Adam Halfday [fl. 1881], Ojibwa Nation, Muncey; he signed Surrender #184, October 6, 1881 (Canada 1891 vol. II: 94).

John Half Moon (1) [fl. 1828], Munsee Nation, Upper Thames River [Muncey] community; he addressed a Methodist meeting at Muncey with Kahkewaquonaby, March 11, 1828; John Halfmoon (2) [born on the Thames River in 1831; died c. 1882?], Munsee Nation, Upper Thames River [Muncey] community, grandson of William Halfmoon [born on the Thames River in 1765; fl. 1852] and Rachel Halfmoon [born on the Thames River in 1802; fl. 1852]; he may be Halfmoon, who, according to Goodspeed, was a Christian with a good formal education, and was deputed by the Munsee of the Thames to travel to Philadelphia to substantiate Munsee claims to their land at Muncey [because they were threatened with eviction by the Ojibwa]; Quakers in Philadelphia found the pertinent records after his death (PAC Canada 1851-52; Goodspeed: 18-19; Kahkewaquonaby 1860: 250).

Haroenyou / Harrowenyou [fl. 1795-1815], Wyandot chief, son of Wyandot Chief Dow-yen-tet, brother of Dow-yen-tet the Younger; Harvenyou / Haroenyou signed the US Greenville Treaty, August 3, 1795, and the US Treaty of Fort McIntosh, July 4, 1805; Harronenu, Wyandot head, subordinate to Tarhé, attended a council at Sandusky, August 20, 1805; on September 19, Harronenu told US Governor Hull about British attempts to get the Wyandot to break their Treaty with the US; Harenyou signed the US Springwells Treaty, September 8, 1815 (US 1837: 54, 173; Hodge vol. I: 527; MPHSC vol. XX: 678, vol. XXXX: 69, 71).

Haronghyoutye / David Hill [fl. 1784 onwards; died 1790], Mohawk chief; he was allied to the British during the U.S. Revolution; he attended a council and witnessed the US Treaty of Fort Stanwix, May 22, 1784; he was associated with Thayendanega on the Grand River (Aquila: 239; Fraser: 487).

Hassy-bonné [fl. 1783], Ojibwa chief, Detroit community; Hassybonné / Hassébonné, Ojibwa chief, attended councils at Detroit, October 10, 17 and 20, 1783 (PAC RG10 ser. II vol. 13).

Hawkawepitathy [fl. 1785], Shawnee/Chaouanon chief; he signed the US Big Miamis [Maumee River] Treaty, January 31, 1786 (US 1837; MPHSC vol. XXIV: 24).

Ha-yane-ma-dae / Isadore [fl. 1809-1816], Métis/Wyandot chief; he lived on the Wabash River at the mouth of the Massinawa River [Peru, Indiana] in 1812; Ha-yane- ma-dae / Isedore, Wyandot chief, signed a letter to US Governor Hull asking for more land, September 30, 1809; according to Peter Clarke, Wyandot Chief Isadore, "a half-breed, part French and part Wyandott", and second Wyandot chief Gould, were part of a peace mission to Tecumseh on the Wabash River in June 1812; Isadore addressed the council in Shawnee and delivered a message from US Governor Hull; Isadore, Huron chief, Brownstown community, addressed a council with the Indian Department at Amherstburg, June 19, 1816; Eckert says Ha-yane- ma-dae was Chief Shetoon (Clarke: 88-98; Eckert: 570-571; MPHSC vol. XVI: 471-473, vol. XXXX: 307). 'If your [Tecumseh's] scheme could be consummated by all the Indian nations forming themselves into one great combination to arrest the rapid march of the whites over our country, we might check them for a while, but we would all, eventually, be swept away, like feathers before the wind, by the irresistible tide of the white emigration from the east! The weak must give way to the powerful, so goes the world'— Massinawa, June 1812 (Clarke: 95).

Henry [fl. 1836], Unami/Delaware chief, Moravian; signed Surrender #47, part of Moraviantown [Fairfield], October 25, 1836; probably moved to Wisconsin or Kansas in 1837 and may have returned to Fairfield in 1843 (Canada 1891 vol. I: 115).

Jacob Henry [born on the Thames River, 1838; fl. 1876-1881], Ojibwa Nation, Muncey community; son of Pamegahwayahsing [Issac] and Mary Henry; Jacob Henry signed: Surrender #154, August 31, 1876, and Surrender #184, October 8, 1881 (PAC Canada 1851-52; Canada 1891 vol. II: 30, 94).

John Henry [fl. 1836], Unami/Delaware, Moravian; he signed Surrender #47, part of Moraviantown [Fairfield], October 25, 1836 (Canada 1891 vol. I: 115).

Joseph Henry [fl. 1836], Unami/Delaware, Moravian; he signed Surrender #47, part of Moraviantown [Fairfield], October 25, 1836 (Canada 1891 vol. I: 115).

Lucius Henry [born in 1860; fl. 1889-1901], Ojibwa Nation, Muncey community; he was the son of John and Nancy Henry; he signed: Surrender #274, July 31, 1889, and Surrender #445, part of Caradoc reserve, July 19, 1901 (PAC Canada 1861; Canada 1891 vol. II: 267, vol. III: 331).

Moses Henry [fl. 1871-1875], Ojibwa Nation, Sarnia community; he signed: Surrender #119, May 5, 1871, and Surrender #143, part of Sarnia reserve, January 14, 1875 (Canada 1891 vol. I: 275, vol. II: 5).

