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Deamhout, 470.

Dean, Capt. George, master of the
"Vengeance," 48-49; letter Feb.
1779, 50-51; chased by the "Uni-
corn," 52; letter from Savannah,

Mch. 1779, 53-55; letter, May 1779.
59-61; wounded, 66; last cruise,
69-71.

Dean, James, 476, 478.

"Deane," frigate, "Unicorn" mistaken
for, 52.

Dearborn, H., 535, note.
De Bartych.

See Barge, D. de.
DeCouagne, J. B. See Couagne, Jean
Baptiste.

Deer Island. See Carleton Island.
Deh-he-wa-mis. See Jemison, Mary.
Delaware Indians, conquered by the
Senecas, 264, note; several mur-
dered near Fort Pitt, 1791, 490; at
conference with U. S. commission-
ers, 1793, 496, note, 497;
Parrish's life with, 529-532.
Dember, George, his map of Niagara
River described, 40.

Dennis, Martha, 380.

Dennis, Obadiah, 174.

Dennis, Philip, 217, note.
Dennison, Polly, 380.

Jasper

Denonville, Marquis de, destruction
of Seneca villages, 99.

Denonville, Fort. See Fort Denon-
ville.

Denton, Robert, 620 and note.
Deonundagao, 391.

De Rochemont, Josephine (Mrs. Homer
Jones), 524.

Destroy Town, 118, 155, 380, 540.
Destroy Town, Mrs., 380.

Detroit, vessels engaged in defense,

1763, 25; Court of Inquiry, 1763,
26; romantic episode of Pontiac's
siege, 44; stores sent by way of
Niagara portage, 78; visited by Rev.
David Bacon, 1800-1801, 184-186;
Elmwood cemetery, 385.

Devil's Hole, massacre, 29, 423-424;
Horatio Jones at, 449.
DeWitt, Benjamin, 537.

"Diary of the siege of Detroit" cited,
26, quoted, 31-32.

"Diana," brig, 64, 67.

Dickson, Thomas, marriage to Mrs.
Taylor, 80; mentioned, 94.

Dickson, William, 94.

Dies, John, 23-24.

"Documentary history of the state of
N. Y." See O'Callaghan, E. B.,
comp.
"Documents relative to the colonial
history of the state of N. Y." See
O'Callaghan, E. B., ed.

Do-eh-saw. See Berry, Jack.

Dog, white, annual sacrifice of the
Senecas, 99-100, 197.

Dolson's, on Mud Creek, N. Y., 171,

179.

"Don Quixote of the Jerseys."
Livingston, Wm.
Don-e-ho-ga-wa,

door-keeper,

See

chief

sachem of the Senecas, 114, 390,
464.

"Door of the long-house," western
location, 389. See also Seneca In-
dians.

Dorchester, Lord, divides Upper Can-
ada into four districts, 82; is vis-
ited by Capt. Brant, 1791, 89-90;
aggravates Indian troubles, 1794, 91.
Dorsheimer, Wm., 607, 608.

Doty, L. L., "History of Livingston
Co., N. Y.," cited, 508, note, 511,
note, 512, note.

Dow, Mrs. H. B., 223.

Downington, Pa., 521, 523.
Doxtater, Mrs. Aleck, 380.

Draper, Mrs. Carrie Cobb, 425, note,

527, note.

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Elliot, John, missionary to the Tus-
caroras, 182, 376.

Elliot, John, Quaker, 497, note.
Ellis, Mercy, 170.

Ellis, Wm., 170, 180.

Elmira, N. Y. See Newtown, N. Y.
Elmwood Cemetery, Detroit, 385.
English, Indian chief, 442; killed,

443; mentioned, 444, 445.
Erie, Pa. (Presqu' Isle), early boat-
building, 20-21; taken by the In-
dians, 1763, 26; Maj. Rogers joined
by Capt. Campbell, to take posses.
sion of Detroit, 1760, 38; in 1804,
217.

