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Joseph Brant (Thayendanegea), Mohawk

http://www.indigenouspeople.net/brant.htm

"Our wise men are called Fathers, and they truly sustain that character.
Do you call yourselves Christians? Does the religion of Him who you call
your Savior inspire your spirit, and guide your practices? Surely not.

It is recorded of him that a bruised reed he never broke.


Cease then to call yourselves Christians, lest you declare to the world your
hypocrisy. Cease too to call other nations savage, when you are tenfold
more the children of cruelty than they.

No person among us desires any other reward for performing a brave and
worthwhile action, but the consciousness of having served his nation.

I bow to no man for I am considered a prince among my own people.


But I will gladly shake your hand."

Joseph Brant to King George III


The Story of Joseph Brant
by Tom Penick

The Mohawk Indian Joseph Brant served as a spokesman for his people, a
Christian missionary of the Anglican church, and a British military captain
during the U.S. War of Independence. He is remembered for his efforts in
unifying upper New York Indian tribes and leading them in terrorizing
raids against patriot communities in support of Great Britian's efforts to
repress the rebellion. He is also credited for the establishment of the Indian
reservation on the Grand River in Canada where the neighboring town of
Brantford, Ontario, bears his name.

Brant was born in 1742 on the banks of the Ohio River and given the Indian
name of Thayendanegea, meaning "he places two bets." He inherited the
status of Mohawk chief from his father. He attended Moor's Charity School
for Indians in Lebanon, Connecticut, where he learned to speak English and
studied Western history and literature. He became an interpreter for an
Anglican Missionary, the Reverend John Stuart, and together they
translated the prayer book and the Gospel of Mark into Mohawk. Molly
Brant, Joseph's sister, married General Sir William Johnson who was the
British superintendent for northern Indian affairs. Sir William was called
to duty during the last French and Indian War of 1754-1763. Joseph
followed Sir William into battle at the age of 13, along with the other Indian
braves at the school.

Following this frightening experience, Joseph returned to school for a short


period. Sir William had need of an interpreter and aid in his business with
the Indians and employed Joseph in this prestigious position. In his work
with Sir William, Joseph discovered a trading company that was buying
discarded guns from the Army, filling cracks in the barrels with lead, and
then selling them to Indians. The guns would explode when fired, often
injuring the owner. Joseph was able to prove this in court and the trading
company's license was revoked.

It was the custom for young men not to marry until they had made their
mark, and Joseph was now prepared to choose a wife. Around 1768 he
married Christine, the daughter of an Oneida chief, whom he had met in
school. They had both Indian and Anglican wedding ceremonies and lived
on a farm which Joseph had inherited. Christine died of tuberculosis
around 1771, leaving Joseph with a son and a daughter. During this time,
Joseph resumed his religious work, translating the Acts of the Apostles into
the Mohawk language.

In 1773, he married Susannah, sister of his first wife. Susannah died a few
months later, also of tuberculosis. In 1774 he was appointed secretary to Sir
William's successor, Guy Johnson. In 1775 he received a captain's
commission and was sent to England to assess whether the British would or
would not help the Mohawk recover their lands. He met with the King on
two occasions and a dinner was held in his honor.

While in England, Brant attended a performance of Romeo and Juliet. Lady


Ossory, a member of a famous Irish family, asked him, "What do you think
of that kind of love-making, Captain Brant?" He replied, "There is too much
of it, your ladyship." "Why do you say that?', and Joseph answered quickly,
"Because, your ladyship, no lover worth a lady's while would waste his time
and breath in all that speech-making. If my people were to make love in that
way our race would be extinct in two generations." [Monture, p. 36]

On his return to the colonies, he saw action in the Battle of Long Island in
August 1776. He led four of the six nations of the Iroquois League in attacks
against colonial outposts on the New York frontier. The Iroquois League
was a confederation of upper New York State Indian tribes formed between
1570 and 1600 who called themselves "the people of the long house."
Initially it was composed of the Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, and
Seneca. After the Tuscarora joined in 1722, the league became known to the
English as the Six Nations and was recognized as such in Albany, New York,
in 1722.

They were better organized and more effective, especially in warfare, than
other Indian confederacies in the region. As the longevity of this union
would suggest, these Indians were more advanced socially than is often
thought. Benjamin Franklin even cited their success in his argument for the
unification of the colonies. They lived in comfortable homes, often better
than those of the colonists, raised crops, and sent hunters to Ohio to supply
meat for those living back in New York. These hunters were usually young
braves or young married couples, as was the case with Joseph Brant's
parents.

During the U.S. War of Independence a split developed in the Iroquois


league, with the Oneida and Tuscarora favoring the American cause while
the others fought for the British under the leadership of Mohawk Chief
Joseph Brant. A few of the leaders favored a neutral stance, preferring to let
the white men kill each other rather than become involved. Brant feared
that the Indians would lose their lands if the colonists achieved
independence. Basic to animosities between Indians and whites was the
difference in views over land ownership. The Indians felt that the land was
for the use of everyone and so initially saw no reason to not welcome the
Europeans. The colonists, on the other hand, were well acquainted with the
privileges of ownership (or lack thereof) and were eager to acquire land of
their own.

Brant commanded the Indians in the Battle of Oriskany on August 6, 1777.


