Class Book__i: NAMES WHICH THE LENNI LENNAPE OR DELAWARE INDIANS GAVE TO RIVERS, STREAMS AND LOCALITIES, WITHIN THE STATES OF PENNSYLVANIA, NEW JERSEY, MARYLAND and VIRGINIA, WITH THKIR SIONIFICATIONS. PREPARED FOR THE TRANSACTIONS OF THE MORAVIAN HISTORICAL SOCIETY FROM A MS. BY JOHN' HECKEWELDER, BY WILLIAM C. REICHEX. BETIILEIIE^r : 11. T. CLAUDER, PEINTER. 1872. 34558 NAMES WHICH THE LENNI LENNAPE OR DELA- WARE INDIANS GAVE TO RIVERS, STREAMS AND LOCALITIES WITHIN THE STATES OF PENNSYLVANIA, NEW JERSEY, MARY- LAND AND VIRGINIA, WITH THEIR SIGNIFICATIONS, BY JOHN HECKEWELDER. The footprints of extinct races of men always become objects of interest in proportion to the fewness of their number and the ob- scurity of their character. Those of the Indian tribes, who once dwelt along the rivers that drain the loveliest portions of the eastern slope of the Appalachians, are growing less and fainter with the lapse of succeeding years. With no records to perpetuate the story of their origin, the course of migratory waves, the wars of contending nations, the rise and decadence of clans and the prowess of national heroes and heroines, save an oral tradition distorted by the adornments of a rude poesy, — the archaeology of this occidental people is likely to remain a sealed book. Even the tokens they have left us in enduring stone, — memorial pillars, implements of war, of the chase and of the household, — whether inscribed in hiero- glyphics of hidden meaning, or cunningly wrought from material as hard as adamant in an age which was ignorant of the use of the metals, — instead of aiding in the solution of the problem, pre- sent it in a more perplexing form. Equally obscure and unintel- ligible, but for the interpreter through whom they now speak, would have forever remained another class of relics come down to us— we mean the straggling footprints of its language, impressed upon the beautiful objects of nature among which this mysterious people lived and passed away. It is with such fragmentary remains of a now dead tongue that this paper is concerned ; principally with words belonging to the euphonious dialect of the Unamis or Delawares of the lowlands, the first of the copper-colored aborigines, who witnessed the advent of the white man from countries beyond the "great water," and the rising of the sun. 4 TRANSACTIONS OF THE When Mr. Heckeweldcr undertook to restore the mutilated forms of Indian appellations of mountains, rivers and localities current among the whites of his time, and then to point out their significance, he did a work for which he is entitled to gratefnl remembrance. These names are now no longer empty sounds. They have become as it were living things, endowed with the faculty of speech. Transformed by him into tutelary spirits, they cling like dryads and hamadryads to the inanimate objects to which they M'cre long ago attached, and keep Avatch over the artless records inscribed upon them by another race of men. Some fix the localities of events that belong to the history of nations or of incidents that occurred in the experience of individuals, — some the favorite haunts of the animals of the chase or the habitat of those spontaneous products of nature which ministered to the Indian's daily wants ; others afford us glimpses of his sylvan life when on the hunt or on the war-path, or are descriptive of peculiarities in the landscape, of its flora or of its fauna; while together they people portions of our country with historical recollections of their former occupants which would otherwise have been inevitably lost. In preparing this paper, the editor took some liberties with Mr. Heckewelder's MS., deeming it desirable to avoid repetitions, to abbreviate modes of expression where it could be done without involving a sacrifice of the compiler's meaning, and to adapt topo- graphical descriptions to the geography of the present day. An alphabetical arrangement of the names suggested itself at once as the most convenient for reference. The historical annotations were drawn from a variety of trustworthy sources, and whilst in their selection preference was