Erie, Fort. See Fort Erie.
Erie, Lake, "From Lake Erie to Mo-
rocco,' 1-14; early ship-building,
19-33; described by G. T. Hopkins,
in 1804, 218.

"Erie," steamboat, 538.

Erie Indians, exterminated by the
Iroquois, 98.

Erwin, N. Y. See Painted Post.
España, Don Carlos de, 6-7.
Etherington, Capt. George, 25.

Evangelical Magazine, cited, 183, note.
Evans, Mrs. Ann Jones (Mrs. David
Evans), 521, 522.

Evans, Rev. David, 522.
Evans, N. Y., 234.
Eves, John, 180.

Ewing, Kate (Mrs. John H. Jones),
526.

Ewing, Wm., 514, note.

Exchange St., Buffalo, formerly Crow
St., 541.

Exodus, ch. 19-20 translated into Sen-
eca, 159.

"Experiment," privateer, 50, 55.

Fairbank's Tavern, Queenston, 79.
Fairchilds, John, 277, note.
Fairfield, N. Y., 231-232.
Falconwood Club, Buffalo, 634.
Fall Brook, N. Y., 484, note, 499, 505.
Faneuil Hall, 614.

"Fannie," schooner, captured by the
"Vengeance," 59, 63; as the "Lan-
golee" becomes tender for the "Ven-
geance," 67; probable fate, 68.
Farmer's Brother, Jacob Lindley's in-
terview with, 176; visited by Rev.
David Bacon, 184 and note; assem-
bles council to hear Rev. Elkanah
Holmes, 194; thinks learning use-
less to Indians, 200; entrusts his
grandson to Mr. Holmes to be edu-
cated, 201-204; met by G. T. Hop-
kins, 221; as delegate requests Hor-
atio Jones to return to the Genesee,
478-479; unfriendliness toward the
government, 1791, 487; receives
Col. Proctor, 1791, 491; his mark,
493. note; urges acceptance of U. S.
peace proposal, 1793, 497; at the
Canandaigua council, 1794, 498;
speech on presentation of Niagara
River tract to Horatio Jones and
Jasper Parrish, 500-501; name on
treaty, Buffalo, 1815, 537.

Fayal, Azores, schooner "Republican"

at, 13.

Fetler's Fort, 388, 393, 394, 398.
Fillmore, Hon. Millard, at the last
Seneca council at Caneadea, 107,
120; mentioned, 539; one of the
founders of the Buffalo Historical
Society, 607; its first president,
608; appoints James O. Putnam
postmaster at Buffalo, 629; men-
tioned, 635.

Fillmore collection, Buffalo Historical
Society, 608, 620.

Finley, Mrs. Elizabeth Jones (Mrs.
William Finley), 525.

Finley, William, 525.

"First book for Indian schools," print-
ed at Cattaraugus Reservation, 160.
First Universalist Church, Buffalo, site
of, 278 and note.

Fish Carrier, 540 and note.

Fishing Creek, Pa., 180; Indian ex-
peditions to, 440, 447.

Fitzgerald, John, 49.

Fitzhugh, Charles Carroll, 525.

Fitzhugh, Mrs. Charles Carroll Jones,
quoted, 513.

Fitzhugh, Mrs. Jane Jones (Mrs.
Charles Fitzhugh), 525.

Fitzhugh, Mrs. Mary Ann Jones (Mrs.
Richard Fitzhugh), 525.
Fitzhugh, Richard, 525.

Five Mile Meadows, below Lewiston,
N. Y., 504.

Five Nations. See Iroquois Indians.
Fleming, George, 481.
Flint, Mrs. Hester

Flint), 525.

(Mrs. Robert

Flint, Judge Robert, 525.

Flint & Kent, Buffalo, site of store,
278 and note.

Flint Creek, 485.

Forsyth, George, quoted, 75-76.
Forsyth & Dyce, Detroit, 76.
Fort Bedford, 388.

