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Tuscarora of North Carolina
Before
the discovery, by Columbus, the
Tuscarora consisted of six towns, and they were a
powerful nation, numbering over twelve hundred warriors, which,
at a ratio according to the rule of estimating, would bring them
at about five or six thousand souls.
The Tuscarora had many years of enjoyment and peaceful
possession of their domain, consisting of six towns on the
Roanoke, Neuse, Taw and Pemlico rivers, in the State of North
Carolina. And they were also confederated to six other nations,
which were the
Coree, Mattamuskeet,
Nottoway and the
Bear River Indians; the names of the other two nations I
have been unable to obtain. My readers will readily see why some
writers have it that they consisted in twelve towns, and other
writers would have it that they consisted in six towns. The real
Tuscarora consisted in six towns; but with the confederate
nations, altogether, were known to be in twelve towns, and all
these different nations which composed the confederacy went
under the name of Tuscarora, the Tuscarora being the most
powerful of the several nations.
The tradition of the Tuscarora admits of having
captured Lawson and his party, and executed some of them to
death on account of their encroachments upon their domain; but
concerning the massacre of Oct. 2d, 1711, the Tuscarora
emphatically deny having taken any part in the affair whatever,
officially. The project was presented to them and in the council
of the sachems, chiefs and warriors, they emphatically declined
taking any part in such a movement, but said if the colonists
made encroachments and trespass on their domain, it is no more
than right and just that we defend our rights, and even
cautioned their young men that they should not take any part
whatever in the action; but, nevertheless, there were a few of
the rash and reckless warriors that took part in the disorder.
The Coree, Mattamuskeet, and Bear River Indians seemed
to be the instigators of the project: but there were several
other nations that took part in the massacre. These three
nations being considered Tuscarora, on account of the
confederacy, and the capture of Lawson and his party a little
previous to this time by the Tuscarora, led the colonists to
conclude that it was the Tuscarora who caused the disaster, and
to them was directed the feud of the colonists.
A little previous to these disorders, it seems that
there were some white men, as our tradition states, with long
coats and wide brimmed hats, visited several nations of the
Indians in that neighborhood, and appeared to be very friendly
toward them, wished them success in everything, and told them
that those settlers who were on the borders of their lands and
constantly encroaching and committing depredations upon the
Indians, were not of the government, but were merely squatters,
who settled there of their own accord, and if they were cut off,
there would be none to avenge them, and were advised to do so.
It has always been a question in my mind who those
white men were, to give such rash advice. Were they Quakers? But
what motive had they in advising, from which so great a disaster
was the result? Or, were they men in disguise, from the county
of Bath, in which the massacre was committed, to make the
Indians believe that they were Quakers, as the two counties were
in arms against each other at that time.
To corroborate the tradition above, I would call your
attention to part of a letter from President Pollock to Lord
Craven, in the year 1712, who attributes the calamity thus:
"Our divisions," says he, "chiefly occasioned by the
Quakers and some other ill-disposed persons, have been the cause
of all the troubles, for the Indians were informed by some of
the traders that the people who lived here are only a few
vagabonds, who had run away from other governments and settled
here of their own accord, without any authority, so that if they
were cut off, there would be none to revenge them. This with
their seeing our differences rise to such a height, that
consisting of two counties only, were in arms one against the
other, encouraged them to fall upon the county of Bath,
expecting it would have no assistance from this nor any other of
the English plantations. This is the chief cause that moved the
Indians to rise against us, as far as I understand."
The Tuscarora never had the inclination of cutting off
the inhabitance of the pale faces. Nevertheless, they did not
always remain idle or unconcerned spectators of the feuds and
dissensions that so long prevailed among the white people,
toward the red men. The successive and regular encroachments, on
their hunting grounds and plantations, which the increase of the
European population occasioned, had not always been submitted to
without murmur.
