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Oneida Indian Tribe History
Oneida (Anglicized compressed form
of the common Iroquois term tiionǎñ'iote',
'there it it-rock has-set-up (continuative),' i. e. a rock
that something set up and is still standing, referring to a large sienite
bowlder near the site of one of their ancient villages). A tribe of the
Iroquois confederation, formerly occupying the country south of Oneida
Lake, Oneida county, N. Y., and latterly including the upper waters of the
Susquehanna. According to authentic tradition, the Oneida was the second
tribe to accept the proposition of Dekanawida and Hiawatha to form a
defensive and offensive league of all the tribes of men for the promotion
of mutual welfare and security. In the federal council and in other
federal assemblies they have the right to representation by 9 federal
chieftains of the highest rank. Like the Mohawk, the Oneida have only 3
clans, the Turtle, the Wolf, and the Bear, each clan being represented by
3 of the 9 federal representatives of this tribe (see
Clan and Gens). Insofar as
eldership as a member of a clan phratry call give precedence in roll-call
and the right to discuss first in order all matters coming before its side
of the council fire, the Oneida are the dominant tribe within the tribal
phratry, called the Four (originally Two) Brothers and "Offspring," to
which they belong. In tribal assemblies the Turtle and the Wolf constitute
a clan phratry, and the Bear another. The Oneida have usually been a
conservative people in their dealing with their allies and with other
peoples. In 1635 they, with the
Onondaga, Cayuga, and Mohawk,
sought to become parties to the peace concluded in the preceding year
between the Seneca and the
Hurons. At this period they were
called sedentary and very populous, but only from Indian reports.
The Jesuit Relation for 1646 (p. 3,1858) says that with
the exception of the Mohawk there was no treaty, properly speaking, then
in existence between the Iroquois tribes inclusive of the Oneida and the
French. From the same Relation it
is learned that "Onnieoute" (Oneniote), the principal Oneida village of
that time, having lost the greater portion of its men in a war with the
"upper Algonquin," was compelled to request the Mohawk to lend aid in
repeopling the village by granting thereto a colony of men, and that it
was for this reason that the Mohawk ceremonially and publicly call the
Oneida their daughter or son. This story is probably due to a
misconception of the fictitious political kinships and relationships
established between the several tribes at the time of the institution and
organization of the League (see Confederation). The Cayuga and the
Tuscarora are likewise called
"Offspring," but not for the reason above given. The Jesuit Relation for
1648 (p.46) first definitely locates the Oneida. From the Relation for
1641 (p. 74) it is gathered that the Jesuit fathers had learned that the
Oneida had a peculiar form of government in which the rulership alternated
between the two sexes. This statement is likewise apparently due to a
misconception of the fact that among Iroquois tribes the titles to the
chiefships belonged to the women of certain clans in the tribe and not to
the men, although men were chosen by the women to exercise the rights and
privileges and to perform the duties pertaining to these chiefships, and
that there were, and indeed still are, a number of women filling federal
chiefships bearing the name of the highest class. These women chieftains
have approximately the game rights, privileges, and immunities as the men
chiefs, but exercise them fully only in emergencies; they, too, maintain
the institutions of society and government among the women.
The Jesuit Relation for 1667 (lii, 145, 1899) declares
that the Oneida were at that time the least tractable of the Iroquois
tribes. It was at this period that Father Bruyas was stationed at the
mission of St Francois Xavier among the Oneida. It is also learned from
this source that the Mohegan and the Conestoga menaced the Oneida. While
on this mission Father Bruyas suffered for food for a part of the year and
was compelled to sustain life on a diet of dried frogs. By the end of the
year 1669 he had baptized 30 persons. In 1660 the Oneida with the Mohawk
were the least populous of the Iroquois tribes. The Jesuit Relation for
1669-70 speaks of the Oneida being present at a " feast of the dead " held
at the Mohawk village of Caughnawaga, showing that in a modified form at
least the decennial ceremony of the so-called "Dead Feast" was practiced
among the Iroquois when first known. On Jan. 80, 1671, the Oneida began
the torture of a captive Conestoga woman, and the torture was prolonged
through 2 days and 2 nights because he in whose stead she had been given
was burned at Conestoga for that length of time. It is held by some that
the town defended by four lines of palisades closely fastened together and
attacked by Champlain in 1615 with his Huron and Algonquian allies, was an
Oneida village, although other authorities place it elsewhere, in Onondaga
territory. In fact, the wars of the Oneida were those of the League,
although like the other tribes they seem to have put forth most energy
against the tribes who in some manner had given them the greatest offense.
The Catawba and the Muskhogean tribes, as well as the Susquehanna river
Indians, the Conestoga, gave most occupation to the Oneida warriors.
After the conquest of the tribes on the Susquehanna and
its tributaries and those
on the Potomac, chiefly by the warriors of the Oneida, the Cayuga, and the
Seneca, and those tribes which had submitted to Iroquois rule, a question
arose as to the propriety of the Mohawk, who had not given any aid in
subduing these peoples, sharing in the income arising from land sales
there. Hence for a time the Mohawk received no emolument from this source,
until the Iroquois tribes became divided and the Mohawk sold the lands in
the Wyoming Valley region of Pennsylvania to the Susquehanna Land Co. of
Connecticut. This, then, in 1728, moved the great federal council of the
league at Onondaga to send Shikellamy, an Oneida chief, as a
superintendent, to the forks of the Susquehanna for the of watching over
the affairs
purpose and the interests of the Six Nations of Iroquois in Pennsylvania.