Fort Chippewa founded, 78.

Fort Denonville, blessing of the cross
at, painting, 621.

Fort Duquesne, capture of remem
bered by "Governor" Blacksnake,
114-115; mentioned, 393.
Fort Erie, visited by the Duke de la

Rochefoucault Liancourt, 1795, 73,
81; Robert Hamilton's business, 81.
82; visited by Rev. Lemuel Covell,
1803, 210, 214; visit of George El-
licott, G. T. Hopkins and P. Dennis,
1804, 217-218, 220; influence of
British officers over Senecas after
the Revolution, 491; visited by Gen.
Benj. Lincoln, 1793, 495-496.
Fort Franklin, 491.

Isaac

Fort George, burial of Gen. S
Brock and Col. John Mc1nald,
214, note.

Fort Haldimand, 75.

Fort Hill farm, 415, note.
Fort Niagara, Capt. Pouchot com-
mandant, 1759, 19: tradition con-
cerning fate of chapel, 39-40; in
1779, 75-76; in 1785, 77; letters

from Robert Hamilton, 1789-91, 85-
90; news of St. Clair's defeat re-
ceived, 91; delivered to the U. S.
1796, 94; receives homeless Sene-
cas after Sullivan's raid, 1799, 100,
125; Moses Van Campen taken to,
104, 456, 458; burial service of
Prideaux, 165, note; Jungman and
Senseman at, 1785, 181; letters of
Rev. Elkanah Holmes, 1800, 187-
204; mentioned, 390, 401; Indian
firearms repaired at, 420; food sent

to

the Indians, 423; visited by
Horatio Jones, 424, 436-440, 449;
prisoners brought by Brant, 447;
visited by Horatio Jones, 462-463;
officers thwart Col. Proctor's mis-
sion, 1791, 491-492; visit of Gen.
Benj. Lincoln and party, 1793, 495;
influence of British officers over In-
dians of western N. Y., 497-498;
Jasper Parrish taken to, 528; Six
Nations encamp around, 531; coun-
cil of Six Nations with the British,
1780, 533; painting of the blessing
of the cross at Fort Denonville, site
of Fort Niagara, 1688, 621.
Fort Orange. See Albany.
Fort Pitt (Pittsburgh), threatened by

Indian conspiracy, 1761, 35; In-
dians killed near, 1791, 490.
Fort Schlosser, Stedman's right to im-
proved adjacent land, 1763, 44; El-
kanah Holmes' missionary labors,
181, 209; supplanted by Chippewa
on old trade route, 78; visited by
Horatio Jones, 438, 439, 462; end
of Mile Strip, 536.

Fort Schuyler (formerly Fort Stan-
wix), Iroquois council sells Onon-
daga and Oneida lands to New
York State, 477-478.

Fort Slusher (incorrect spelling). See
Fort Schlosser.

Fort Stanwix, peace negotiations and
treaty with Six Nations, end of
Revolution, 108-109, 468-469, 474,
533-534- See Fort Schuyler.

Fort Washington, Indian treaty at,
proposed, 489.

Fort Wayne, Quaker mission to, 1804,

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Frey, Maj. John, 86.
Frey, Philip R., 86.
Friends, Society of, sends teachers to
Indians on Cattaraugus reservation,
and on the Allegheny, 127, 150-151,
250; protects Indians in sale of
lands to Ogden Land Co., 160;
"Quakers among the Senecas," by
F. H. Severance, 165-168; a com-
mittee appointed by Yearly Meeting
of Friends of Pennsylvania, N. J.,
etc., for promoting the improvement
and gradual civilization of the In-
dian natives," 167 and note, 168,
note; "Meeting for sufferings"
sends delegation to treaty at San-
dusky, 168; deputations to Friends
in Canada, 169, note; Jacob Lind-
ley's journal of visit to Friends in
Canada, 1797, 169-180; desire to
educate Indian boys, 201; mission
of Ellicott, Hopkins and Dennis to
Indians at Fort Wayne, 1804, 217,
note; Hopkins' visit to Buffalo and
Niagara Falls, 217-222; at Indian
councils, 497, note, 499; their
method of civilizing Indians, 250,
254, 376; a Quaker's idea of the
work of the Spirit, 373.
Frobisher, Benj., 19.