given to such matter as belongs to Mora- vian history, the attempt was made in all cases to adduce the earliest use or mention on record of the names under consideration. The following maps were freely consulted in this effort : 1st. "A Map of the Middle Bint'ish Colonies in America and of Aquanish- uonigy, the Country of the Confederate Indians, comprehending Aqua- nhhuonigy proper, their place of 7'esidence, (that part of the State of New York lying south of the Mohawk) — 0/wo (embracing the region of country south of the Maumee as far down as the Ken- tucky) and Tiiuxsoxruntie (the country north of the Maumcc and west of the Huron, as high as Lake Huron) their deer-hunting countries, — and Couxsaxragc (upper New York, south of the St. kOEAVIAN HISTORICAL SOCIETY. 5 Lawrence) and Skaniadarade (the country lying nortli of Lake Erie) their beaver- hunting coimtry;" "publislied by Act of Parlia- ment by Lewis Evans, June 22, 1755, and sold by R. Dodsley in Pall Mall, London, and by the author in Philadelphia. Engraved by James Turner, of Philadelphia." Being dedicated to the Hon^le Thomas Pownall, Esq., the map is illuminated M'ith the coat of arms of the Pownall family, blazoned as follows : Arms. Arg., a lion rampant, sa. charged on the breast with a cross pate of the first. Orest. A lion's jambe erased, erect ppr, grasping a key or, from which a chain is reflexed of the last. 2. "JL Mcq^ of the im- jproved part of the Province of Pennsylvania, humbly dedicated to the Hon. Thomas Pcnn and Richard Penn, JEsqrs., true and abso- lute Proprietaries and Governoi^s of the Province of Pennsylvania, and Counties of New Castle, Kent and Sussex on Pelaivare, by Nicholas Scull, and published according to Act of Parliament, January 1, 1759." The formula of dedication appearing on this invaluable historical chart is inscribed within elaborate scroll- work, surrounded by the arms and crest of the Penn family bla- zoned thus: Arms. Arg. on a fess sa. three plates. Crest, A demi-lion rampant, ppr. gorged with a collar sa. charged wutli three plates. Motto. Mercy and Justice. 3. "A Map of the State of Pennsylvania, by Reading Hotvell. Respectfully inscribed to Thomas Miffiin, Governor, and to the Senate and House of Repre- sentatives of the Commomcealth of Pennsylvania by the author. Published August 1, 1792, for hhn, and sold by James Phillijjs, George's Yard, Lombard Street, LondonJ' This map is beautifully executed, and shows, to use the words of the draftsman, "the triangle lately purchased by Congress, and the boundary lines of the State as run by the respective Commissioners, with parts of Lake Erie and Presqu' Isle ; also by actual survey the rivers Sus- quehanna (its north-east and west branches), Tyoga, Sinnemahon- ing, Juniata, Lehigh, Jjexawacsein, Schuylkill, and the western rivers, Ohio, Alleghany, Conewango, — part of the Chautaughque Lake and French Creek, agreeable to the late discoveries, — the Monaungahela, Yaxhiogeni and Kiskemanetas; also the larger creeks, most of the lesser streams, mountains, the principal old roads, with the many new ones in the northern and western parts of the State, and portages and communications according to the late surveys by order of Government; furthermore the division 6 TRANSACTIONS OF THE lines of the respective counties unci townships, a delineation of the districts of depreciation and donation lands, with all the other dis- tricts in the new purchase — besides the seats of justice in the re- spective counties, iron-works, mills, manufactories, locations of minerals, bridle-roads, Indian-paths, &c., &c." It was from a third edition of this map, that Mr. Heckewelder, as he tells us, copied the majority of names in his catalogue ; Proud's History of Pennsylvania (Phila. 