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Skenandoa

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John Skenandoa
Shenandoah
Bornc. 1706
DiedMarch 11, 1816(1816-03-11) (aged 109–110)
Oneida County, New York, U.S.
NationalitySusquehannock Oneida
Occupation(s)Chief, military leader

John Skenandoa (/ˌskɛnənˈdə/; c. 1706[1] – March 11, 1816), also called Shenandoah (/ˌʃɛnənˈdə/) among other forms, was an elected chief (a so-called "pine tree chief") of the Oneida. He was born into the Iroquoian-speaking Susquehannocks, but was adopted into the Oneida of the Iroquois Confederacy. When he later accepted Christianity, he was baptized as "John", taking his Oneida name Skenandoa as his surname. Based on a possible reconstruction of his name in its original Oneida, he is sometimes called "Oskanondonha" in modern scholarship. His tombstone bears the spelling Schenando (/ˈʃɛnənd, ˈskɛn-/).

During the colonial years, Skenandoa supported the English against the French in the Seven Years' War. Later, during the American Revolutionary War, he supported the colonials and led a force of 250 Oneida and Tuscarora warriors in western New York in their support. He met George Washington, who wrote at least one letter of recommendation for him.[2]

A longtime friend of the minister Samuel Kirkland, a founder of Hamilton College, his request to be buried next to Kirkland was granted. In the funeral procession at the death of Skenandoa together were Oneida, students and officers from Hamilton College, Kirkland's widow and her family, and many citizens of Clinton, New York.

Name

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Skenandoa's name is variously recorded; "Shenandoah" has become the most famous form, used in many versions of the folk song "O Shenandoah", where the words "O Shenandoah, I love your daughter" and "The chief disdained the trader's dollars: / 'My daughter never you shall follow'" are found. Other forms include Skenandoah or Scanandoa; Schenandoah, Schenandoa, Shenondoa, Shanandoah, or Shanendoah; Skenando or Scanondo; Schenando; Skenandore; and Skennondon, Scanandon, Skonondon, or Skeanendon.

The origin of Skenandoa's name is uncertain. The spelling Oskanondonha (which was not recorded in his lifetime) assumes derivation from Oneida oskanu:tú: [oˌskanũːˈtũː], "deer".[3][4] However, Skenandoa referred to himself as "an aged hemlock",[5][6] and the Oneida word for "hemlock" is kanʌʔtú:saʔ [ˌkanə̃ʔˈtũːsaʔ];[7] this derivation has had a longer tradition of acceptance.[5][8]

Life

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Skenandoa was born in 1710 into the Iroquoian-speaking Susquehannock people (also called Conestoga), located in present-day eastern Pennsylvania. He was adopted into the Oneida people, one of the Five Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy.

As an adult man, he was notable for his height,[9] estimated to be 6'5," and was said to have a commanding presence. The Oneida elected him as a "Pine Tree Chief", in recognition of his leadership and contribution to the tribe. This position allowed him a place in the Grand Council of 50 chiefs of the Confederacy, representing all the clans of all the nations. It was not hereditary, nor could Skenandoa name a successor.[10] The name referred to a man being recognized as a chief and rising up inside the tribe.[10]

During the Seven Years' War (also called the French and Indian War in the United States), Chief Skenandoa favored the British against the French and led the Oneida in their support in central New York. He was said to have saved German colonists in German Flatts, in the Mohawk Valley, from a massacre.[11]

During the next decades, he formed more alliances with the ethnic German and British colonists in central and western New York.