"From Lake Erie to Morocco," 1-14.
Frontenac, Comte de, urges need of

sailing vessels on Lake Erie, 19.
Frothingham, Rev. Frederick, 635.
Fur trade, Sir William Johnson sent
to regulate, 1761, 36; northwestern
trade opened to British by occupa
tion of Detroit, 1760, 38; injured
by Indian hostility after the Revo-
lution, 89-91.

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Gah-ne-ya-de-o. See Caneadea.
Gah-nee-songo. See Shongo, Col.
Gan-da-chi-o-ra-gou, Seneca village, 99.
Gan-da-ga-ro, Seneca village, 99.
Gan-dou-ga-rae, N. Y., Seneca village,

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Ga-yeh-twa-geh. See Parker, Nichol-
son H.

"Gazette," York, quoted, 84.
"General Mathew," privateer, 50, 55,
Genesee Castle. See Big Tree's vil-
lage.

Genesee County, N. Y., 526.
Genesee River, crossed by Jacob Lind-
ley's party, 1797, 172-173, 178;
crossed by Rev. David Bacon, 1801,
185-186; crossed by Covell and
Warren, 1803, 208; the river course,
431; crossed by Horatio Jones, 485,
487.

Geneseo, N. Y., Livingston County
Historical Society, 459, note; men-
tioned, 485; treaty of Big Tree and
Morris Purchase, 1797, 499; trial
of James Brewer, 511-512; grave of
Horatio Jones, 512 and note; the
Jones family, 525.

Genesis, in part translated into Sen-
eca, 159.

Genet, E. C., 91.

Geneva, N. Y., meeting of presbytery,

1805, 225; Horatio Jones the first
white settler on site, 472; first
called Kanadesaga, 477-478;
trade route, 480.

early

Genisha, N. Y., 484 and note.
Gen-nis-he'-o. See Genesee River.
George III., protects Indian lands
from encroachment, at Niagara port-
age, 42-44.

George, Colonel Sam, 544.

George, Chief, 361.

George, son-in-law of White Chief,
305.

George, Fort.

See Fort George.

"George Washington," ship, 51, 53,
56.

Gibbins, Lt., of the Queen's Rangers,
at the Miami, 1793, 497, note.
Gibson, Henry B., 509.
Girty, Simon, 496 and note.
Givin, Hannah (Mrs. Joshua Jones),

522.

"

Gladwin, Maj. Henry, 23, 27, 36.
"Gladwin," schooner, at siege of De-
troit, 1763, identified with the "Hu-
ron, 25-26; real "Gladwin" built
in 1764, 26; sailed for Detroit and
Michillimackinac, 31; fate, 32-33.
Gladwin mss., cited, 26 and note.
Glen Iris, 102.

Glenny, Mrs. John Clark, 621.
Glines, Almira (Mrs. James H. Clute),
525.

Gluck, James Fraser, 623.

Goat Island, in 1819, 277.
Goodyear, Charles W., 624.

Gordon, Col., commandant at Ft. Ni-

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Goshen, N. Y., 534.

Gospel Advocate cited, 379.
"Go'-wana-gwa'-he'-sat-hah Yon-de'-yas-
dah'-gwah: a spelling book in the
Seneca language," published at Buf-
falo Creek Reservation, 159.
Gowanda, N. Y., Seneca mission press,
160.

Grand Army of the Republic, Buffalo
posts, gifts to Buffalo Historical So-
ciety, 608.

Grand Island annuity, 539.
Grand River, Canada, home of the
Mohawks, 107-108, 115-117, 190;
visited by Covell, 212; condition of
Mohawks, 247; tract secured at
Brant's request, 467; settlement of
Cayugas, 540, note.