1798) furnished him with a few, and his friend Samuel D. Pranks, of Harrisburg, with those occurring in Indian deeds preserved in the Laud Office of the Commonwealth. David Zeisberger's "Ks,'20 From Pittsburg, by water, to the W^abash 1022 Up the Wabash to Post Vincennes 100 From Post Vincennes by land to the Falls of Ohio 150 Fromtlie Falls of Ohio to Pittsburg 705 From Pittsburg, via Bethlehem, to Philadelnhia 370 2727 1793. At the request of Government, accompanied GJen. Lincoln^ Col. Pick- ering and ex-Governor Beverly Randolph, (appointed Commis- sioners to treat with the friendly Indians on the Miami) via FMiila- delpbia, New Y'ork, Albany, Schenectady, Fort Stanwix, Oneida Lake, Oswego, Niagara and Lake Erie, as far as Detroit 800 From Detroit, alone to Fairfield, Lipper Cauada and return 140 From Detroit to Bethlehem, as follows: across Lake Erie to Ni- agara — across Lake Ontario to Kingston — from Kingston down the St. Lawrence to Montreal — thence by land to St. Joluis — thence down Lake Champlain to Skenesborough or Whitehall — thence along the Hudson to Albany — thence by sloop to New York, and tbence to Bethlehem 1310 179-. Accompanied Jacob Eyerly as far as Pittsburg — he was on his way to survey lands on French Creek, and return 620 1797. In company of Bro. William Henry and others, to the Muskingum 410 From (Jnadeniiiitten through the wilderness (accompanied part of the way by an Indian) to Marietta 125 Return, with Gen. Putnam (engaged in a survey) to Gnadeniiiitteii, and thence to the Tuscarawas Fording Place 200 A second time to Marietta by water, and thence to Bethlehem 640 1798. Accompanied Bro. Benjamin Mortimer to Fairfield, U. C, traveling through the Gencssee country to BuHalo, thence by way of Black Rock, Niagara Falls, Queenstown, Newark (head of Lake Ontario) Burlington Heights, Grand River (or Brandt's Town), the Pinery, and JMonsey Town .'.. 5;i0 From Fairlield (in company of William Edwards and two Indians) by way of Detroit, Brownstown, River Raisin, Miami, Old Fori, The Rapids, Upper Sandusky, Owl Creek and Walhending to Gna- denhiitten 270 Thence to Pittsburg, in comi)aiiy of Bro. Mortimer (to escort El- dridge), and return '200 In the autumn, in company of Bro. Mortimer (who along with Zeis- berger had led some Indians from Fairtield to Gnadenhiitten) to Bethlehem 410 12 TRANSACTIONS OF THE 1799. To Muskingum, and return 8'20 1800. Accompanied Bro. Christian Fdc. Dencke to Gnadenhiitten 410 Thence in the autumn to Pittsburg, and from there by way of Fort Franklin and Meadville to La Boeuf, pursuant to commission re- ceived from the Directors of the " Society for Propagating the Gospel among the Heathen," to view its lands on French Creek ; thence via Pittsburg to Bethlehem 660 1801. Moved witii my family to Muskingum 410 To Marietta, and return 220 1802. Do do 220 To Bethlehem and return, at my own expense 820 1803. To Marietta, and return 220 In the autumn with Bro. Loskiel from Gnadenhiitten to Pittsburg, and return • 200 1804. On official business (to appraise houses, &c.) to Zanesville and other towns, and return 140 1805. To Zanesville and return 120 1806. To do. (to pay taxes) and return 120 Thence to Bethlehem and return via Philadelphia, at my own expense. 850 1807. To Zanesville, and return 120 1808. To do. (to pay taxes) and return 120 1809. Appointed by the Assembly one of ihree commissioners to fix two new County seats, visiting Canton, Wooster, Eicliland, &c^ and return... 190 To Zanesville, and return _••• 120 In December, via Zanesville and New Lancaster to the^Assembly sit- ting in Ohio, and in January of 1810, return.. 245 1810. To Zanesville (to pay taxes) and return 110 In October removed with my family to Bethlehem 410 Thereupon to Lancaster to present William Henry Ivillbuck's petition to the Assemby, and return to Philadelphia 190 1813. For the last time m the Western country, traveling to Gnadenhiitten by way of Pittsburg, Harmony, Beaver Town, Tuscarawas and New Philadelphia. From Gnadenhiitten to Zanesville, and return to Betldehem 955 26,257 MOEAVIAN HISTORICAL SOCIETY. 