|
Iatowaywinasy [fl. 1788], Ojibwa chief; he signed [with a Bird totem] the Jonathon Schieffelin deed, north side of the Askunessippi [Thames River] from Chatham to London, September 20, 1788 (PAO, MU 2099 OS 1-4).
From PAO, MU 2099 - 1788. George Ironside Junior [fl. 1825-1840], born in Upper Canada, civil servant, superintendent of Indian Affairs at Amherstburg in 1840, elected Huron?/ Wendat/Wyandot or Tionnontaté chief of the Anderdon Reserve; son of George Ironside of the Indian Department (began in the Department as an assistant to Matthew Elliott) and Vocemassussia of the Shawnee Nation - she was related to Tenskwatawa [Peter Jones visited his father, who was the Indian Agent at Fort Malden on March 29, 1828]; George Ironside Junior was elected head chief in 1838 or 1839; he was succeeded by Thomas A. Clark who was elected a few years later; George Ironside Junior was moved to Manitoulin Island by the Indian Department because of a conflict at Amherstburg - he served on the island as Indian agent to the Wikwemikong Ojibwa community (Canada 1847: no. 20; BHC: G. Ironside Papers; Ferris; Kahkewaquonaby 1860: 127; Leclair 1988a: 63; MPHSC vol. XX: 698). Cornelius Island / Irland / Ireland [born at the Oneida Castle in 1799; fl. 1848-1872], Oneida chief, Oneida Nation, part of the Oneida Settlement, Thames River, married to Nellie [born at the Oneida Castle, New York in 1806; fl. 1852]; Cornelius Irland, signed Surrender #233, Oneida Settlement purchase, December 20, 1848; Cornelius Ireland signed Surrender #127, Canadian Southern Railway right of way, January 17, 1872 (PAC Canada 1851-52; Canada 1891 vol. I: 296, vol. II: 187, 189). Mary Island / Mary Bread [born at the Oneida Castle, New York in 1792; fl. 1852], Oneida Nation, Oneida Settlement, married John Bread on June 19, 1848 - he died before 1852 (PAC Canada 1851-52; Goodspeed: 26). Isononcainen [fl. 1781], Huron/Wyandot or Tionnontaté chief; he attended a council with Major De Peyster at Detroit, July 29, 1781 (Lajeunesse: 124-126; MPHSC vol. X: 502, vol. XIII: 92). Itappuwa [fl. 1701], Five Nations [Iroquoian] sachem; he attended the Great Peace council at Montréal, July 25, 1701; he attended the Albany Conference with Governor Nansan, July 9, 1701; placed southern Ontario hunting grounds under the protection of the British Crown on July 19, 1701 (NYCD vol. IV: 903; Monture pers. com.). I-yo-na-yo-ta-ha [fl. 1805], Wendat/Huron/Wyandot chief; he signed the US Treaty of Detroit ceding the west half of Lake St. Clair, etc., November 17, 1807 (US 1837: 136; Leighton: app. B1).
A ¦ B ¦ C ¦ D ¦ E ¦ F ¦ G ¦ H ¦ I ¦ J ¦ K ¦ L ¦ M ¦ N ¦ O ¦ P ¦ Q ¦ R ¦ S ¦ T ¦ U ¦ V ¦ W ¦ X ¦ Y ¦ Z
|