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New Jersey
Indian Tribes
Delaware. The name is derived from that of Delaware
River, which in turn, was named for Lord Delaware, second governor of
Virginia. Also called:
Abnaki or Wabanaki, "Easterners," from their position relative to many
other Algonquian tribes. (See Abnaki under Maine, Wampanoag under
Massachusetts, and Wappinger under New York.)
A-ko-tca-ka'nlsn, "One who stammers in his speech," the Mohawk name.
The Oneida and Tuscarora names were similar.
Anakwaneki, Cherokee name, an attempt at Wabanaki.
Lenni Lenape (their own name), meaning "true men," or "standard men."
Loup, "wolf," so called by the French.
Mochomes, "grandfather," name given by those Algonquian tribes which
claimed descent from them.
Nar-wah-ro, Wichita name.
Renni Renape, a form of Lenni Lenape.
Tca-ka'nen, shortened form of Mohawk name given above. (The names
in the languages of the other four Iroquois tribes are about the same).
Connections. The Delaware
belonged to the Algonquian linguistic stock, their closest relatives being
the Nanticoke, Conoy, and Powhatan Indians to the south and the Mahican,
Wappinger, and southern New England Indians on the north. The dialect of
the northernmost of their major divisions, the Munsee, differed
considerably from that of the southern groups.
Location. The Delaware
occupied all of the State of New Jersey, the western end of Long Island,
all of Staten and Manhattan Islands and neighboring parts of the mainland,
along with other portions of New York west of the Hudson, and parts of
eastern Pennsylvania, and northern Delaware. (See also
Delaware,
Illinois,
Indiana,
Kansas, Maryland and the
District of Columbia,
Missouri,
New York,
Ohio, Pennsylvania,
Oklahoma, and the Munsee under Kansas,
Oklahoma, and Wisconsin.)
Subdivisions
There were three major divisions or subtribes, the Munsee
in northern New Jersey and adjacent portions of New York west of the
Hudson, the Unalachtigo in northern Delaware, southeastern Pennsylvania,
and southern New Jersey, and the Unami in the intermediate territory,
extending to the western end of Long Island. Each comprised a great many
minor divisions which it is not always easy to classify under the three
main heads.
As Munsee may probably be reckoned the following:
Catskill, on Catskill Creek, Greene County, N. Y.
Mamekoting, in Mamakating Valley, west of the Shawangunk Mountains, N. Y.
Minisink, on the headwaters of Delaware River in the southwestern part of
Ulster
and Orange Counties, N. Y., and the adjacent parts of New Jersey and
Pennsylvania.
Waranawonkong, in the country watered by the Esopus, Wallkill, and
Shawangunk Creeks, mainly in Ulster County, N. Y.
Wawarsink, centered about the junction of Wawarsing and Rondout Creeks,
Ulster County, N. Y.
We may class as Unami the
following:
Aquackanonk, on Passaic River, N. J., and lands back from it including the
tract called Dundee in Passsaic.
Assunpink, on Stony Creek near Trenton.
Axion, on the eastern bank of Delaware River between Rancocas Creek and
Trenton.
Calcefar, in the interior of New Jersey between Rancocas Creek and
Trenton.
Canarsee, in Kings County, Long Island, on the southern end of Manhattan
Island, and the eastern end of Staten Island, N. Y.
Gachwechnagechga, on Lehigh River, Pa.
Hackensack, in the valleys of Hackensack and Passaic Rivers.
Haverstraw, on the western bank of the lower Hudson, in Rockland County,
N. Y.
Meletecunk, in Monmouth County.
Mosilian, on the eastern bank of Delaware River about Trenton.
Navasink, on the highlands of Navesink, claiming the land from Barnegat to
the Raritan.
Pompton, on Pompton Creek.
Raritan, in the valley of Raritan River and on the left bank of Delaware
River as far down as the falls at Trenton.
Beckgawawane, on the upper part of Manhattan Island and the adjacent
mainland of New York west of the Bronx.
Tappan, on the western bank of Hudson River in Rockland County, N. Y., and
Bergen County.
Waoranec, near Esopus Creek, Ulster County, N. Y.