13 1. DELAWARE NAMES OF RIVEES, STREAMS AND LOCALITIES IN PENNSYLVANIA. Allegheny, corrupted from AUigewi — the name of a race of Indians* said to have dwelt along the river of that name^f and in * Of the wars of the Lenape and Mengwe witli tlie Alligewi, and of the dis- comfiture and expulsion of the latter from Alligewinink, Heckewelder records the following tradition in his History of Indian Nations. The Lenape (the Dela- wares), resided many hundred years ago in a far distant country in the western part of tlie American Continent. For some reason they determined to migrate eastward, and accordingly set out in a body. After a very long journey and many nights' encampments by the way, they at length arrived at the Naviaesi Sipu (i. e. the Eiver of Fish, the Mississippi) where they fell in with the Mengwe (the Iroquois), who were likewise emigrating from a distant country in search of new homes, and who had struck that river somewhat higher up. Spies sent out in advance by the Lenape to reconnoitre had ascertained, before the arrival cf the main body of their people on the Mississippi, that the country east of it was inhabited by a very powerful nation, who had numerous large towns built on tlie rivers flowing through it. Tiiis was the nation of the Alligaii. I^Iany won- derful things are told of them. They are said to have been remarkably tall and stout, and even of gignntic stature, far exceeding in size the tallest of the Lenape. They were likewise .skilled in the arts of defensive warfare, of throwing up en- trenchments and of erecting fortifications, remains of some of which are to be seen at the present day in the western country. The Lenape, on arriving at the Mississippi, thought it prudent, before crossing the stream, to send a messenger to the Alligewi to request permission of them to settle in their neighborhood. This was refused. Instead, howevei", the Alligewi expressed a willingness to allow them a passage thvougli their country. The Le- nape accordingly began to cross the river. It was now that the Alligewi, on seeing that the strangers were a numerous people, (not to be counted by thousands), moved by fear, fell treacherously upon those who had already crossed, slew many of them, and threatened the others with annihilation' should they persist in tiie passage. On recovering from the surprise, the Lenape held a council, in which they considered what Avas best to be done, whether to retreat, or whether to mea- sure their strength with those who had cruelly betrayed their confidence. They felt disposed to do the latter, for they were a brave people, and incensed at the loss of their kinsmen. But prudence forbade them engaging in an unequal con- test, and they were about setting their faces westward, when the Mengwe, who from their encampment had been spectators of the unprovoked attack, proposed to render them assistance, to join them in a war of conquest and extermination with the Alligewi, and after its successful close, to share with them the conquered territory. " Thus," they said, '' their wanderings would end, and there they would find the homes in search of which they had left tiie setting sun." Having thus united their forces, the Lenape and Mengwe declared war against 14 TEANS ACTIONS OF THE AlUgewininh, i, c, all the country west of the Alleghenies, draiiied by the tributaries of the Ohio and their numerous sources. The Shawauose called this river Palaiou-thepikL Appolacon, (emptying into the Susquehanna from the South, in Susquehanna County), corrupted from Apelogdcan, (in Miusi Delaware Apellochgacan), signifying, tvhence the messengei^ returned.X Aquanshicola, (emptying into the Lehigh from the north-east in Carbon County), corrupted from Achquoansch'wola, signifying, where we fish with the bush-net.^ the Alligewi, and grccit battles were fought, in which many warriors fell on both sides. It was a long and bloody contest, in which quarter was neither asked nor given. The enemy stockaded their large towns and erected fortifications, which the allies besieged, and sometimes took by storm. In a certain engagement the slain were thrown together in large heaps and covered with earth, — their places of sepulture forming tumuli or mounds, that for many generations marked the site of the great battle-field. Thus hard pressed the Alligewi, seeing their destruc- tion inevitable, withdrew from the contest, abandoned their country to the inva- ders, and fled down the Mississippi, never to return. Hereupon the conquerors made a division