Although they were pleased with the neighbors, from
whom they had trade for their furs, and could procure spirituous
liquors and other articles, which tended to the gratification of
their real or imaginary wants. And they were required to
surrender larger and larger portions of their domain, and at
last, the removal of families from the neighborhood of their
long cherished memories of the graves of their ancestors, to the
more distant and less valuable tracts of land. Other causes of
animosity and ill-will were not wanting. Their hunters were shot
down like so many beasts, at the edge of the settlement, killed
in their wigwams, their young females' chastity violated, and
many other things might be related, which their tradition shows.
But I have neither heart nor inclination to bring to a
resurrection the long gone-by memories of our forefathers. I
would that all were cast into oblivion, where might not be found
neither trace nor track; but rather that the chain of friendship
which has existed for more than a century between the Tuscarora
and the United States Government may be made brighter and
brighter as time rolls on.
I have said that the Tuscarora never had the
inclination of cutting off the first colonies, and if that were
their desire, how readily would they have excepted the advice of
President Thomas Carey, through one of his counsel Edward Porter
in the year 1710, of which you will find in Martin's History of
North Carolina a difficulty between Gov. Hyde and the above,
to-wit: "Before any relief could be sent he attempted the
landing of some of his men under fire of his brig, but they were
repulsed by the militia of the neighborhood, which Gov. Hyde had
time to collect. They returned on board, and their Chief sought
a safe retreat in the swamps of the Tar river, where he raised
his standard and endeavored to bring the Tuscarora Indians into
an alliance. For this purpose he dispatched to them Edward
Porter, one of his counsel, who endeavored by promises of great
rewards to induce them to cut off all the inhabitants of that
part of the province who adhered to Gov. Hyde. This was acceded
to by some of his young warriors, but when the matter was
debated in council the old men dissuaded them from listening to
Porter."
Now, did not some of Carey's men go afterwards to some
of the neighboring Indian nations and induced them, in the year
1710, to commit the massacre?
I suppose to the critical reader, and to the people
generally, my writing will appear to them fictitious, because of
their first impression, which has been taught them by many
historians. Historians generally have given only one side of the
story, and have avoided, as much as possible, to give the
history of the wrongs done to the Tuscarora, but they are very
scrupulous to preserve the history of the capture of Lawson, his
execution and of the massacre, which they allege to have been
committed by the Tuscarora, and are styled by many as being
inimical, haughty, jealous, warlike bloodhounds, bloodthirsty
and scarcely to be human. These are the first impressions made
by the historians upon the mind of the world. I suppose, for the
purpose of getting a general verdict, that it was right; that
they were crushed as a nation, their domain snatched from them,
driven into the cold world, and not a word has been written by
historians, or the Tuscarora themselves, to vindicate their
cause.
But with all the great tide of prejudiced feelings towards
the Tuscarora, I have ventured to write their history as I have
received it, and think it to be true.
After the massacre, and the Tuscarora heard it reported
that they were charged with being the author of the disaster,
they immediately sent messengers and denied the charge of having
officially taken any part in the disorder, but acknowledged that
a few of the reckless and lawless warriors did take part against
their admonitions, but they were willing to make all the
restoration that was in their power to do, and would fight for
them if necessary. At different times they petitioned,
remonstrated and supplicated for peace, which was slighted and
disregarded, and only produced more violence and insult.
Notice what Governor Spotswood, of Virginia, said
concerning the Tuscarora, to wit:
"On the first of the disaster I sent a detachment of
the militia to the tributary Indians of this province to prevent
them from joining in the war, and understanding that the Indians
in some of the Tuscarora towns had refused to march against the
whites, sent a messenger to invite them, with the rest of the
friendly tribes, to a conference at the Nottoway line, on the
southern border of Virginia, where he met them on the 7th of
November."
"The Governor, after entering into some conversation
with the Chiefs, had the pleasure of finding the report which
his messengers had made, from their observations while in the
Tuscarora towns, that they were very desirous of continuing in
peace, and were greatly concerned that any of their nation
should have joined in the massacre."
The Chiefs, after accounting for the delay that
occurred, expressed the desire of the Indians of their towns to
continue in strict friendship with the whites, and assist them
in chastising the authors of the late disorder.
