Susquehannock
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The Susquehannock people were natives of areas adjacent to the Susquehanna River and its tributaries from the southern part of what is now New York, through Pennsylvania, to the mouth of the Susquehanna in Maryland at the north end of the Chesapeake Bay. These people were called
- Andastes by the French (from their Huron name Andastoerrhonon),
- Minquas by the Dutch and Swedes (their Lenape (Delaware) name meaning "treacherous"),
- Susquehannocks by the English of Maryland and Virginia (an Algonquin name meaning "people of the muddy river", and
- Conestoga by the English of Pennsylvania (from Kanastoge, meaning place of the immersed pole, the name of their village in Pennsylvania).
Over the next hundred years, the Susquehannock population was devasted by the ravages of disease and warfare. Some groups left the area and joined other tribes to the north, south, and west. The remaining Susquehannock, numbering only a few hundred, eventually settled in a new village in Lancaster County called Conestoga Town, where they lived under the protection of the provincial government of the Pennsylvania Commonwealth. Nevertheless, their population declined steadily, so that only twenty-two people remained in Conestoga Town in 1763. That year the Paxton Boys, in response to Indian hostilities on the western frontier, attacked the village and brutally murdered all twenty people that they could find.
References
- Illick, Joseph E. Colonial Pennsylvania: a History. New York. Scribner. 1976.
- Kent, Barry C. Susquehanna's Indians. Harrisburg, The Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. 1984.
External links
- ["Where are the Susquehannock?"] from native.brokenclaw.net
- ["Susquehannock History"] by Lee Sultzman
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