of the country, whereby the Mengwe came into possession of the lands about the great lakes and their tributary streams, the Lenape of those situate to the south, whence these gradually moved eastward, even to the Atlantic coast, until when the white man came, the Delaware or Lenapewihiituck (i. e., the river of the Lenape) was in the very heart of their settlements. f The Allegheny was called by the French, on their first hostile occupation o Pennsylvania territory in 1753, "La Belle Riviere" a name subsequently applied to the Ohio, the former being regarded not as a tributary, but as the main stream of the great river of Alligewinink. Hence, too, Indian traders also called the river below the Forks the Allegheny, or else used this name'and Ohio without dis- crimination when speaking of the great river of Western Pennsylvania. The Delawares called the Allegheny or Ohio, Kit-hanne, i. e., the main stream in its region of country, it being the same descriptive appellation by which they desig- nated their great river of the East, i. e., the Delaware. Jonah Davenport and .James Le Tort, Indian traders, iu Oct., 1731, reported that on Kiltanning liiver there dwelt mostly Delawares, 50 families, 100 men, with Kykenhammo, their chief. (See Delaware, Kittanning and Ohio, in this register.) % Al-lo-ga-can, a servant, a messenger. Zr. I Ach-quoa-ni-can a bush-net; ach-quo-ne-man, to lish with a bush-net; ach- qtvoa-na-u, caught with the bush-net. — Zr. "As soon as the shad {scha-wa-nam- meck, the south-fish, compounded of scha-iva-ne-u south, and na-mees fish) come from the south to deposit their spawn, running up the rivers from the sea, the Indians assemble for the annual fishery. And first they build a stone dam across the stream, the two wings or walls of which converge into a pound or wooden box, perforated with holes. This is the trap. A wild grape-vine of sufficient length to reach from shore to shore is then cut, and loaded down with brush, secured at intervals of from ten to fifteen feet. This barrier is stretched across the river, perhaps a moraviajSt historical society. 15 AuGHWICK, (a tributary of the Juniata in Huntingdon County), corrupted from Achweeh, signifying brushy, i. e., overgrown with brush.^' Bald Eagle, (emptying into the Susquehanna from the south- mile above the pound, and being held in position by Indians in canoes, is slowly towed down stream. The frightened fish are driven before it back into the dam, and thence by the Indians, posted on its walls, into the pound, where they are caught by hand. As many as a thousand are known to have been taken in this way in a morning. The Delawares called March the shad-month." — Loskiel's His- tory of the Moravian Mission among the North American Indians. The narrow valley or gorge of the Aquanshicola (written sometimes Aqvansha- hales in old deeds), was visited by Zinzendorf in July of 1742, and by missionaries from Bethlehem, until the commencement of Indian hostilities in the foil of 1755. It most have been a favorite planting-spot of the Delawares. It may have been inhabited by even an earlier race, by a race of strong men that wrought in stone as we do in wood, handling and fashioning huge blocks taken out of the mountain side, with the same ease and accuracy of design as with which are fashioned the lesser implements of war and the chase, found so plentifully along the Aquanschi- cola. If ever there was a relic of a "stone-age," it is the so-called " Indian mill {tach-quoa-hoa-can) of the Aquanschicola," now in the museum of Mr. Kichard Crist of Nazareth, Pa. Of its history we know only the following: Mr. Chas. E. Buskirk of Chestnut Hill Township, now sixty-five years of age, states that in his grandfather's time the mill was discovered, partially embedded in the ground, near the foot of the mountain on the left bank of the creek, not far from the Ko.ss Common Tavern, and at once became an object of curiosity to the neighborhood, as well as to passing travelers. In 1860, Mr. Reuben Hartzell, on whose land it lay, had it disinterred, removed and set up in front of the Tavern. Mr. Crist purchased and