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Documentary History of the State of New York, Vol. II

O'Callaghan, E.B., ed. The Documentary History of the State of New York, Vol. II. Albany: Weed, Parsons and Co., 1849. 421 words

Johiison be agent for the, 582; insolence towarils the Oswego traders by the, 561 ; the treaties with the Six Nations usually attended by the River, 572 ; speeches to the, 666, 575, 5;7, 583, 594,604,631,633; from the, 572, 575, 578, 598, 630, 632, 637; the, protest against the sale of rum at their castles, 59! ; the account of the first visit of the Dutch to this jountry given by the, 598 ; Col. Johnson sent to Onondaga to take the hatchet out of the hands of the, 529; the discontinuance of the coun- ■i^il fire at Onondaga the sign of the disappearance as a people of the, 534; the number of, at the meeting at Joiinson Hall, 665; every green thin^ there eaten up by the, 666; number of, at the battle of Lake George, 684; names of the settlements on ihe Susquehannah river belonging to the, 715; the proprietor of Pennsylvania, chosen as umpire between Virginia and the, 738 ; neutrality declared by the three Upper Nations of, 746; presents only to be given to fighting, 747 ; proofs of the dissatisfaction entertained against Pennsylvania by the, 750, 761 ; the land s^uth of the mouth of the Ohio not belonging to the Northern Confederacy of, 849; the jlivisirinal lines of Pennsylvania and

Blaryland west of the Alleganies permitted to be run by the, 853 ; journal of ihe proceedings at Niagara, with the, 868; the patent of Kayaderosseras and of the lower Mohawk flatts complained of bj^ the 8'SI ; the effect of the conquest of Canada on the relations with the, 898; the number of, at the treaty of Fort Stanwix, 915; policy pursued by the, when disjiosed to quarrel, 950 ; to be encouraged to cut each others throats rather than those of the English traders, 969; alliances ■ considered offensive and defensive by the, 973; the northern, are dissuaded from their hostile measures against the Cherokee, ib; ratification of the treaty of Fort Stanwix with the, 974; principal grievances in 1776, of the, 775; complain of the great quantity of rum and the small number of clergymen sent among the, 976; a congress at the Great Plains of Sciota, about to be held by the, 978; the result of the Sciota Congress, 980, 990; Union to be deprecated between the Northern and Southern, 981 ; the western tribes of, sell their Pawnie prisoners, 984; view taken of scalping, by the, 995; additional complaints of the Six Nations ot, 1002; death bed of Sir Wm.