At first Shikellarny exercised a general supervision over only the
Shawnee and the
Delaware, who thereafter were
required to consult him in all matters arising between them and the
proprietary government. So well did he perform his duty that in 1745
Shikellamy was made full superintendent over all the dependent tribes on
the Susquehanna, with his residence at Shamokin. He showed great
astuteness in the management of the affairs entrusted to his care, seeking
at all times to promote the interests of his people. Such was the
influence which the Oneida exercised on the Susquehanna.
In 1687 the Oneida were included in the warrant of the
King of Great Britain to Gov. Dongan of New York, authorizing him to
protect the Five Nations as subjects of Great Britain. In 1696 Count
Frontenac burned the Oneida castle, destroyed all their corn, and made
prisoners of 30 men, women, and children.
In 1645-46 the Oneida were at war with the
Nipissing, and one band of
17 warriors from "Ononiiote" defeated an Algonkin party under Teswehat,
the one-eyed chief of this people, killing the chief's son and taking 2
women prisoners. This Iroquois party was afterward defeated by 30 Hurons
and the 2 women were recaptured.
In the Jesuit Relation for 1666-68 Father Bruyas writes
that the Oneida were reputed the most cruel of all the Iroquois tribes;
that they had always made war on the Algonkin and the Hurons, and that
two-thirds of the population of their villages were composed of the people
of these two tribes who had become Iroquois in temper and inclination.
This missionary adds that the nature of the Oneida was then altogether
barbarous, being cruel, sly, cunning, and prone to blood shed and carnage.
In 1655 a party of 60 Oneida warriors was sent against
the Amikwa, or Beaver Indians. This war was still in progress in 1661, for
in that year 2 bands, one of 24 and the other of 30 warriors, were to
fight the encountered on their way to fight the Amikwa.
Chauchetiere (letter in Jesuit Relations, Thwaites ed.,
lxii, 185, 1900) says that "war is blazing in the country of the Outaouaks,"
that the Iroquois, especially the Oneida, continued their hatred of the
Outagami (Foxes) and the Illinois, and
so have slain and captured many
Illinois. In 1681 they killed or captured about 1,000 of these
unfortunate people.
In 1711, about half of the Tuscarora tribe, then
dwelling in North Carolina, seems to have conspired with several alien
neighboring tribes and bands to destroy the Carolina settlers. The
colonists, however, recollecting the ancient feud between the Southern and
the Northern Indians, allied themselves with the Catawba and some
Muskhogean tribes. The Tuscarora, sustaining several severe defeats, were
filially driven from their homes and hunting grounds. This act of the
Southern Indians made the hatred of the Iroquois against the Catawba more
bitter and merciless.
The Oneida were at times friendly to the French and to
the Jesuit missionaries, while the other Iroquois were their determined
enemies. A great part of the Oneida and the Tuscarora, through the
influence of Rev. Samuel Kirkland, remained neutral in the Revolutionary
war, while the majority of the confederation of the Iroquois were divided
and did not act as a unit in this matter. Early in that struggle the
hostile Iroquois tribes attacked the Oneida and burned one of their
villages, forcing then to take refuge near the Americans in the vicinity
of Schenectady, where they remained until the close of the war. Shortly
after the main body of the tribe returned to their former homes. At a
later period a considerable number emigrated to Canada and settled on
Grand river and Thames river, Ontario. Another small band, called Oriskas,
formed a new settlement at Ganowarohare, a few miles from the main body in
Oneida county, N. Y. At different earlier periods the Oneida adopted and
gave lands to the Tuscarora, the Stockbridges, and the
Brotherton. The Tuscarora
afterward removed to land granted by the Seneca in west New York. In 1846,
having sold most of their lands in New York, the greater part of the
Oneida, together with their last two adopted tribes, removed to a tract on
Green bay, Wis., where they now reside. Among those living in New York at
the time of removal were two parties
known respectively as the
First Christian,
and the Second Christian or
Orchard party.
The Oneida entered into treaties with the United States
at
Ft Stanwix, N. Y., Oct. 22, 1784;
Ft Harmar, O., Jan. 9, 1789;
Canandaigua, N. Y., Nov. 11, 1794;
Oneida, N. Y., Dec. 2, 1794;
Buffalo Creek, N. Y., Jan. 15, 1838; and
Washington, D. C., Feb. 3, 1838.
They also held no fewer than 30 treaties with the State
of New York between the years 1788 and 1842.
The estimates of Oneida population at different periods
are no more satisfactory
than those relating to the other Iroquois tribes. The earliest account
(1660) gives them1500. They are placed at 1,000 in1677 and 1721. In 1770
they were estimated
at 410, in 1776 at 628, and in 1795 at 660, and were said to have been
decreasing for a long time. They number at present (1906) about 3,220, of
whom 286 are still
in New York, 2,151 under the Oneida School Superintendency in Wisconsin,
783 on Thames river, Ontario, besides those settled among the other
Iroquois on Grand river, Ontario. There are no means of learning the
number of Oneida who joined the several colonies of Catholic Iroquois.
The Oneida towns, so far as known, were:
Awegen
Brothertown
Cahunghage
Canowdowsa
Cowassalon
Chittenango
Ganadoga |
Hostayuntwa
Oneida
Opolopong
Oriska
Ossewingo
Ostogeron
Schoherage |
Sevege
Solocka
Stockbridge
Tegasoke
Teseroken
Teiosweken
Tkanetota |
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Handbook
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