The following may be considered
as Unalachtigo, though I am in some doubt about the Neshamini:
Amimenipaty, at site of a large pigment plant of the Du Pont Company at
Edgemoor, Del.
Asomoche, on the eastern bank of Delaware River between Salem and Camden.
Chikohoki, at site of Crane Brook Church, on west side of Delaware River
near its junction with the Christanna River.
Eriwonec, about Old Man's Creek in Salem or Gloucester County.
Hopokohacking, on site now occupied by Wilmington, Del. Kahansuk, about
Low Creek, Cumberland County.
Manta, about Salem Creek.
Memankitonna, on the present site of Claymont, Del., on Naaman's Creek.
Nantuxet, in Pennsylvania and Delaware.
Naraticon, in southern New Jersey, probably on Raccoon Creek. Neshamini,
on Neshaminy Creek, Bucks County, Pa.
Okahoki, on Ridley and Crum Creeks, Delaware County, Pa.
Passayonk, on Schuylkill River, Pa., and along the western bank of
Delaware River, perhaps extending into Delaware.
Shackamaxon, on the site of Kensington, Philadelphia, Pa.
Siconesse, on the eastern bank of Delaware River a short distance above
Salem. Tirans, on the northern shore of Delaware Bay about Cape May or in
Cumberland
County.
Yacomanshaghking, on a small stream about the present Camden.
Villages
It will not be practicable to
separate the villages belonging to the three great divisions in all cases.
The following are entered in the Handbook of American Indians (Hodge,
1907, 1910)
Achsinnink, Unalachtigo village on Hocking River, Ohio, about 1770.
Ahasimus, probably Unami, in northern New Jersey.
Alamingo, a village, probably Delaware, on Susquehanna River.
Allaquippa, possible name of a settlement at the mouth of the Youghiogheny
River, Pa., in 1755.
Anderson's Town, on the south side of White River about Anderson, Ind.
Au Glaize, on a southeastern branch of Maumee River, Ohio.
Bald Eagle's Nest, on the right bank of Bald Eagle Creek near Milesburg,
Pa. Beaversville, near the junction of Buggy Creek and Canadian River,
Okla. Beavertown, on the east side of the extreme eastern head branch of
Hocking River near Beavertown, Ohio.
Black Hawk, probably Delaware, about Mount Auburn, Shelby County, Ind.
Black Leg's Village, probably Delaware, on the north bank of Conemaugh
River in the southeastern part of Armstrong County, Pa.
Buckstown, probably Delaware, on the southeast side of White River, about
3 miles east of Anderson, Ind.
Bulletta Town, probably Delaware, in Coshocton County, Ohio, on Muskingum
River about halfway between Walhonding River and Tomstown.
Cashiehtunk, probably Munsee, on Delaware River near the point where it is
met by the New Jersey State line.
Catawaweshink, probably Delaware, on or near Susquehanna River, near Big
Island, Pa.
Chikohoki, a Manta village on the site of Burlington, Burlington County,
N. J. Chilohocki, probably Delaware, on Miami River, Ohio.
Chinklacamoose, probably Delaware, on the site of Clearfield, Pa.
Clistowacka, near Bethlehem, Pa.
Communipaw, village of the Hackensack, at Communipaw. Conemaugh, probably
Delaware, about Conemaugh, Pa. Coshocton, on the site of Coshocton, Ohio.
Crossweeksung, in Burlington County, probably about Crosswicks.
Custaloga's Town, Unalachtigo, two villages, one near French Creek,
opposite Franklin, Pa., the other on Walhonding River, near Killbucks
Creek in Coshocton County, Ohio.
Edgpiiliik, in western New Jersey.
Eriwonec, about Old Man's Creek in Salem or Gloucester County.
Frankstown, probably Delaware, about Frankstown, Pa.
Friedenshütten, a Moravian mission
town on Susquehanna River a few miles below Wyalusing, probably in Wyoming
County, Pa.
Friedensstadt, in Beaver County, Pa., probably near Darlington.
Gekelemukpechuenk, in Ohio, and perhaps identical with White Eyes' Town.
