|
Page 18
HISTORY OF CLEARFIELD COUNTY.
sions. That portion of the Lenapes that reached and occupied the Atlantic slope,
became in time divided into three clans, or smaller tribes, to wit: The Unamis
or Turtle tribe, Unalachtgo or Turkey tribe, and the Minsi or Wolf tribe,
otherwise known as Monsey or Muncy. The Wolf or Monseys, being more warlike and
fierce than the other tribes, occupied the territory farthest
inland, that they might defend the border against any depredations of the Mengwe,
who, although they engaged with the Lenapes against their common enemy, the
Allegewi, were still distrusted by them on account of the doubtful interest they
took in the war on the Mississippi. The possession of the Lenapes extended from
the Hudson southwest, including the Susquehanna valley and the valley of the
Juniata. The three principal tribes, Turtle, Turkey, and Minsi, of the Lenapes,
were afterward sub-divided into other tribes or clans, each assuming a seperate
name, as locality or circumstances might suggest. Some of these
subordinate tribes were known as the Shawnee, the Susquehannas, the Nanticokes,
the Neshamines.
The Mengwe became, in course of time, separated into
five distinct tribes, and were severally known as follows: Mohawks, Oneidas,
Onondagas, Cayugas, and Senecas. Although their main line of possessions hovered
along the borders of the Great Lakes, their hunting ground reached many miles
inland, and they frequently came in contact with the Lenapes of whom they were
jealous, and they endeavored to arouse hostilities among the various tribes of
the Lenapes, but in this they were unsuccessful. The Lenapes were the stronger
and more powerful in point of numbers, and this fact was well known to the
Mengwe. They dare not attack them nor wage war against them, nor was their
border as carefully and strongly guarded as that of the Lenapes, with the Minsi
on their frontier. Having failed in every attempt either to create dissension
among the various Lenape sub-tribes, or lead them from their well defended
border, the Mengwe called together their several tribes for the pur-
pose of effecting a union for aggressive and defensive warfare. This council
having met, it resulted in the creation of that great branch of Indian
government known as the Five Nations. By the French they were known as the
Iroquois; by the Dutch, Maquas, and by the English, Mingoes. In general, this
confederacy was known as the Iroquois Nation. and thus the most skilled
historians have been content to designate it. It should be borne in mind,
however, that the name "Iroquois: was never used by the Confederates themselves.
It was first used by the French, and its precise meaning is veiled in
uncertainty. The men of the Confederacy called themselves "Hedonosaunee," which
means literally, "They form a cabin," describing in this manner the
close union existing among them. The Indian name just above quoted, is more
liberally and commonly rendered, "The People of the Long House," which is more
full in description, though not so accurate in translation. The central and
unique characteristic of the Iroquois league was not the mere fact
|
|