Signed in as:
filler@godaddy.com
Signed in as:
filler@godaddy.com
Approximately 12,600 years ago ice glaciers had receded from the area that became Pennsylvania, and about 10,000 years ago (8000 B.C.) a period of warming began in which the rivers and coastlines of Pennsylvania started to take their modern form. The earliest known human remains have been found at the Meadowcroft Rockshelter, thirty miles southwest of Pittsburgh. They are evidence of a food gathering culture in operation probably between 12,000 and 14,000 years ago.
When first discovered by Europeans, Pennsylvania, like the rest of the continent, was inhabited by groups of people of Mongoloid ancestry long known as American Indians. Today they are proudly designated the Native Americans. The culture reflected their Stone Age background, especially in material arts and crafts. Tools, weapons, and household equipment were made from stone, wood, and bark. Transportation was on foot or by canoe. Houses were made of bark, clothing from the skins of animals. The rudiments of a more complex civilization were at hand in the arts of weaving, pottery, and agriculture, although hunting and food gathering prevailed. Some Indians formed confederacies such as the League of the Five Nations, which was made up of certain New York-Pennsylvania groups of Iroquoian speech. The other large linguistic group in Pennsylvania was the Algonkian, represented by the Delawares (or Lenape), Shawnees, and other tribes.
The Lenape or Delawares, calling themselves Leni-Lenape or "real men, originally occupied the basin of the Delaware River and were the most important of several tribes that spoke an Algonkian language. Under the pressure of white settlement, they began to drift westward to the Wyoming Valley, to the Allegheny and, finally, to eastern Ohio. Many of them took the French side in the French and Indian War, joined in Pontiac's War, and fought on the British side in the Revolutionary War. Afterward, some fled to Ontario and the rest wandered westward. Their descendants now live on reservations in Oklahoma and Ontario. The Munsees were a division of the Delawares who lived on the upper Delaware River, above the Lehigh River.
The Susquehannocks were a powerful Iroquoian-speaking tribe who lived along the Susquehanna in Pennsylvania and Maryland. An energetic people living in Algonkian-speaking tribes' territory, they engaged in many wars. In the end, they fell victim to new diseases brought by European settlers, and to attacks by Marylanders and by the Iroquois, which destroyed them as a nation by 1675. A few descendants were among the Conestoga Indians who were massacred in 1763 in Lancaster County.
The Shawnees were an important Algonkian-speaking tribe who came to Pennsylvania from the west in the 1690s, some groups settling on the lower Susquehanna and others with the Munsees near Easton. In the course of time they moved to the Wyoming Valley and the Ohio Valley, where they joined other Shawnees who had gone there directly. They were allies of the French in the French and Indian War and of the British in the Revolution, being almost constantly at war with settlers for forty years preceding the Treaty of Greenville in 1795. After Wayne's victory at Fallen Timbers (1794), they settled near the Delawares in Indiana, and their descendants now live in Oklahoma.
The Iroquois Confederacy of Iroquoian-speaking tribes, at first known as the Five Nations, included the Mohawks, Oneidas, Onondagas, Cayugas, and Senecas. After about 1723, when the Tuscaroras from the South were admitted to the confederacy, it was called the Six Nations. The five original tribes, when first known to Europeans, held much of New York State from Lake Champlain to the Genesee River. From this central position they gradually extended their power. As middlemen in the fur trade with the western Indian nations, as intermediaries skilled in dealing with the whites, and as the largest single group of Native Americans in northeastern America, they gained influence over Indian tribes from Illinois and Lake Michigan to the eastern seaboard. During the colonial wars their alliance or their neutrality was eagerly sought by both the French and the British. The Senecas, the westernmost tribe, established villages on the upper Allegheny in the 1730s. Small groups of Iroquois also scattered westward into Ohio and became known as Mingoes. During the Revolution, most of the Six Nations took the British side, but the Oneidas and many Tuscaroras were pro-American. Gen. John Sullivan's expedition up the Susquehanna River and Gen. Daniel Brodhead's expedition up the Allegheny River laid waste to their villages and cornfields in 1779 and disrupted their society. Many who had fought for the British moved to Canada after the Revolution, but the rest worked out peaceful relations with the United States under the leadership of such chiefs as Cornplanter. The General Assembly recognized this noted chief by granting him a tract of land on the upper Allegheny in 1791.