Samuel Kirkland, a Protestant missionary who went to the Iroquois country of western New York in 1764, encountered Chief Skenandoa there and mentioned him in letters. Kirkland returned to the area in 1766 and worked with the Oneida for the remainder of his life. After Kirkland persuaded the chief to become baptized, Skenandoa took the name "John". Many of the Oneida converted to Christianity in the decade before the American Revolutionary War.[11]

In part due to the friendship with Kirkland, Chief Skenandoa favored the patriot colonials and led the Oneida to be their allies during the Revolutionary War. He led many Oneida to fight against the British and their Iroquois allies, who came from four nations of the Confederacy. Chief Skenandoa commanded 250 warriors from the Oneida and Tuscarora tribes.[11][12] In the 1800s New York Governor Daniel D. Tompkins gave him a silver pipe in recognition of his contributions. Today it is displayed at Shako:wi, the Oneida Nation museum at their reservation near Syracuse.[13]

Mohawk war leader Joseph Brant, who allied with the British during the revolution, had Skenandoa jailed at Fort Niagara for a period in 1779 during the war when the Oneida chief was on a peace mission to the Iroquois. Brant hoped that the British could help contain colonial encroachment against the Iroquois.

After the war, Kirkland continued to minister to the Oneida. About 1791 he started planning a seminary, a boys' school to be open to Oneida as well as white young men of the area. In 1793 he received a charter from the state for the Hamilton Oneida Seminary, and in 1794 completed its first building, known as Oneida Hall.[11] By 1812, the seminary developed as the four-year institution known as Hamilton College.

Skenandoa lived into great old age. Nearing the end of his life and having gone blind,[14] the chief is recorded as having said:

I am an aged hemlock. I am dead at the top. The winds of an hundred winters have whistled through my branches. Why my Jesus keeps me here so long, I cannot conceive. Pray ye to him, that I may have patience to endure till my time may come.[5][6]

After Skenandoah died in 1816 at well over a hundred years old, he was buried upon his request (and with the Kirkland family's approval) next to his friend Kirkland, who had died in 1808, on the grounds of Kirkland's home in Clinton, New York.[11][12] Today the property is known as Harding Farm. As a measure of the respect for the chief, the procession at his funeral in 1816 included students and officers from Hamilton College, the widow Mrs. Kirkland and other members of her family, and numerous town residents, in addition to his son and members of his family and nation.[11] In 1851, both bodies were reinterred in the cemetery of Hamilton College, of which Kirkland was a co-founder.

Legacy and honors

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The Oneida oral tradition tells that Chief Skenandoa provided critical food, sending corn to General George Washington and his men during their harsh winter at Valley Forge in 1777–1778. Washington is said to have named the Shenandoah River and valley in his honor,[15][16] and subsequently numerous other places in the United States were named Shenandoah. He is also referred to in the title and lyrics of the folk song "Oh Shenandoah".

A monument to Skenandoa was erected by the Northern Missionary Society at the Hamilton College cemetery. Its inscription recognizes his leadership, friendship with Kirkland, and important contributions to the rebel colonists during the war.[11]

In 2002 he was inducted into the Hall of Fame of the Oneida County Historical Society.[17]

The Oneida performer-composer Joanne Shenandoah (1957–2021) was a descendant of Chief Shenandoah.

References

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  1. ^ Variously recorded as 1704, 1706, and 1710.
  2. ^ Glathaar, Joseph; Martin, James Kirby (2007). Forgotten Allies: The Oneida Indians and the American Revolution. Hill and Wang. p. 99. ISBN 978-0809046003.
  3. ^ Michelson, Karen; Doxtator, Mercy (2002). "oskanu·tú·". Oneida–English/English–Oneida Dictionary. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9780802035905.
  4. ^ Hodge, Frederick Webb (1910). "Skenandoa". Handbook of North American Indians North of Mexico. Vol. 2. Government Printing Office: Washington, D.C. Hodge (via Hewitt) gives the reconstructed form Skĕñnoñʹdoⁿʾ (that is, ⟨*skʌnútu:ʔ⟩) based on this derivation.
  5. ^ a b c Bartholomew, Orlo (1878). "A Historical Address Delivered at Augusta". History of Oneida County, New York. Philadelphia: Everts & Fariss. p. 409. