Documentary History of the State of New York, Vol. I
Indians, papers relating to the several tribes of, 9, et Iroquois, papers relating to the, 9; names of the several tribes of, 11; customs of the, 12; explanations seq ; numerical strength of the, 16, 21, 24, 43, 66, of illustrations relating to the, 13, ct seq.; Wenttotums of the, 17 why the flesh of the 123, 468 worth Greenhalgh's observations among the, 15; French was considered salty by the, 84 their lands first forts on the river of the, 43; location, climate annexed to New York, 98 ; traders sent by Gov. and products of the country of the, 44; the river Dongan to the Far, 100 ; the, as far as the South of the, 45; the Illinois attacked by the, 66; geneSea claimed by the English, 130, 133 cruelties ral council convoked at Onondaga by the, 84; the after the attack on the Senecas, exercised by, 146 ; best season to wage war against, ib.; reason of the Indian account of the French attack on the Senemissionaries returning from among the, 86; plan of ca, 151, 153; notices of the, with pipes through the, if attacked, 90; Gov. Dongan's character of their noses, 162, 164 ; a board established for the the, 99; number of the castles of the, 100; means management of the affairs of the, 218 proceedadopted by the, to increase their numbers, 123; nuings at the conference between Gov. Fletcher and merical force of the, 123, 142; Fort St. Louis, 111. the, 222 ; conveyance of lands on the Susquehanattacked by the, 141; plan of the French attack na by the, 261 ; complaints of the, against Pennon the, 142; a number of the, sent to the French sylvania, 271, et seq ; deed establishing a line of galleys, 146; the, taken under the protection of division between the whites and the, 379.