had it conveyed to Nazareth in Sept. of 1869. This unique piece of antiquity is wrought from a solid block of gray sandstone, and in form is a per- fect frustum of a cone, with an altitude of three feet, the diameter of the lower base being the same, and that of the upper base being one foot six inches. A funnel-shaped cavity tapering down from a ten-inch to a five-inch diameter, is chiseled into the block to the depth of two feet, at which point the polished cir- cumference shows where the stone that rjround or cut the corn, xevolved in its socket. From here the grist fell through a hole, nine inches square, morticed into the lower base. The weight of the block is 2185 pound,";. It would almost appear as if the mill were worked by an application of the povrer at the extremities of levers, fitted into the upright that carried the cutter or crusher at its base, after the fashion of a capstan — that the mill was placed over a pit, and that the gri.st was caught in bags or other receptacles jilaced in the latter. The crushing or cutting stone, although lost, is well remembered by inhabitants of Ro.ss Common. * A-che-we-u bushy. — Zr. An Indian village of this name, mentioned in Pro- vincial records prior to 1750, stood on Aughivicb Creek (it is said on tiie site of Shirleysburg) where Fort Shirley (so named in honor of Gen. Win. Shirley of Massachusetts) was built in 1756. (.Jeorge Croghan, a trader of note, and subst" quently Sir Wm. .Johnson's deputy in Indian afliiirs, resided previous to the 16 TRANSACTIONS OF THE west in Clinton County), called by the Delawares Wapalanewacli- schiec-hdnne, i. e., the stream of the Bald Eagle's nest.^ Bald Eagle's NEST,t in Delaware, Wapalaneicachschiechey. Beaver Dam, (a branch of the Kiskiminetas in Westmoreland County), called by the Delawares Amochkpahds'mkX signifying rvhere the beaver has shut up the stream. Beaver River, (a branch of the Ohio in Beaver County), in Delaware, Amoclikioi-sipu,% i.e., heaver-river, or Amochk-hdnne, i. e.j Indian war at AiigJanck Old Tovm. In Sept. of 1754, Conrad Weisser treated witli tlie Delawares and Shawanese of the West, in belialf of tlie Province, at Augli- wick. * Woap-m and Woa-peeJc,, white. Woap-a-lanne, tlie bald eagle. Wach-scMe- chey, a nest. Ilan-ne, a stream. — Zr. t The name of an Indian village, situated above the confluence of Buffalo Eiin and Bald Eagle Creek (now in Centre County), and the residence of "Bald Eagle," a noted chief. Scull's map calls it simply "The Nest." It stood on the flats near Miiesbnrg, on the "Indian Path from the Great Island to Ohio." X A-mochk, a beaver. — Zr. § Sipo and sipu, a river. Si-po-iit (diminutive), a creek. Si-punlc and Si pu- sing, at, or, in the river.— Zr. The Moravian missionary, C. Frederic Post, in the summer of 1758 undertook a perilous mission in behalf of the Proprietary Govern- ment to the Delawares of Ohio, — in the course of which he jienetrated the wilds of Pennsylvania to their extreme western limits. His journal appears in full in the third volume of the Archives of Pennsylvania. Accompanied by several friendly Indians, he set out from Bethlehem on the 19th of July for Fort Augusta, (Sunbury). There he took the path along the right bank of the West Branch, leading over the Chillisquaque, over Muncy, LoyalsocJc and Pine Creeks, — crossed the Susquelianna at the Oreat Island, and then struck one of the main Indian thor- oughfares to the West. On the od of July he forded Beech Creek, on whose left bank he came to the forks of the road. One branch led south-west along the Bald Eagle, ])aBt the Nest to Frankstown, and thence to the Ohio country; — the other due West to Chinklacamooie. Post took the latter. It led over the 3Iosh- annon, which he crossed on the 1st of August. Next day he arrived at the village of Chinklacamoose in the "Clear Fields." Hence the travelers struck a trail to the north-west, crossed Tobys Creek (Clarion Kiver), and on the 7th of August reached Fort Venango, built by the French in 17-53, in " the forks of the Allegheny." " I prayed the Lord," writes Post, " to blind the French, as he did the enemies of Lot and Elisha, that I might pass unknown." Leaving Venango, Post and his companions turned their horses' heads to the south-west, — struck the Conequenes- sing on the r2th of August,— crossed the Big Beaver, and next day arrived at Kafni, alias Ches- ter River." The Swedes called the stream Oplaml Kill. II A-men-Uchiech-/in, to rob, to plunder. Me-hu.