 1860, 1870 and 1880
b. Oklahoma was not a
political division in 1880.
Notes About the Book:
Source: Source:
Report on Indians Taxed and Indians not Taxed in the United States, Except
Alaska at the Eleventh Census: 1890, Department of the Interior, Government
Printing Office, Washington DC., 1894
Online Publication: The manuscript was scanned and
then ocr'd. Minimal editing has been done, and readers can and should expect
some errors in the textual output. Several spellings have been used for the same
tribe of Indians.
This site includes some historical materials that may imply negative
stereotypes reflecting the culture or language of a particular period or place.
These items are presented as part of the historical record and should not be
interpreted to mean that the WebMasters in any way endorse the stereotypes
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