Isaac Hill [fl. 1882], Delaware Nation, Moravian; he signed Surrender #199, part of Moraviantown [Fairfield], November 13, 1882 (Canada 1891 vol. II: 124).

Thomas Homer [born at the Oneida Castle, New York in 1827; fl. 1872-1884], Oneida Nation, Oneida settlement, married to Hannah [born at the Oneida Castle, New York in 1832; fl. 1852]; he signed: Surrender #127, Canadian Southern Railway right of way, January 17, 1872, and Surrender #197, hunting agreement, August 1, 1884 (PAC Canada 1851-52; Canada 1891 vol. I: 296, 121).

Ho-na-ye-wus / Farmer's Brother [born c.1735; died 1815], Seneca war chief, Buffalo Creek community; he was a part of the ambush of the British at Devil's Hole near Niagara Falls, September 12, 1763; he attended and spoke at councils at Niagara to discuss the US Indians, April 14, 1791, as well as at the Miami River, May 4, 1791, and at Niagara on May 24, 1791; he attended a council at Philadelphia on April 28, 1792; he attended the General Council at the Glaize [Defiance, Ohio], September 30, 1792; he attended a council at Canadarque on October 25, 1794 where he accused William Johnson of being a British spy; he attended a council at Newark [Niagara-on-the-Lake], March 30, 1795; and he attended the Great Council at Big Tree, in 1797 [the entire Seneca country was sold to an almost bankrupt Philadelphia financier for $100,000]; he was a friend of Mary Jemison [she obtained the Gardeau Tract at Big Tree]; he fought for the U.S. in 1812 (Aquila: 236; Peckham: 224; Seaver: 79; MPHSC vol. XX: 399, vol. XXIV: 491-492, vol. XXV: 47). 'Brothers, the British and their agents are the sole causes and fomenters of these disturbances between us and the hostile Indians.' —Canadarque, October 25, 1794.

Hootshoopkaw / Four Legs / O-chek-ka [fl. 1809 onwards; probably died at Fort Winnebago in 1832], Winnebago war chief, Bear Clan, chief of the Winnebago village on Doty Island, successor to Winnebago Chief Black Wolf [died 1829]; Four Legs was an ally of Tecumseh, travelling to the Six Nations in New York with him in 1809; he was at the Battle of Moraviantown, October 5, 1813; he signed the U.S. Treaty of Fort Armstrong, 1832 (US 1837; Blair vol. II: 295; Goltz 1973: 159; Lurie: 694; Sugden: 155).

Hopocan (Tobacco Pipe) / Captain Pipe / Konieschguanokee / Komeschguanokee (Maker of Day) / Tahunquecoppi [fl. 1764 onwards; died 1794], Munsee/Delaware war chief, Wolf clan; "a sober, sensible Indian"; he attended a conference at the camp at Tuskerawas, October 13 to December 16, 1764; listed in the war losses of the trader Franks on August 19, 1766; succeeded Munsee/Delaware Chief Custaloga [Pakanke] in 1773; moved away from Delaware chief Netawatwees to the south shore of Lake Erie at Cayhoga in 1776; he was the leader of the pro-British Delaware faction, but signed the US Fort Pitt Treaty, September 17, 1778; he lived on the Upper Sandusky River in 1780, and gained control of the Delaware Council at Coshocton in the fall of that year; lived at the headwaters of the Mad River, spring 1781; Captain Pipe, Delaware chief, agreed to bring the Moravians to Detroit under his protection on October 21, 1781; he attended and spoke at councils with the Moravians and the British at Detroit, November 9 and December 8, 1781; with Buckongehelas he defeated the US Militia under the command of Captains Crawford and Williamson on the Sandusky River in June 1782, after the Gnadenhütten massacre; he signed the US Treaty of Fort McIntosh, January 21, 1785; he lived on the south shore of Lake Erie near the Maumee River in 1786; he signed US Treaty of Fort Harmar, January 9, 1789; he informed the Moravians in February, 1791 that they should leave the Huron River because it was unsafe; he attended a council at Niagara to discuss the US Indians, April 14, 1791; he met the Five Nations in council at the Miami Rapids, August 17, 1792; Captain Pipe / Tahunquecoppi, Delaware Nation, signed the US Peace Treaty at the Miamis Rapids, September 29, 1817 (US 1837; Goddard 1978a: 223; Gray: 54, 56, 62; Kjellberg: 26, 29-30; Tanner 81, 83-84, 89-90; DCB vol. VI: 302; MPHSC vol. X: 527, 538-540, 543, 545, vol. XIII: 42-46, vol. XIX: 276, 374, 690, vol. XX: 66-67, 134, 680, vol. XXIV: 24, 179, 208, 468, 486, 492, vol. XXV: 690; PSWJ vol. V: 355, vol. XI: 435, 724, vol. XII: 1047-1048). 'While you, father are setting me on your enemy, much in the same manner as a hunter sets his dog on the game...I may, perchance, happen to look back to the place from whence you started me, and what shall I see? Perhaps I may see my father shaking hands with the long knives; yes, with these very people he now calls his enemies. I may then see him laugh at my folly for having obeyed his orders; and yet I am now risking my life at his command!' —Detroit, November 9, 1781.

Hubbill [fl. 1836], Delaware Nation, Moraviantown [Fairfield] community; he signed Surrender #47, part of Moraviantown, October 25, 1836 (Canada 1891 vol. I: 115).

John Huff [fl. 1857], Delaware Nation, Fairfield; he signed: Surrender #83, part of Moraviantown, April 9, 1857, and Surrender #832, part of Moraviantown, May 15, 1857 (Canada 1891 vol. I: 215, 217).

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