In early 1778 he gathered a force of Indians from the villages of Unadilla
and Oquaga on the Susquehanna River. On September 17, 1778 they
destroyed German Flats near Herkimer, New York. The patriots retalliated
under the leadership of Col. William Butler and destroyed Unadilla and
Oquaga on October 8th and 10th. Brant's forces, along with loyalists under
Capt. Walter N. Butler, then set out to destroy the town and fort at Cherry
Valley. There were 200-300 men stationed at the fort but they were
unprepared for the attack on August 11, 1778. The attackers killed some 30
men, women, and children, burned houses, and took 71 prisoners. They
killed 16 soldiers at the fort but withdrew the following day when 200
patriot reinforcements arrived. The settlement was abandoned and the
event came to be known as the "Cherry Valley Massacre." Brant won a
formidable reputation after this raid and in cooperation with loyalists and
British regulars, he brought fear and destruction to the entire Mohawk
Valley, southern New York, and northern Pennsylvania.

He thwarted the attempts of a rival chief, Red Jacket, to persuade the


Iroquois to make peace with the revolutionaries. In 1779, U.S. Major
General John Sullivan led a retaliatory expedition of 3700 men against the
Iroquois, destroying fields, orchards, granaries, and their morale. The
Iroquois were defeated near present-day Elmira, N.Y. In spite of this,
Indian raids persisted until the end of the war and many homesteads had to
abandoned. The Iroquois League came to an end after admitting defeat in
the Second Treaty of Ft. Stanwix in 1784.

Around 1782, Brant married his third wife, Catherine Croghan, daughter of
an Irishman and a Mohawk. With the war over, and the British having
surrendered lands to the colonists and not to the Indians, Brant was faced
with finding a new home for himself and his people. He discouraged further
Indian warfare and helped the U.S. commissioners to secure peace treaties
with the Miamis and other tribes. He retained his commission in the British
Army and was awarded a grant of land on the Grand River in Ontario by
Govenor Sir Frederick Haldimand of Canada in 1784. The tract of 675,000
acres encompassed the Grand River from its mouth to its source, six miles
deep on either side.

Brant led 1843 Iroquois Loyalists from New York State to this site where
they settled and established the Grand River Reservation for the Mohawk.
The party included members of all six tribes, but primarily Mohawk and
Cayugas, as well as a few Delaware, Nanticoke, Tutelo, Creek, and
Cherokee, who had lived with the Iroquois before the war. They settled in
small tribal villages along the river. Sir Haldimand had hurriedly pushed
through the land agreement before his term of office expired and was
unable to provide the Indians with legal title to the property. For this
reason, Brant again traveled to England in 1785. He succeeded in obtaining
compensation for Mohawk losses in the U.S. War for Independence and
received funds for the first Episcopal Church in Upper Canada, but failed to
obtain firm title to the Grand River reservation. The legality of the transfer
remains under question today.

Her Majesty's Chapel of the Mohawks was built in 1785 at the order of King
George III. The simple wooden structure survives today as the oldest
Protestant church in Ontario and is the only church outside the United
Kingdom with the status of Chapel Royal. The church contains some lavish
appointments including a silver service and bible dating from 1712 when
Queen Anne had a church erected for the Mohawk on the Mohawk River in
New York. Also erected for the Indians in 1785 was a saw and grist mill and
a school.

Brant continued with his missionary work. He felt that his followers could
learn much from observing the ways of the white man and made a number
of land sales of reservation property to white settlers to this end, despite the
unsettled ownership. He tried unsuccessfully to arrange a settlement
between the Iroquois and the United States. He traveled in the American
West promoting an all-Indian confederacy to resist land cessions. Late in
his life, he continued the work he had begun as a young man of translating
the Creed and important passages of the Old and New Testament into the
Mohawk language. He was a man who studied and was able to internalize
the better qualities of the white man while always remaining loyal and
devoted to his people.

Joseph Brant died at his last residence in what is now Burlington in 1807,
Ontario and was buried there. Later his remains where transferred by an
Indian relay, where various warriors would take turns to carry him for
reburial (a distance of approx. 25 miles) at the church known as The Chapel
of the Mohawks in what was once Brant's Mohawk Village (around 1790)
and is now part of the city of Brantford.

Bibliography

1. "Brant, Joseph," Dictionary of American Biography, 1927.

2. "Brant, Joseph," The Encyclopedia Americana, 1992.

3. "Brant, Joseph," The New Encyclopedia Britannica, 1991.

4. "Brantford," The New Encyclopedia Britannica, 1991.

5. "Cherry Valley Massacre," The Encyclopedia Americana, 1992.

6. Flick, A.C., "The Sullivan-Clinton Campaign of 1779,"


History of the State of New York, 1933-1937.

7. Green, Evarts Boutell, The Revolutionary Generation 1763-1790, 1943.

8. "Iroquois League," The new Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1991.

9. Mathews, R. V., "In Defense of Joseph Brant," Conservationist, 31:41,


March 1977.

10. Mitchell, Lt.Col. Joseph B., Discipline & Bayonets, 1967.


11. Monture, Ethel Brant, Famous Indians, 1960.

12. Van Steen, M., "Brantford's Royal Chapel," Canadian Geographical


Journal, 57:136-41, October 1958.

13. Weaver, Sally M., "Six Nations of the Grand River, Ontario," Handbook
North American Indians, 1978.

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