Other Tribes, which cannot be identified with certainty, occupied western Pennsylvania before the Europeans arrived, but were eliminated by wars and diseases in the seventeenth century, long before the Lenapes, Shawnees, and Senecas began to move there. The Eries, a great Iroquoian-speaking tribe, lived along the south shore of Lake Erie but were wiped out by the Iroquois about 1654. The Mahicans, an Algonkian-speaking tribe related to the Mohegans of Connecticut, lived in the upper Hudson Valley of New York but were driven out by pressure from the Iroquois and from the white settlers, some joining the Lenapes in the Wyoming Valley about 1730 and some settling at Stockbridge, Massachusetts. Two Algonkian-speaking tribes, the Conoys and the Nanticokes, moved northward from Maryland early in the eighteenth century, settling in southern New York, and eventually moved westward with the Delawares, with whom they merged. The Saponis, Siouan-speaking tribes from Virginia and North Carolina, moved northward to seek Iroquois protection and were eventually absorbed into the Cayugas. In the latter part of the eighteenth century there were temporary villages of Wyandots, Chippewas, Mississaugas, and Ottawas in western Pennsylvania.
Click on the image, above, to learn more from the PA HIstorical & Museum Commission.
Courtesy of https://www.co.elk.pa.us/index.php/about-elk-county: Elk County's first inhabitants were presumed to be the Seneca or Cornplanter Indians. Ruins of Indians forts have been found near Russell City in Highland Township. Another Indian earthwork possibly could be situated in Jones Township. The old Kittanning Indian Trial, the most direct route from Olean, New York to Kittanning, passes through western Elk County.
March 4, 1681
According to The History of Butler County - 1883,
It is commonly but erroneously supposed that Pennsylvania was so named by her founder in honor of himself. As a matter of fact, PENN wished to call his province New Wales, but the King (Charles II) objected. PENN then, in view of the fact that the country was heavily timbered, proposed the name of Sylvania. The King agreed to this as a portion of the title, and prefixed Penn, to do honor to the memory of the distinguished Admiral, the father of William PENN. The Admiral at the time of his death had claims against the Crown amounting to £16,000. It was in liquidation of these claims that the title to all of the lands in the charter limits of Pennsylvania was vested in William PENN. The charter conveying the magnificent province, dated March 4, 1681, is the foundation of all land titles in the State.
The province contained, as a calculation shows, about thirty-five million three hundred and sixty-one thousand and six hundred acres. The final adjustment of the charter boundaries with Maryland, Virginia and New York did not take place until after the lapse of many years. PENN's immense landed estate yielded him little revenue, and, indeed, he became pecuniarily embarrassed. He died in 1718, after a busy and useful life, but one full of mental disquietude. By his will, made in 1712, he devised his lands, rents, etc., in America to his wife Hannah, in trust, to dispose of so much as was necessary to pay his debts, and then to convey 40,000 acres to William PENN, Jr., his son by a former wife, and the rest of the vast estate to his children by his second wife. The title was vested in them until 1778, when it was assumed by the State or colony.
PENN, after he had secured his grant from the King, issued proposals for the sale of lands in the province, and a large number of purchasers from London, Liverpool and Bristol soon applied to him for land.
The first Indian purchase after the charter was made by William MARKHAM, a relative of the proprietor, in July, 1682, and secured the right to a small territory about commensurate with the present county of Bucks. In 1683, 1684, and 1685, deeds were executed for small parcels of land west of the Schylkill and on the Susquehanna. In 1686, the deed for the much disputed "Walking Purchase," of which one of the boundaries was "as far as a man can go in one day and a half," is said to have been obtained. Other relinquishments were made by the Indians in 1696 and subsequent years, but the lands freed from their claim prior to 1718 were of comparatively small extent. The most important relinquishments of the title of the aborigines by deeds and treaties, were in 1736, 1749, 1754, 1768 and 1784.
It is with the last of these, "the Last Purchase," that we are most concerned.
