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34
A CENTURY OF DISHONOR.

mates of the barbarous ferocity of the Indian character as shown by those early massacres.[1]

The United States’ first treaty with the Delawares was made in 1778, at Fort Pitt. The parties to it were said to be “the United States and the Delaware Nation.” It stipulates that there shall be peace, and that the troops of the United States may pass “through the country of the Delaware Nation,” upon paying the full value of any supplies they may use. It further says that, “Whereas the enemies of the United States have endeavored by every artifice to possess the Indians with an opinion that it is our design to extirpate them, and take possession of their country; to obviate such false suggestions, the United States guarantee to said nation of Delawares, and their heirs, all their territorial rights in the fullest and most ample manner as bounded by former treaties.”

The treaty also provides that, “should it for the future be found conducive for the mutual interest of both parties to invite any other tribes who have been friends to the interests of the United States to join the present confederation and form a State, whereof the Delaware Nation shall be the head,” it shall be done; and the Delawares shall be entitled to send a representative to Congress.[2]

The Delawares agreed to send all the warriors they could spare to fight for us, and that there should be peace and perpetual friendship.

At this time the rest of the Ohio tribes, most of the New York tribes, and a large part of the Delawares were in arms on the British side. When the war of the Revolution was concluded, they were all foreed to make peace as best they could with us; and in our first treaty we provided for the reinstating in the Delaware Nation of the chiefs and headmen who had


  1. See Appendix, Art. X.
  2. It is superfluous to say that these provisions were never carried out.