Skip to content
Chronological Reasoning and Causation

Indigenous People in Colonial New York

  1. Load Acknowledgement of War service, Oneida Indians, Revolutionary War, 1792 in Main Image Viewer
  2. Load Petition of Sarah Robins, "a free-born Indian woman," to Governor Robert Hunter, ca. 1711 in Main Image Viewer
  3. Load Message from the Mohawk and Canajoharie Indians to Acting Governor James DeLancey, 1755 in Main Image Viewer
  4. Load Declaration of Cornelis Cornelissen and Others Regarding the Destruction of a House by the Indians, 1644 in Main Image Viewer
  5. Load Declaration of Cornelis Cornelissen and Others Regarding the Destruction of a House by the Indians, 1644 in Main Image Viewer
  6. Load Declaration of Ponkes, an Indian of Marechkawick, Regarding the Destruction of a House, 1644 in Main Image Viewer
  7. Load Declaration of Ponkes, an Indian of Marechkawick, Regarding the Destruction of a House, 1644 in Main Image Viewer
  8. Load Declaration of Jan Evertsen Bout and Claes Jansen Regarding the Burning of Jochem Pietersen Kyler's House in Main Image Viewer

Suggested Teaching Instructions

Historical Context
Encounters between American Indians and European colonists in New York ranged from cultural exchange, trade, and alliance to conflict and outright war. While facing the reality of dominance by European powers and the loss of economic independence, many Indians nevertheless retained their core traditional values. They employed creative and at times unpredictable means to resist their colonial neighbors.

British colonial authorities mildly discouraged Indian slavery and on several occasions tried unsuccessfully to prohibit it. Early court cases and laws listing duties to be placed on Indian slaves imported into New York indicate that colonial authorities allowed enslavement of Indians to persist. Even freeborn American Indians had reason to fear being forced into slavery and petitioned the colonial council for protection.

From the late seventeenth through the mid-eighteenth centuries, the French and English pressured the Iroquois to choose sides during frequent periods of imperial warfare. Iroquois leaders, distrustful of both powers, opted to maintain neutrality, often playing one side against the other. Still, individual Indian nations at times formed temporary alliances with one power or another.

The Oneida and Tuscarora Indians, influenced in part by the missionary work of Presbyterian minister William Strickland, chose to fight alongside the patriot forces in the Revolutionary War. The Oneidas aided the rebels at the battles of Oriskany, Saratoga, and Barren Hill, in addition to sharing their corn with George Washington’s starving troops at Valley Forge.
 

 
Essential Question
How does human migration impact culture and society?
 
Check for Understanding
Describe the relationship between the American Indians and colonial New York and explain how that relationship changed over time.