-men.lachit, a robber.— i^/-. 'I Shortened into C'lii'juis and Sidunja, both post-towns in Lancaster County. MORAVIAN HISTORICAL SOCIETY* 19 North-east in Lancaster County), corrupted from Chichiswahmgo, the 2il(ice of the crawfish, i.e., where the ground is full of holes hored by the crab or craw-fish. Chillisquaque,* (emptying into the Susquehanna from the North-east in Northumberland County), corrupted from Chili/i- nuagi signifying, the place of snotv -birds. CHiXKLACAMOOSEjt "ow shortened into Moose, (emptying into the Susquehanna from the North-east in Clearfield County, "the Clear Fields'^), corrupted from Achtschingi-clamme, signifying, it almost joins, in allusion to a horse-shoe bend in the stream, whose extremities almost unite. Choconut, (emptying into the Susquehanna in the County of that name) corrupted from the Nanticoke word I'schochnot. Clarion River,| (a branch of the Allegheny draining Clarion County), called by the Delawares, Gawunsch-hanne, i. e,, brier- stream, — the stream Mdiose banks are overgrown with the green- brier. Coaquannock,§ the, name by which the site of Philadelphia * Scull's Map locates an Indian village of the same name at the mouth of the creek. "An old Shawano took us in his canoe across the creek at Zilhj-squachne., for which service I gave him some needles and a pair of shoe strings." — C. Weis- xfr'a Journal to OnonrJiir/n. March, 17o7. t On the site of the county-town of Clearfield, there stood in olden times the village of Chinklacamoose, written ChinglfrdHKinrJir, on Scull's Map. It was the central point of the great "Chinklacamoose Path." Post lodged at this village on his way to the Ohio country in the night of August 2d, ]7o8. " We arrived," he writes in his .Tournal, "this night at Slnui/liunicr, where we saw the posts painted red and stuck in the ground, to which the Indians tie Iheir prisoners. It is a disagreeable and melancholy sight to see the means titey use to punish flesh and blood." '•July 14lh, 1772. We came to the Clearfield creek, so called by the Indiann because on its banks there are acres of land that resemble 'clearings;' — the buf- falo that resort hither, having destroyed every vestige of undergrowth, and left the face of the country as bare as though it had been cleared by the grub-axe of the pioneer." — John Eltti-riii\'< Jovrnnl nf tlu' Mir/rnlion nf ihf MoravUin Inainn)' to the Big Beaver. X Formerly called Toliifx Cmk. \ "The Proprietary having now returned from Maryland lo C'"(/7«(/««or/,, the place so called by the Indians, where Philadelphia now stands, began to purchase lands of the Indians." ProxuVs History of Pennxi/lrama, Vol. 1, p. 211, Penn ])urchased Coaquannovk, the site of his intended capital, from the three brothers, Andrew, Swen and Ole Swenson, early Swedish settlers on Delaware, — said bro- thers or other whites having bought the Indian claim, prior to his arrival in the 20 TRANSACTIONS OF THE was known to the Indians, is a corruption of Cnvequenahu, signify- ing, the grove of tall pines. CoCALiCO, (a branch of the Conestoga in Ijancaster County), corrupted from Acligoohwalico,^ (sliortened into Chgokalico), s\g,m- tying, ichere the snahes collect in dens to ^jass the winter. {Note. This spot along the Creek was well known to the Indians.) CocoosiNG, (a branch of the Tnlpehocken in Berks County), corrupted from Golchosing,'\ signifying, vJiere oicls are, the place of oirls. CoHOCKSiNK, corrupted from Cuwenhasinh,X signifying, wliere the pines grow, — ichere there are pinelands. CoNESTOGA,§ an Iroquois word. country in October of 1682. "Tlie Proprietor at liis first arrival, finding tlie Swedes possessed of the most valuable tracts of latul ou the front of the river, without inrjuiring into the validity of their titles, but