Fish Carrier or "Ojageght," which translates to English as "he is carrying a fish by the forehead strap," was an Iroquois chief of the Cayuga people. He supported the British during the American Revolution, participating in the Battle of Wyoming in 1778 and the Battle of Newtown in 1779.
Although the Encyclopedia of Native American Biography states that Fish Carrier “supported the patriot cause,” [1] historians Barbara Graymont [2] and Max Mintz [3] both record that Fish Carrier was allied with the British, and led the Cayuga contingent against the Americans at the Battle of Wyoming and the Battle of Newtown. At a council held at Irondequoit in July 1777, the Cayuga and Seneca had abandoned their neutrality and had "taken up the hatchet" against the Americans. Fish Carrier accepted the war belt on behalf of the Cayuga, and likely participated in the Siege of Fort Stanwix and the Battle of Oriskany later that summer. [2]
While a small group of Oneida led by Han Yost Thahoswagwat supported the Americans during the Sullivan Expedition, [4] this was not the case for the Cayuga whose villages were destroyed in September 1779. The Cayuga fled to Fort Niagara and the following spring moved to Buffalo Creek. [5]
Fish Carrier participated in a number of raids in 1780 including the August 1780 raid on the Canajoharie district led by Joseph Brant. Fifty-three houses were burned as well as barns, a gristmill, a church, and two small forts. [2]
Most of the Cayuga, including Fish Carrier, remained at Buffalo Creek after the war, while a few hundred settled on the Grand River on land granted to the Iroquois in 1784 by Frederick Haldimand, Governor of the Province of Quebec. A faction of the Cayuga led by Steel Trap, however, returned to the Cayuga Lake region and in February 1789 negotiated a treaty with Governor George Clinton of New York. Steel Trap ceded most of the Cayuga's traditional territory except for roughly 64,000 acres at the north end of Cayuga Lake. Although Fish Carrier did not attend the negotiations or sign the treaty, one square mile was reserved for his use. In June 1790, Fish Carrier met with Governor Clinton at Fort Stanwix and ratified the 1789 Treaty. [6] [7]
Fish Carrier attended meetings between Indian Commissioner Timothy Pickering and representatives of the Iroquois at Tioga Point in November 1790 and at Painted Post (Newtown) in July 1791. He was an advisor to Red Jacket during the meeting at Buffalo in April 1791 with Colonel Thomas Proctor. [8]
In March 1792, Fish Carrier was with a delegation of Seneca and Cayuga that met with George Washington in Philadelphia. Fish Carrier, Red Jacket, Cornplanter, Blacksnake and two others were presented with large oval silver peace medals. [9]
Fish Carrier was one of the signatories of the November 1794 Treaty of Canandaigua that established perpetual “peace and friendship” between the Iroquois and the United States, and acknowledged the sovereignty of the Iroquois within their lands. [8]
Fish Carrier worked to reduce tensions between the Senecas and the Onedias who had supported British and American forces respectively. Julia Anna Perkins, in Early Times on the Susquehanna, writes about Fish Carrier at a ceremony to adopt Robert Morris into the Senecas following Morris's acquisition of much of the earlier Phelps and Gorham Purchase. The ceremony became tense following dances and songs of battles between the Senecas and the Oneidas, and knives were drawn. Fish Carrier stood up, "striking the post with violence", and shouted "You are all a parcel of boys; when you have all attained my age, and performed the warlike deeds that I have performed, you may boast what you have done; not till then!" [10]
Fish Carrier’s name in Cayuga is transcribed as “Oo-jau-gent-a” on the Treaty of Canandaigua, as “Ogageghte” on a document dated August 1789. [11] as “Ho-ja-ga-ta” by ethnologist Lewis H. Morgan. [5] and as "Ojageght" in the Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico. [12]
Fish Carrier had three children, a daughter and two sons. After Fish Carrier's death at Buffalo Creek, his family moved to the Six Nations of the Grand River reserve in Upper Canada (Ontario). Morgan visited the reserve in 1850 and purchased a conch shell breastplate that had belonged to Fish Carrier for five dollars from Peter Fish Carrier, Fish Carrier's son. [5]
The 1779 Sullivan Expedition was a United States military campaign during the American Revolutionary War, lasting from June to October 1779, against the four British-allied nations of the Iroquois. The campaign was ordered by George Washington in response to Iroquois and Loyalist attacks on the Wyoming Valley, German Flatts, and Cherry Valley. The campaign had the aim of "taking the war home to the enemy to break their morale." The Continental Army carried out a scorched-earth campaign in the territory of the Iroquois Confederacy in what is now western and central New York.
The Battle of Oriskany was a significant engagement of the Saratoga campaign of the American Revolutionary War, and one of the bloodiest battles in the conflict between Patriot forces and those loyal to Great Britain. On August 6, 1777, several hundred of Britain's Indigenous allies, accompanied by Loyalists of the King's Royal Regiment of New York and the British Indian Department, ambushed a Patriot militia column which was marching to relieve the siege of Fort Stanwix. This was one of the few battles in which the majority of the participants were American colonists. Patriots and allied Oneidas fought against Loyalists and allied Iroquois and Mississaugas. No British regulars were involved; however, a detachment of Hessians was present.
John Butler was an American-born military officer, landowner, colonial official in the British Indian Department, and merchant. During the American Revolutionary War, he was a prominent Loyalist who led the provincial regiment known as Butler's Rangers. Born in Connecticut, he moved to New York with his family, where he learned several Iroquoian languages and worked as an interpreter in the fur trade. He was well-prepared to work with the Mohawk and other Iroquois nations who became allies of the British during the rebellion.
The Cherry Valley massacre was an attack by British and Iroquois forces on a fort and the town of Cherry Valley in central New York on November 11, 1778, during the American Revolutionary War. It has been described as one of the most horrific frontier massacres of the war. A mixed force of Loyalists, British soldiers, Senecas, and Mohawks descended on Cherry Valley, whose defenders, despite warnings, were unprepared for the attack. During the raid, the Seneca in particular targeted non-combatants, and reports state that 30 such individuals were killed, in addition to a number of armed defenders.
The Seneca are a group of Indigenous Iroquoian-speaking people who historically lived south of Lake Ontario, one of the five Great Lakes in North America. Their nation was the farthest to the west within the Six Nations or Iroquois League (Haudenosaunee) in New York before the American Revolution. For this reason, they are called “The Keepers of the Western Door.”
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The Battle of Wyoming, also known as the Wyoming Massacre, was a military engagement during the American Revolutionary War between Patriot militia and a force of Loyalist soldiers and Indigenous warriors. The battle took place in the Wyoming Valley of Pennsylvania on July 3, 1778 in what is now Luzerne County. The result was an overwhelming defeat for the Americans. The battle is often referred to as the "Wyoming Massacre" because of the roughly 300 Patriot casualties, many of whom were killed by the Seneca and Cayuga as they fled the battlefield or after they had been taken prisoner.
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