Granger, Edmund W., 623.
Granger, Erastus, 218 and note; 275,

note.

Gray, Rev. Andrew, missionary to the
Tuscaroras, 1809, 126.

Gray, David, "The last Indian council
on the Genesee," 121-123, credited,
107, note; 635.

Great Abico, wreck of the "Republi-

can, 14.

Great Britain, Lords, commissioners

of trade and plantations, petitioned
by the merchants of Albany, 40-42.
Great Lakes, visit of lake schooner

"Republican" to Mediterranean

ports, 1-14; trans-Atlantic trade in
vessels from the Great Lakes, 14,
note.

Greeley, Horace, 526.

Green, James, letter from R. Hamil-
ton, 81-82.

Green, Thomas, 193.

Green Bay, Wis., 385;

land pur-

chased by Six Nations, 537.

Greene, Dr. Joseph C., 608, 623, 624.
Greig, John, 509.

Greybeard, Charles, 380.

Greybeard, Mrs. Charles, 380.

Gridley, S. H., collections of Water-
loo Historical Society cited, 420,
note, 434, note.

Griffith, Sally, 485, 519, 520.
"Griffon," its first successors on the
Great Lakes, 17-33.
Grimsby, Ont., 214, note.
Gross, Thomas, 379.

Grosvenor, George H., 620.

Groton, Ct., the "Hive of the Averys,"

223, note.

Groton (Ct.) Union Conference, ex-

tract from report to, 1807, 231-238.
Gunn, Chester B., 525.

Gunn, Mrs. Sarah J. E. Clute (Mrs.
Chester B. Gunn), 441, note, 515,

note; "Sarah Whitmore's captiv-
ity,' 515-520; credited, 521, note;
family, 525.

Guy-an-gwa-ta. See Cornplanter.
Gy-ant-wa-chia. See Cornplanter.

Ha-ah-ta-o. See Sharp Shins.
Haddock, Lorenzo K., 231, note.
Ha-dya-no-doh. See Pierce, Maris B.

Ha-go-go-ant. See Shongo, "Dr."
James.

Hah-do-wes-go-wah,

adopts Horatio
Jones, 416; mentioned, 421; expe-
dition to Grand River, 461; declines
to sell Horatio Jones, 463; visits
Horatio Jones, and his family, 513.
Hah-ney-wee, 414 and note.
Hah-yen-de-seh, 390, 391, 395.
Haines, Jesse, 170.

"Halcyon," Queenston, residence of
R. K. Noye, 79.

Haldimand, Gen. Sir Frederick, 33,
39. 467.

Haldimand, Fort. See Fort Haldi-
mand.

"Haldimand papers," quoted, 76. See
also "Canadian archives.'

Halftown, 103, 486.

Hall, Hon. Nathan K., 613, 635.

Hamburg, N. Y., home of Benj. C.
Van Duzee, 128, note.
Hamilton, Catherine

John), 77.

Askin (Mrs.

Hamilton, Rev. John, 74.
"Hamilton, Robert, the founder of
Queenston," 73-95; emigration to
America, 75; partnership with Rich-
ard Cartwright, 76-77; business
transferred to Fort Niagara and
Kingston, 77; marriage to Catherine
Askin, 77; home at Queenston, 79-
80; control of Canadian transfer
business on the Niagara, 81; ap-
pointed Judge of Nassau, 82; in the
Legislative Council of Upper Can-
ada, 83: marriage to Mary Herki-
mer McLean, and death, 84; letters
to John Porteous, 1789-1798, 84-94;
entertains Gen. Benj. Lincoln, 1793,

495.

Hammond, Libbeus, capture and es-
cape from Indians, 442-443.
Ha-non'-da-a'-suh, "Keeper of

the

Hill," vi. See also Shongo, Moses.
"Harcourt" ("Renown"), ship, 64.
Hardenbergh, Maj. Abraham, 480-482.
Harper, Capt. Alexander, captured,
445-446.