Gnadenhütten, three Moravian Mission
villages, one on the north side of Mahoning Creek near its junction with
the Lehigh about the present Lehighton; a second on the site of Weissport,
Carbon County, Pa.; and a third on the Muskingum River near the present
Gnadenhutten, Ohio. (Brinton (1885) says there were two more towns of the
same name.)
Goshgoshunk, with perhaps some Seneca, on Allegheny River about the upper
part of Venango County, Pa.
Grapevine Town, perhaps Delaware, 8 miles up Captina River, Belmont
County, Ohio.
Greentown, on the Black Fork of Mohican River near the boundary of
Richland and Ashland Counties, Ohio.
Gweghkongh, probably Unami, in northern New Jersey, near Staten Island, or
on the neighboring New York mainland.
Hespatingh, probably Unami, apparently in northern New Jersey, and perhaps
near Bergen or Union Hill.
Hickorytown, probably about East Hickory or West Hickory, Pa. Hockhocken,
on Hocking River, Ohio.
Hogstown, between Venango and Buffalo Creek, Pa., perhaps identical with
Kuskuski.
Jacobs Cabins, probably Delaware, on Youghiogheny River, perhaps near
Jacobs Creek, Fayette County, Pa.
Jeromestown, near Jeromesville, Ohio.
Kalbauvane, probably' Delaware, on the headwaters of the west branch of
Susquehanna River, Pa.
Kanestio, Delaware and other Indians, on the upper Susquehanna River, near
Kanestio Creek in Steuben County, N. Y.
Kanhangton, about the mouth of Chemung River in the northern part of
Bradford County, Pa.
Katamoonchink, perhaps the name of a Delaware village near West Whiteland,
Chester County, Pa.
Kickenapawling, probably Delaware and Iroquois, at the junction of Stony
Creek with Conemaugh River, approximately on the site of Johnstown, Pa.
Kiktheswemud, probably Delaware, near Anderson, Ind., perhaps identical
with Buckstown or Little Munsee Town.
Killbuck's Town, on the east side of Killbuck Creek, about 10 miles south
of Wooster, Ohio.
Kishakoquilla, two towns successively occupied by a chief of the name, one
about Kishacoquillas, Mifflin County, Pa., the other on French Creek about
7 miles below Meadville, Crawford County, Pa.
Kiskiminetas, on the south side of lower Kiskiminetas Creek, near its
mouth, Westmoreland County, Pa.
Kiskominitoes, on the north bank of Ohio River between the Hocking and
Scioto Rivers, Ohio.
Kittanning, divided into several settlements and mixed with Iroquois and
Caughnawaga, near Kittanning on Allegheny River, Armstrong County, Pa.
Kohhokking, near "Painted Post" in Steuben County, N. Y., or Elmira,
Chemung County, N. Y.
Kuskuski, with Iroquois, on Beaver Creek, near Newcastle, in Lawrence
County, Pa.
Languntennenk, Moravian Delaware near Darlington, Beaver County, Pa.
Lawunkhannek, Moravian Delaware on Allegheny River above Franklin, Venango
County, Pa.
Lichtenau, Moravian Delaware on the east side of Muskingum River, 3 miles
below Coshocton, Ohio.
Little Munsee Town, Munsee, a few miles east of Anderson, Ind.
Macharienkonck, Minisink, in the bend of Delaware River, Pike County, Pa.,
opposite Port Jervis.
Macocks, some distance north of Chikohoki, which was probably at
Wilmington, Del., perhaps the village of the Okahoki in Pennsylvania.
Mahoning, on the west bank of Mahoning River, perhaps between Warren and
Youngstown, Ohio.
Mechgachkamic, perhaps Unami, probably near Hackensack, N. J. Meggeckessou,
on Delaware River at Trenton Falls, N. J. Meniolagomeka, on Aquanshicola
Creek, Carbon County, Pa.
Meochkonck, Minisink, on the upper Delaware River in southeastern New
York. Minisink, Minisink, in Sussex County, N. J., near where the State
line crosses Delaware River.
Munceytown, Munsee, on Thames River northwest of Brantford, Ontario,
Canada. Muskingum, probably Delaware, on the west bank of Muskingum River,
Ohio.
Nain, Moravian Indians, principally Delaware, near Bethlehem, Pa.
