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Oneida and Cayuga join the Confederacy
"The
Oneida and
Cayuga," says Gallatin, "are said to
have been compelled
to join [the confederacy.] Those two tribes were the younger and the three
others the older members." Zinzendorf, speaking of the Iroquois, says "the
Oneidas and Cayuga are their children."--Indian tribes of
North America.
"By the early French writers, the Mohawks and Oneidas were styled the
lower or inferior Iroquois; while the Onondagas, Cayuga and Seneca, were
denominated the upper or superior Iroquois, because they were located
near the sources of the St. Lawrence. The Mohawks, who are commonly
supposed to be the first nation in the confederacy and were considered
the most warlike people in the land, were also styled elder brothers of
the other nations, and so esteemed themselves. To [them] was always
accorded the high consideration of furnishing the war captain, or 'Tekarahogea,'
of the confederacy, which distinguished title was retained with them till
the year 1814, when the celebrated Hoa-ho-a-quah, an Onondaga, was chosen
in general council at Buffalo to fill that important station.
The political and social organizations of the Iroquois
though simple in their structure were effective in their operation. They
were calculated to violate as little as might be the high regard this
people had for individual liberty, which they required should be the
largest, consistent with the general welfare. The method by which they
secured efficiency without imposing undue restraint was as unique as it
was simple and happy. No light tie could hold to the harmonious
development of a common interest so fierce and barbarous a people as
these. The problem was eminently worthy of the genius which
solved it; for while it held them inflexibly, yet unrestrainedly, to all
matters relating to their federate existence, it secured the utmost
elasticity and freedom in their tribal and national relations. The entire
control of all civil matters affecting the common interest was vested in a
national council of about fifty sachems, though in some instances as many
as eighty, chosen at first from the wisest men in their several nations,
and afterwards hereditary in their families. All met as equals, but a
peculiar dignity was ever attached to the Atotarho of the Onondagas. All
the nations were represented and each had one vote in the council. This
general council was held by common consent in the principal village of the
Onondagas, the central nation.9
Thither, if the matter under consideration was of deep and general
interest, not the sachems alone, but the greater part of the population,
gathered; and while the sachems deliberated in the council-house, the
chiefs and old men, the warriors, and often the women, were holding their
respective councils apart, and their opinions, laid by their deputies
before the council of sachems, were never without influence on its
decisions. All questions of tribal, national and federal polity were
discussed and decided in councils. They had no written constitution, and
no attempt was made to coerce a nation or individual. The authority of
these sachems was measured by the estimate the people put upon their
wisdom and integrity; and the execution of Parkman's Jesuits. of their
plans rested upon the voluntary acquiescence of those whom they
represented. But the Iroquois were actuated by a high regard for personal
and national honor, which ever sufficed to impress them with a deep sense
of duty. Women were excluded from the deliberations of the councils.
A marked feature of the Iroquois civil polity was that
which made the concurrence of all the nations necessary before any measure
could be adopted. To secure this unanimity the most persuasive powers of
reason and eloquence were constantly employed. Their speakers studied
euphony in the selection and arrangement of their words, and their
discourses were made highly impressive, if not always eloquent and
convincing, by the use of graceful attitudes and gestures. In this severe
school were trained those orators, whose efforts have challenged favorable
comparison with the best in civilized nations, and reflected not less
renown on the federation than its bravest warriors.10
Parkman, in his work on the Jesuits, says:
"The ease and frequency with which a requisition
seemingly so difficult was fulfilled afford a striking illustration of
Indian nature,--on one side so stubborn, tenacious and impracticable; on
the other so pliant and acquiescent. An explanation of this harmony is to
be found also in an intense spirit of nationality: for never since the
days of Sparta were individual life and national life more completely
fused into one.11
"There was a class of men among the Iroquois always put
forward on public occasions to speak the mind of the nation or defend its
interests. Nearly all of them were of the number of the subordinate
chiefs. Nature and training had fitted them for public speaking, and they
were deeply versed in the history and traditions of the league. They were
in fact professed orators, high in honor and influence among the people.
To a huge stock of conventional metaphors, the use of which required
nothing but practice, they often added an astute intellect, an astonishing
memory, and an eloquence which deserved the name.
"In one particular, the training of these savage
politicians was never surpassed. They had no art of writing to record
events, or preserve the stipulations of treaties. Memory, therefore, was
tasked to the utmost, and developed to an extraordinary degree. They had various
devices for aiding it, such as bundles of sticks, and that
system of signs, emblems, and rude pictures, which they shared with other
tribes. Their famous wampum belts were so
many mnemonic signs, each standing for some act, speech, treaty, or clause
of a treaty. These represented the public
archives, and were divided among various custodians, each charged with the
memory and interpretation of those
assigned to him. The meaning of the belts was from time to time expounded
in the councils. In conferences with them
nothing more astonished the French, Dutch and English officials than the
precision with which, before replying to their
addresses, the Indian orators repeated them point by point."
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9 Loskiel gives us a description of
the Onondaga council house in 1745, from the pen of Gottlieb Spangenberg,
a Bishop of the United Brethren, who spent several weeks at Onondaga in
that year. "The council-house," he says,
"was built of bark. On each side six seats were placed, each containing
six
persons. No one was admitted besides the members of the council, except a
few, who were particularly honored. If one rose to speak, all the rest sat
in
profound silence, smoking their pipes. The speaker uttered his words in a
singing tone, always rising a few notes at the close of each sentence.
Whatever was pleasing to the council, was confirmed by all with the word
Nee, or Yes. And at the end of each speech, the whole company joined in
applauding the speaker by calling Hoho. At noon, two men entered, bearing
a large kettle filled with meat, upon a pole across their shoulders, which
was
first presented to the guests. A large wooden ladle, as broad and deep as
a
common bowl, hung with a hook to the side of the kettle, with which every
one might at once help himself to as much as he could eat. When the guests
had eaten their fill, they begged the counselors to do the same. The whole
was conducted in a very decent manner. Indeed now and then one or the
other would lie flat upon his back to rest himself, and sometimes they
would
stop, joke and laugh heartily."--History of the Mission of the United
Brethren
among the Indians of North America.--Loskiel.
10 "An erect and commanding figure, with a blanket thrown
loosely over
the shoulder, his naked arm raised, and addressing, in impassioned
strains,
a group of similar persons sitting upon the ground around him, would, to
use
the illustration of an early historian of this State, give no faint
picture of
Rome in her early days."--Smith's History of N. Y.
DeWitt Clinton says of the speech of Garangula to the
French General
De la Barre, "I believe it impossible to find in all the effusions of
ancient
or modern oratory a speech more appropriate or convincing. Under the veil
of respectful profession it conveys the most biting irony, and while it
abounds
with rich and splendid imagery, it contains the most solid reasoning. I
place
it in the same rank as the celebrated speech of Logan."
11 The history of the Iroquois, however, furnishes
numerous exceptions to
this rule. During the French and Indian wars with the English-American
Colonies, it often became difficult to secure unity of action in favor of
the
latter, and in 1755 it was entirely defeated. In 1763, Sir Wm. Johnson did
not class the Seneca among the "friendly tribes;" and in 1775, the
English
were obliged to resort to tribal alliances in view of the determination of
the
council in favor of neutrality.
Notes About the Book:
Source: Smith, James H., History of Chenango and Madison Counties, New York.
D. Mason & Co. Syracuse, NY 1880
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.
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