"But now an unfortunate difference arose between the
Governor and the burgesses, the latter insisting on the passage
of a bill for raising an army in Virginia, without trusting to
the sincerity of the profession of the Tuscarora Chiefs. The
Governor refusing to accede to this proposition, and declining
to co-operate in their plans, the dispute ended by a dissolution
of the assembly."
There was at one time a treaty of peace concluded
between the Sachems and Chiefs of the Tuscarora and Governor
Spotswood, of Virginia, and one of the conditions of the treaty
was to help in chastising the authors of the late massacre. In
conformity with this pledge the Tuscarora made an attack on the
Mattamuskeet, where they obtained thirty scalps and presented
them to the authorities of the whites, of which they pretended
to be pleased. I don't doubt but that they were really pleased,
but not with any good feelings towards the Tuscarora. I suppose
the object was to get all the other Indian nations alienated
from them, so that in due time they might be easily conquered,
because they were the nation that the whites seemed bent on
destroying. The Tuscarora had faith in the treaty, but only to
disappoint them in the thought of having the dark cloud which
hung so glowingly over them taken away. It is said by historians
that the Tuscarora disregarded the treaty and began hostilities.
But I will relate a tradition, handed down from generation to
generation, which is as follows, to wit:
Some little time after the treaty concluded, several
white men went into one of their towns and said that they were
sent by the government to distribute among them an annuity of
goods in token of friendship; and also said, "In token of your
sincerity to the treaty of peace, you will all repair to a place
where there is a cord stretched out in a straight line, you must
all take hold of the line with your right hand, and all those
that refuse to take hold will be considered as hostile and will
be omitted in the distribution of the goods." They all went to
the place designated and found the cord strung out for nearly a
mile; at one end of it was a bundle covered with cloth, which,
as they supposed, contained the goods; so the unsuspecting
Indians, women and children, with eager hearts, laid hold on the
rope. When it was thought that they were in a proper position,
the white men all at once uncovered the supposed goods, which
was a large cannon, and being prepared to shoot in a line with
the cord it was at once fired and roared like thunder. In a
moment the ground along the cord was strewn with the meats of
the Tuscarora. This is one of the effects of the treaty at that
time.
I will copy a report of Governor Spotswood to the Lords
Commissioners of Trade, in the year 1711, to-wit:
"Had they," said he, "really intended to carry on the
war against the Indians, they could not have done it in a more
frugal way than by the treaty I concluded with the Tuscarora
chiefs.
"Indeed, some of that house, since the dissolution, own
more freely than they would do while sitting, that most of the
irregularities of their proceedings are owing to some rash
votes, passed without foresight, which they could not afterwards
get over without breaking the rules of their house; and so they
chose, rather, to let the country suffer than to own themselves
in an error.
"Some of the Tuscarora chiefs have lately been with
Governor Spotswood, of Virginia, and pretend a great inclination
to peace.
"They are again to be with him on the 26th of this
month; we are to send two agents to meet them there Mr. Tobias
Knight and Mayor Christophe Gale not with any expectation that
the Governor will make any treaty for us, for that would be
dishonorable to your lordship and make us appear contemptible in
the eyes of the Indians, but with a view to hear what they have
to propose."
I might quote many more passages similar to those
above, but let these few suffice to show how the Tuscarora were
treated. Now, finally, with a combination of causes, they were
in 1713, crushed and broken down as a nation, to satisfy the
inclinations of the white people, persecutions being kept up by
neighboring whites and southern Indians until June following.
The Oneida Indians, having heard of the disaster to the
Tuscarora Nation, invited them to come and make their dwelling
among them: so, accordingly, they left Carolina and took their
journey north to rejoin their sister nations.
Me think I can see them leaving their once cherished
homes the aged, the helpless, the women and children, and the
warriors faint and few the ashes are cold on their native
hearth; the smoke no more curls round their lowly cabin: they
move on with slow, unsteady steps; they turn to take a last look
upon their doomed village and cast a last glance upon the long
cherished memories of their fathers' graves. They shed no tears;
they utter no cries: they heave no groans, they linger but a
moment. They know and feel that there is for them still one more
remove further, not distant nor unseen.
