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Iroquoia: Haudenosaunee Life and Culture, 1630–1783: Bibliography

Iroquoia: Haudenosaunee Life and Culture, 1630–1783
Bibliography
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Cover Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Dedication Page
  4. Contents
  5. List of Illustrations
  6. Acknowledgments
  7. Introduction: Sustaining Haudenosaunee Homelands
  8. 1.The Natural and Built Environment of the Haudenosaunee Homeland
  9. 2.Preserving the Longhouse
  10. 3.The Mourning Wars Come to Haudenosaunee Homelands, 1687–1701
  11. 4.Confronting Imperial Expansion
  12. 5.Protecting Haudenosaunee Mobility, Autonomy, and Ecosystems
  13. 6.Haudenosaunee Communities and Imperial Warfare, 1744–1763
  14. 7.Haudenosaunee Settlement Patterns and Subsistence Strategies in the Late-Colonial Period, 1763–1783
  15. Conclusion: The Built Environment of the Haudenosaunee Homeland
  16. Notes
  17. Bibliography
  18. Index
  19. Copyright Page

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Archival Materials

  • Bibliothèque Nationale de France

  • Pierre Raffeix, “Le Lac Ontario avec les lieux circonvoisins et particulièrement les cinq nations iroquoises,” 1688.

  • Cornell University, Kroch Library, Rare and Manuscript Collection, Ithaca, New York

  • Van Schaick Family Papers

  • Dartmouth College Library, Hanover, New Hampshire

  • Papers of Eleazar Wheelock

  • DeWitt-Tompkins County Historical Society, Ithaca, New York

  • New York State Indians Collection

  • Gilder Lehrman Collection, New York

  • Evert Wendell Account Book, 1695–1726

  • Hamilton College, Clinton, New York

  • Samuel Kirkland Correspondence, Hamilton College

  • Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia

  • James Logan Papers

  • Library of Congress, Washington, DC

  • Geography and Map Division

  • Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston

  • Timothy Pickering Papers

  • Michigan Historical Collections, Ann Arbor

  • Cadillac Papers

  • Montgomery County Historical Society Collection, Fort Johnson, New York

  • Nicholas DeGraff Collection

  • Miscellaneous Papers

  • Newberry Library, Chicago, Illinois

  • Ayer Manuscripts

  • New York Historical Society, New York

  • Henry Barclay Papers

  • John Bartram Papers

  • Daniel Claus Papers

  • Cadwallader Colden Papers

  • George Croghan Papers

  • Cuyler Papers

  • Stephen DeLancey Papers

  • Jelles Fonda, “Account Book,” 1768–1778

  • Horatio Gates Papers

  • Horsmanden Papers

  • Indian Box

  • New York Public Library, New York

  • George Bancroft Collection

  • Chalmers Collection

  • Indians, Miscellaneous Manuscripts

  • Lionel Pincus and PrincessFiryal Map Division

  • New York State Archives, Albany

  • New York Colonial Manuscripts

  • New York Council Minutes, 1668–1783

  • New York State Library, Albany

  • Robert Adems, “Day Book,” microfilm

  • Beauchamp, William Martin, Antiquities of Onondaga, microfilm

  • Hermanus Bleecker Papers

  • Campbell Papers

  • Fonda Family Papers

  • Herkimer Family Papers

  • Arthur C. Parker Papers

  • Sullivan Indian Campaign, 1779

  • Unidentified Account Book, “General Store, 1771–1774,” Mohawk Valley/Albany

  • Old Fort Johnson, Fort Johnson, New York

  • Fonda, Jelles. “Indian Book for Jelles Fonda at Cachsewago, 1758–1763.” MS651-647.

  • Public Archives of Canada

  • Haldimand Papers

  • Rochester Museum and Science Center, Rochester, New York

  • Follette, Harrison C. Archeology of the Counties of Monroe, Ontario, Livingston, and Genesee, New York. Unpublished manuscript.

  • Hamell, George R. Field Notes on the Kanadesaga site.

  • Hayes, Charles F., III, Daniel M. Barber, and George R. Hamell. An Archaeological Survey of Gannagaro State Historic Site, Ontario County, New York. Unpublished report.

  • University of Houston, Special Collections, Houston, Texas

  • Colonel Israel Shreve Papers

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Dissertations and Theses

  • Agnew, Aileen B. “Silent Partners: The Economic Life of Women on the Frontier of Colonial New York.” PhD diss., University of New Hampshire, 1998.
  • Campisi, Jack. “Ethnic Identity and Boundary Maintenance in Three Oneida Communities.” PhD diss., State University of New York at Albany, 1974.
  • Doxtator, Deborah. “What Happened to the Iroquois Clans? A Study of Clans in Three Nineteenth Century Rotinonhsyonni Communities.” PhD diss., University of Western Ontario, 1996.
  • Guldenzopt, David B. “The Colonial Transformation of Mohawk Iroquois Society.” PhD diss., State University of New York at Albany, 1987.
  • Haan, Richard. “The Covenant Chain: Iroquois Diplomacy on the Niagara Frontier, 1697–1730.” PhD diss., University of California, Santa Barbara, 1976.
  • Henry, Dixie Lynn. “Cultural Change and Adaptation among the Oneida Iroquois, A.D. 1000–1700.” PhD diss., Cornell University Press, 2001.
  • Jennings, Francis. “Minquon's Passing: Indian-European Relations in Colonial Pennsylvania, 1674–1755.” PhD diss. University of Pennsylvania, 1965.
  • Johnson, Laura Elaine. “‘Goods to Clothe Themselves’: Native Consumers, Native Images on the Pennsylvania Frontier, 1712–1730.” Master's thesis, University of Delaware, 2004.
  • Keener, Craig S. “An Ethnohistoric Perspective on Iroquois Warfare during the Second Half of the Seventeenth Century (A. D. 1649–1701).” PhD diss., Ohio State University, 1998.
  • Nelson, Carol R. “The Klinko Site: A Late Woodland Component in Seneca Country, New York.” Master's thesis, State University of New York at Buffalo, 1977.
  • Patrick, Christine Sternberg. “The Life and Times of Samuel Kirkland, 1741–1808: Missionary to the Oneida Indians, American Patriot, and Founder of Hamilton College.” PhD diss., State University of New York at Buffalo, 1993.
  • Preston, David L. “The Texture of Contact: European and Indian Settler Communities on the Iroquoian Borderlands, 1720–1780.” PhD diss., College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia, 2002.
  • Prezzano, Susan Carol. “Longhouse, Village, and Palisade: Community Patterns at the Iroquois Southern Door.” PhD diss., State University of New York at Binghamton, 1992.
  • Terry, Wyllys. “Negotiating the Frontier: Land Patenting in Colonial New York.” PhD diss., Boston University, 1997.

Papers

  • Waterman, Kees-Jan. “Not Confined to the Village Clearings: Indian Women in the Fur Trade in Colonial New York, 1695–1732.” Paper presented at the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture Conference, Boston, June 6–8, 2008.

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