Harrington, Nancy (Mrs. William W.
Jones), 524..

Harris, Daniel, settles in Rochester,
384.

Harris, Daniel Ely, 384.

Harris, George H., "The life of Hora-

tio Jones," 381-492; biographical
sketch, 384-386; "The aboriginal oc-
cupation of the Lower Genesee coun-
try" mentioned, 386; data
Jones genealogy, 521, note.

Harris, John, 69.

for

Harris, Louisa La Tourrette, 340.
Harris, Mrs. Marianne La. T., 138-

154, 323, 351, 361.
Harris, T. S., Jr. (Indian), 379.
Harris, Rev. Thompson S., missionary,

Buffalo Creek Reservation, 138-154;
his character and success, 138-139;
report to U. S. War dept., 1821,
143-145; with James Young trans-
lates the "Sermon on the Moun-

tain," 147, 152-153, 273, note, mis-
sion broken up in 1824; return in
1825, 150; missions at Cattaraugus
and the Tuscarora village added to
his charge, 150; translation of Gos-
pel of St. Luke into Seneca, 153,
155; resigns his charge, 154; charges
against J. B. Hyde, 273, note;
"Journals, 1821-1828," 281-378; his
life and work, 378-379, note.
Harris, Mrs. Thompson S., 378, 379.
See also Harris, Rev. T. S.

Hart & Hickox (formerly Hart & Lay,
then Hart & Cunningham), 544.
Hartford, Conn., 183-184.

Hart's Log, 392, 394.

Hartshorne, Wm., 168, 497, note.
Harvey, Joel, settlement at Eighteen
Mile Creek, 234.

Haton's (?), N.

226.

Hauenstein, Mrs. Alfred G., 621.
Haven, Joseph, 174.

Haven, Solomon G., 635, 636.
Havre de Grace, 632, 636.
Ha-wes-do-ne.

Hawk clan, 464.

See Jones, Horatio.

Hawley's settlement, near Tuscarora
village, 352.

Hay, Lt. Jehu, 25-26.

Hay, Sir John Drummond, 12.
Hay-en-de-seh, 390, 391, 395.
Hayhurst, Bezaleel, 180.

Hazard, George Starr, 616, 621; me-
morial, 626; 635.

Hazard, Mrs. George S., 635.

Health regulations, ports of Spain and
Morocco, 1-13.
Heap-of-Dogs, 476.

Heckewelder, John, 168, 497, note.
Hempferman, Rebecca, marries Thos.
Armstrong, 137, 280 and note.
Henderson, Nancy, 150.

Hendrick, sachem, 193; his men, 497.
Henry, Alexander, "Travels," cited,

19.

Henry Twoguns. See Twoguns, Henry.
Henvey, Patrick, 49.
Herkimer, Mary, Mrs. McLean, mar.
riage to Robert Hamilton, 84.
Hermitage, Genesee valley, 513.
Herringdon, Nathan, 172.
Herrit, John and Mary, 174.
Hesse, Upper Canada, 82.
Hewitt, Elijah, 525.

Hewitt, Horatio Jones, 526.

Hewitt, Mrs. Margaret Lovett (Mrs.
H. J. Hewitt), 526.

Hewitt. Mrs. Rebecca Jones (Mrs.
Elijah Hewitt), 525.

Hey-en-de-seh, 390, 391, 395.

Hi-e-wah-doo-gis-tah.

atio.

Hill, Benjamin. 174.

See Jones, Hor-

Hill, C. F., "History of Columbus
Co., Pa.," cited, 440, note.

Hill, Capt. Daniel (or David?), buys
Jasper Parrish. 427-428; mentioned,
463; adopts him. 532-533.
Hill, Hon. Henry W., address in ac
ceptance of Lincoln statue by Buf-
falo Historical Society, 612-616;

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