One bright, sunny June morning, in the year 1813, was
one of the darkest days that the Tuscarora ever witnessed, when
most of the nation took their pace to the north until they came
within the bounds of the Oneida domain, about two miles west of
Tamaqua, in the state of Pennsylvania, where they located and
set out apple trees which can be seen to this day: some of the
trees, will measure about two feet in diameter. Here they
dwelled for about two years.
In about the year 1815, the
Iroquois, being the
Mohawk,
Onondaga,
Seneca,
Oneida and Cayuga nations, which were then called the
five nations, had a general council where the Tuscarora made an
application through their brothers the Oneida, to be admitted
into the Iroquois and become the sixth nation, on the grounds of
a common generic origin, which was granted them unanimously.
Then the Seneca adopted the Tuscarora as their children. Ever
since that time to the present, if a Seneca addresses the
Tuscarora, he will invariably salute them as "my sons," in
social or in council; and also the Tuscarora in return will say
"my fathers." The relation has always been kept up to the
present.
The Tuscarora were then initiated without enlarging the
frame-work of the confederacy and formation of the League, by
allowing them their own Sachems and Chiefs, which they had as
hereditary from their nation in the south, except on which they
gave, as the Holder of the Tree, to sit and enjoy a nominal
equality in the councils of the League, by the courtesy of the
other five nations. They were not dependent, but were admitted
to as full an equality as could be granted them without
enlarging the frame-work of the confederacy. In the councils of
the League they had no national designation. They were then
assigned a portion of the Oneidas' territory, which is lying
upon the Unadilla river on the east, the Chenango on the west,
and the Susquehanna on the south, where they dwelled and enjoyed
their peace again for about seventy years. In 1736 they numbered
200 warriors of fighting men.
Read Massacre of the German Flats, N.
Y.
The Oneida being the
original owner of the tract of land assigned to the Tuscarora as
aforesaid, were made party with the Tuscarora to the treaty made
at Fort Herkimer in the year 1785, by which it was ceded to the
State, and the Oneida took all the avails of the treaty. The
Tuscarora were then again left without a home and were partially
scattered among the other nations, although they continued to
preserve their nationality. They had some settlements, at a
later period, in Oneida Castle, called by them Gaunea-wahro-hare
(signifying head on the pole), and one in the valley of the
Genesee below Avon, called by them Ju-na-stre-yo (signifying the
beautiful valley); another settlement at Con-na-so-ra-ga, on the
line between Onondaga and Oneida; another in the fork of
Chattenango Creek, which they called Ju-ta-nea-ga (signifying
where the sun shines); and another on the Jordan Creek, which
they called Kan-ha-to (signifying limb in water). These several
places were settled at different periods, which I am not able to
give.
In the revolutionary war between the United States and
Great Britain, the Tuscarora then had their settlement at the
place allotted them by the league in 1715, between the Unadilla
River and the Chenango. They took an active part with the United
States. Many a soldier and scout of the United States, in their
fatigue and hunger, found a rest and a morsel in the rude homes
of the Tuscarora, which were ever hospitably open to them.
When the other Indians which took part with the British
knew that the Tuscarora took part with the United States, they
invaded their settlement, destroyed their property and burned
down their houses to ashes, which scattered them for a while.
There was a party that settled at Oyouwayea, or Johnson's
landing place, on lake Ontario, about four miles east of the
mouth of Niagara River, which is at the mouth of the four-mile
creek, for the purpose of getting out of the centre of the other
Indians which were for the British.