The Indian title to the land northwest of the Allegheny River was extinguished by the treaty of Fort Stanwix in 1784. Since the year 1768, when the first treaty of Fort Stanwix was made ("the First Purchase"), the northwestern boundary of Indian purchases in the State ran from the Susquehanna, on the New York line, to Towanda Creek; thence to the head of Pine Creek (Lycoming County) thence to its mouth, and up the West Branch to its source; thence over to Kittanning and down the Allegheny and the Ohio to the west line of the State.
The purchase of 1784, as it is denominated, included all of the lands in the State northwest of this boundary, except the "triangle" in Erie County, embracing the whole of the present counties of Butler, Clarion, Jefferson, Elk, Cameron, Potter, McKean, Warren, Forrest, Venango, Crawford, Mercer and Lawrence, and parts of the counties of Beaver, Erie, Allegheny, Armstrong, Indiana, Clearfield, Clinton, Lycoming, Tioga and Bradford.
Distinguished men represented the United States at the treaty -- Richard BUTLER, Oliver WOLCOTT and Arthur LEE; Gen. LAFAYETTE was present. The Mohawks, Onondagas, Senecas, Cayugas, Tuscaroras and Seneca-O'beal tribes -- the six nations -- were represented by the leading chieftains, among them CORNPLANTER and RED JACKET. The later was opposed to peace, and made a war speech which LAFAYETTTE said was a "a masterpiece, and very warrior who heard him was carried away with his eloquence." CORNPLANTER saw the folly of waging a war single handed against the whole power of the Confederacy, and exerted all of his power for peace. He sought, however, to avoid a definite treaty without the concurrence of the western tribes. The Commissioners refused to listen to any delay, and, after a long conference, the treaty was signed upon the 22d of October.
The leading provisions of The Treaty With The Six Nations: 1784 were:
Six hostages shall be immediately delivered to the commissioners, by the said nations, to remain in possession of the United States, until all the prisoners, white and black, which were taken by the Senecas, Mohawks, Onondags and Cayugas, or by any of them, in the late war, from among the citizens of the United States, shall be delivered up.
The Oneida and Tuscarora nations shall be secured in the possession of the lands on which they are settled.
The line shall be drawn, beginning at the mouth of a creek about four miles east of Niagara, called Oyonwayea, or Johnson's Landing Place, upon the lake, named by the Indians Oswego and by us Ontario; from thence southerly, in a direction always four miles east of the carrying path, between Lake Erie and Ontario, to the mouth of Tehoseroron, or Buffalo Creek of Lake Erie; thence south, to the north boundary of the State of Pennsylvania; thence west to the end of the said north boundary; thence south along the west boundary of the said State to the River Ohio; the said line from the mouth of the Oyonwayea to the Ohio shall be the western boundary of the lands of the Six Nations; so that the Six Nations shall, and do, yield to the United States, all claims to the country west of the said boundary; and then they shall be secured in the peaceful possession of the lands they inhabit, east and north of the same, reserving only six miles square, around the fort of Oswego, to the United States, for the support of the same.
The Commissioners of the United States, in consideration of the present circumstances of the Six Nations, and in execution of the present circumstances of the Six Nations, and in execution of the humane and liberal views of the Untied States, upon the signing of these articles, will order goods to be delivered to the Six Nations for their own use and comfort.*
*ALBACH's Annals of the West
All of the lands within the charter limits of the State were released from Indian title within a period of one hundred and two years (1682 to 1784), and the Commonwealth became possessed of the ownership. *
* What is known as "the triangle" -- the northern part of Erie County, was not within the charter boundaries of the province. This tract, containing an area of 202,187 acres was by the cessions of New York in 1781, by Massachusetts in 1785, and by Connecticut in 1786, left out of the jurisdiction of any particular State. Gen. IRVINE, while surveying the donation lands of Northwestern Pennsylvania, discovered that the northern (charter) boundary of the State would strike Lake Erie, so as to leave but a few miles of lake coast, and that without a harbor in the State. In consequence of his representation, a movement was set on foot to secure from the Indians and the United States, the cession of "the triangle." Its acquisition by Pennsylvania was secured in 1792.
For reference purposes, see the Historical Pennsylvania Map with Indian Names and Purchases in the IUP@Belltown Map Room.
Copyright © 2024 CAMP - All Rights Reserved.
Powered by GoDaddy
We use cookies to analyze website traffic and optimize your website experience. By accepting our use of cookies, your data will be aggregated with all other user data.