Newcomerstown, village of Chief Newcomer, about the site of New Comerstown,
Tuscarawas County, Ohio.
Newtown, the name of three towns probably of the Delaware and Iroquois,
one on the north bank of Licking River, near the site of the present
Zanesville, Ohio; a second about the site of Newtown, Ohio; and a third on
the west side of Wills Creek near the site of Cambridge, Ohio.
Nyack, probably Canarsee, about the site of Fort Hamilton, Kings County,
Long Island, afterward removed to Staten Island.
Nyack, Unami probably, on the west bank of Hudson River about the present
Nyack, N. Y.
Ostonwackin, with Cayuga, Oneida, and other Indians, on the site of the
present Montoursville, Pa.
Outaunink, Munsee, on the north bank of White River, opposite Muncie, Ind.
Owl's Town, probably Delaware, on Mohican River, Coshocton County, Ohio.
Pakadasank, probably Munsee, about the site of Crawford, Orange County, N.
Y.
Papagonk, probably Munsee, in Ulster County, N. Y., also placed near
Pepacton, Delaware County, N. Y.
Passycotcung, on Chemung River, N. Y.
Peckwes, Munsee or Shawnee, about 10 miles from Hackensack.
Pematuning, probably Delaware, near Shenango, Pa.
Pequottink, Moravian Delaware, on the east bank of Huron River, near
Milan, Ohio.
Playwickey, probably Unalachtigo, in Bucks County, Pa.
Pohkopophunk, in eastern Pennsylvania, probably in Carbon County.
Queenashawakee, on the upper Susquehanna River, Pa.
Raincock, Rancocas, in Burlington County.
Raystown, (?).
Remahenonc, perhaps Unami, near New York City.
Roymount, near Cape May.
Salem, Moravian Delaware, on the west bank of Tuscarawas River, 1˝
miles southwest of Port Washington, Tuscarawas County, Ohio.
Salt Lick, probably Delaware, on Mahoning River near Warren, Ohio.
Sawcunk, with Shawnee and Mingo, near the mouth of Beaver Creek, about the
site of the present Beaver, Pa.
Sawkin, on the east bank of Delaware River in New Jersey.
Schepinaikonck, Minisink, perhaps in Orange County, N. Y.
Schipston, probably Delaware, at the head of Juniata River, Pa.
Schoenbrunn, Moravian Munsee, about 2 miles below the site of New
Philadelphia, Ohio.
Seven Houses, near the ford of Beaver Creek just above its mouth, Beaver
County, Pa.
Shackamaxon, on the site of Kensington, Philadelphia, Pa.
Shamokin, with Shawnee, Iroquois, and Tutelo, on north sides of
Susquehanna River including the island at the site of Sunbury, Pa.
Shannopin's Town, on Allegheny River about 2 miles above its junction with
the Monongahela.
Shenango, with other tribes, the name of several towns, one on the north
bank of Ohio River a little below Economy, Pa.; one at the junction of
Conewango and the Allegheny; and one some distance up Big Beaver, near
Kuskuski (q. v.).
Sheshequin, with Iroquois, about 6 miles below Tioga Point, Bradford
County, Pa. Soupnapka, on the east bank of Delaware River in New Jersey.
Three Legs Town, named from a chief, on the east bank of Muskingum River a
few miles south of the mouth of the Tuscarawas, Coshocton County, Ohio.
Tioga, with Nanticoke, Mahican, Saponi, Tutelo, etc., on the site of
Athens, Pa.
Tom's Town, on Scioto River, a short distance below the present
Chillicothe and near the mouth of Paint Creek, Ohio.
Tullihas, with Mahican and Caughnawaga, on the west branch of Muskingum
River, Ohio, about 20 miles above the forks.
Tuscarawas, with Wyandot, on Tuscarawas River, Ohio, near the mouth of Big
Sandy River.
Venango, with Seneca, Shawnee, Wyandot, Ottawa, etc., at the site of
Franklin, Venango County, Pa.
Wechquetank, Moravian Delaware, about 8 miles beyond the Blue Ridge,
northwest from Bethlehem, Pa., probably near the present Mauch Chunk.