About the close of the war there were two families of
the Tuscarora hunting and fishing along the shores of lake
Ontario, and then up the east shore of Niagara River as far as
Lewiston, and there left their canoe; then traveled east and up
the mountain as far as a place which they now call the Old Saw
Mill (now on the Tuscarora Reservation), above the Ayers' farm,
where they saw great quantities of butternuts and walnuts and a
nice stream of water flowing down the mountain; there they took
their rest, and after remaining several days they concluded to
make their winter quarters at that place, which they did. After
they were missing for a time from the settlement at Johnson's
landing, they were hunted by their people and finally found at
this place. A few years after this the Oneidas and Tuscarora
ceded the tract of land that was apportioned to the Tuscarora;
then families after families came and located with those two
families mentioned above. This is the beginning of the
settlement of the present Tuscarora Reservation.
The Tuscarora, ever since the revolutionary war, have
had their residence within the territory of the Seneca nation,
they being considered the father of the Tuscarora by being
adopted as such, at the time of their initiation into the
confederacy, in the year 1715.
Read...A Treaty between the United
States of America and the Tribes of Indians called the Six
Nations
There was also a contract entered into between the
Seneca Nation of Indians of the first part, and Robert Morris.
Esq., of the city of Philadelphia, of the second part. At a
treaty held under the authority of the United States, at
Genesee, in the county of Ontario, State of New York, on the
fifteenth day of September, 1797, and on sundry days immediately
prior thereto, by the Honorable Jeremiah Wadsworth. Esq., a
commissioner appointed by the President of the United States to
hold the same, when the Seneca ceded the country that included
the now Tuscarora Reservation. The Tuscarora then and there made
their complaint by their chiefs, for the first since they were
initiated into the confederacy of the Iroquois; in the presence
of the commissioner and the others that are parties to the
treaty; that the Iroquois had from time to time allotted them
lands and had been ceded each time by the Iroquois, without
giving them a farthing to remunerate them for their portion of
the lands so ceded, or for the improvements that they had made,
and asked if they were to be driven in this manner from place to
place all the days of their existence, and if that is the way a
father should use their children or brothers should use their
brothers, and to keep them living in disappointment; they also
alluded to a treaty concluded at Fort Stanwix three years before
this, where the commissioners of the United States reserved to
them land, which read as follows:
Article II. The Oneida and Tuscarora Nations shall be
secured in the possession of the lands on which they are
settled."
The commissioner then inquired into the merits of the
complaint of the Tuscarora, which the Iroquois affirmed; the
commissioner then said to them, that it is not right to make a
contract, or to grant anything without faith; it is only
honorable when you adhere to your stipulation.
When Robert Morris knew that the Tuscarora were
destitute of land, he reserved and donated to them two square
miles being 1280 acres; the Seneca also granted to them one
square mile being 640 acres, which grant was made at the
convention dated above. On the 13th day of March, 1808, the
sachems, chiefs and head men of the Seneca Nation of Indians
executed a written indenture of the grant or deed to the
Tuscarora Nation, of the one square mile of land above
mentioned, and was duly signed by the sachems, chiefs and head
men of the aforesaid Indians. On the 22d day of September, 1810,
it was entered and put on file in the Niagara County Clerk's
office, on page 56; and was again put on file in the Niagara
County Clerk's Office, Lockport, in book of deeds 151, page 168,
March 13, 1879.
About the year 1800, Solomon Longbard and his brother
held private council between themselves, consulting how they
might obtain more land to make a permanent home for the
Tuscarora and their generation after them, they concluded to
repair to North Carolina and see if they could procure any means
from that source, whereby they might obtain more land. In
pursuance, the Tuscarora Chiefs in council appointed as
delegates Solomon Longboard and Sacarrissa, being sachems of the
nation in the year 1801, and in 1802 they effected a lease by
the aid of the Legislature of North Carolina, from which accrued
$13,722; and in the year 1804, General Dearborn, then Secretary
of War, was authorized by Congress to buy land for the Tuscarora
with the said money, by which he bought 4,329 acres of the
Holland Land Company, which is now on the south and east side of
the three square miles mentioned above, which now constitutes
the
Tuscarora Reservation.
The Tuscarora Nation was once more at peace and in
possession of lands which they could call their own.
Indian
Treaties | Massacre of the German
Flats | Seneca Lands
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