considering tliem as strang- ers in an English government, through his known benevolence to mankind was pleased so far to distinguish them by his favors as to confirm to all such as aji- ]ilied to l»im all their just claims, to the great disappointment of those English adventurers who embarked with him and hazarded their lives and fortunes in the commendable design of peopling this colony ; or where it was found necessary to ap])ly any of those claims to other purposes, he was pleased to make very ample compensation for them ; a {)regnant instance of wliich, is his grant of OflO aoi'es of land to the Swensons in lieu of a very slender claim they had to about half that cpiantity in the place where it was judged most convenient this city should be built." — Report of Petition of the Swedes, 1721. J'enn'a Archives, Vol. 1, p. 172. * Acli-ijook, a Buake. Woa-lac, a hole. Suck-ack-goolc, a black snake — M'hi- (ich-i/ook, a water-snake; — Ax-f/ash-achf/ook, a green snake; — Mdch-i/t-u-ncli-ijook, a copper-snake. — Zr. lleckewelder, in his Narrative, states that the Western Indians, who were sig- nally defeated by Gen. Wayne at the Rapids of the Miami in August of 1794, call- ed him Siickachyook, because of the caution and cunning he displayed in his move- ments throughout the campaign. f Gok-hoos, an owl, Gok-ho-tii, an owlet.— Z/-. Ink, the local suffix nl, or, irhere. On Dec. 28, 1742, Zinzendorf preached in a farm-house on the Cocoosing. X Cu-u-e, a pine. ILi-cki, land. — Zr. Jiik, the local suffix at, or where. 'i On the flats east of Turkey Hill at the mouth of the Conestoga in Manor Township, dwelt the small tribe of the Conestogas, whom Wm. Penn is said to have visited in their town, and to retain whose friendship despite the macliina- tions of French emissaries, his Lieut. Governors exercised constant precaution. Hence Jame.s Logan repaired to Conestoga in 1705, (iov. Evans in 1707, (iov. (iookin in 1710, Gov. Keith in 1717 and Gov. Gordon in 1728. TdgndalenKa, or Civility, a chief of this tribe is oflen named in the records of those days. It was he who wrote that touching letter in which grief for the loss of a beloved child appears in almost every line. " Tlie late death of my child causes su much trouble MORAVIAN HISTORICAL SOCIETY. 21 CoNEWANGO, (a branch of the Allegheny in Warren Connty), corrupted from Guneunga/^ signifying, fliey have been gone a long time, they stay a long time. CoNEWANTA, (emptying into the Susquehanna in the County of that name) rorru}ite(l frnm Ouvci'inga, signifying, tJiey stay long time. CONNEAUT, (a branch of French Creek in Crawford County), corrupted from Gnnniati, signifying, it is a long time since he or they are gone. CoNOCOCHEAGUE,t (a branch of the Potomac draining Franklin County), corrupted from Guneukitschil:, signifying, indeed a long ira.y ! a name expressive of impatience manifested by a company of Indians travelino- along; the stream. CoNODOGWiNET, (a branch of the Susquehanna draining Cum- berland County), corrupted from G}innvpducl^hannet,% signifying, for a long icay nothing but bends. CoNONODAW, (one of the head branches of the Allegheny in McKean County), corrupted from Gunnidda, signifying, he tarries long. [Note. A name ex])ressive of the impatience of some In- aiul sorrow :it tliis time, it puts all oilier thoughts out of my niiud — my grief and sorrow ovei power me — my eyes are full of tears for the sake of my child. My trouble is so great at this time tiiat it j)uts all other thoughts out of my mind, so that I do nothing but cry every day. When my grief anil sorrow are a little over, you sliall hear from us, even if 1 do not come myself!" The Conestogas remained on tlieir old seats long after the oilier Indians on tlie Susquehanna had been crowded by the advance of civilization beyond Shamokin, and it was upward of sixty years after William Penn had been at tlieir town, and full twenty-five aflcr Tayodalesna has ceased grieving for his child, that they were barbarously exter- minated to a man, by the Scotch-Irish partisans of Paxton. * Gu-nr u^\oug. (lii-iii(x-ii^\i is long. (!ii-/ii. n long while. (li(-n