Wekeeponall, on the west bank of the Susquehanna River, about the mouth of
Loyalstock Creek in Lycoming County, Pa., probably identical with Queen
Esther's Town.
Walagamika, on the site of Nazareth, Lehigh County, Pa.
White-eyes Village, named from a chief, on the site of Duncan's Falls, 9
miles below Zanesville, Ohio.
White Woman's Town, near the junction of Walhonding and Killbuck Rivers,
about 7 miles northwest of the forks of the Muskingum River, in Coshocton
County, Ohio.
Will's Town, on the east bank of Muskingum River at the mouth of Wills
Creek,
Muskingum County, Ohio.
Woapikamikunk, in the valley of White River, Ind.
Wyalusing, Munsee and Iroquois, on the site of Wyalusing, Bradford County,
Pa. Wyoming, with Iroquois, Shawnee, Mahican, and Nanticoke; later
entirely Delaware and Munsee; principal settlement at the site of
Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
History. The traditional
history of the Delaware set forth in the famous Walam Olum (see Brinton,
1882-85, vol. 5), gave them an origin somewhere northwest of their later
habitat. They were found by the earliest white voyagers in the historic
seats above given. The Dutch came into contact with the Unami and Munsee
Delaware in 1609 and the Swedes with the Unalachtigo in 1637. Both were
succeeded by the English in 1664, but the most notable event in Delaware
history took place in 1682 when these Indians held their first council
with William Penn at what is now Germantown, Philadelphia. About 1720 the
Iroquois assumed dominion over them and they were gradually crowded west
by the white colonists, reaching the Allegheny as early as 1724, and
settling at Wyoming and other points on the Susquehanna about 1742. In
1751, by invitation of the Huron, they began to form villages in eastern
Ohio, and soon the greater part of them were on the Muskingum and other
Ohio streams. Backed by the French and by other western tribes, they now
freed themselves from Iroquois control and opposed the English settlers
steadily until the treaty of Greenville in 1795. Notable missionary work
was done among them by the Moravians in the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries. About 1770 they received permission from the
Miami and
Piankashaw to settle
between the Ohio and White Rivers, Ind. In 1789, by permission of the
Spanish government, a part moved to Missouri and later to Arkansas, along
with a band of Shawnee, and by 1820 they had found their way to Texas. By
1835 most of the bands had been gathered on a reservation in Kansas, but
in 1867 the greater part of these removed to the present Oklahoma, where
some of them occupied a corner of the Cherokee Nation. Others are with the
Caddo and Wichita in southwestern Oklahoma, a few Munsee are with the
Stockbridges in Wisconsin, and some are scattered in other parts of the
United States.
In Ontario, Canada, are three bands, the Delawares of
Grand River, near Hagersville; the Moravians of the Thames, near Bothwell;
and the Munceys of the Thames, near Muncey nearly all of whom are of the
Munsee division.
Population. Mooney (1928)
estimates that there were 8,000 Delaware in 1600 not including the
Canarsee of Long Island; estimates made during the eighteenth century vary
between 2,400 and 3,000; nineteenth-century estimates are much lower; and
the United States Census of 1910 returned 914 Delawares and 71 Munsee, or
a total of 985, to which must be added the bands in Canada, making perhaps
1,600 all together. 140 Delaware were reported on the Wichita Reservation,
Okla., in 1937.
Connection in which they have
become noted. The Delaware are noted as one of the very few tribes
which have come to be known by an English term, and as one of the chief
antagonists of the Whites while the latter were forcing their way
westward, but in later years as furnishing the most reliable scouts in
White employ. A different sort of fame has been attained by one of their
early chiefs, Tamenend,
whose name, in the form Tammany, was applied to a philanthropic society, a
place of meeting, and a famous political organization. Delaware chiefs
signed the famous treaty with Penn under the oak at Shackamaxon, and their
tribes occupied Manhattan Island and the shores of New York Harbor at the
arrival of the Dutch. The name Delaware has been used for postoffices in
Arkansas, Iowa, Kentucky, Missouri, New Jersey, Ohio, and Oklahoma,
besides the State of Delaware. Lenape is a post village in Leavenworth
County, Kans., and Lenapah in Nowata County, Okla.
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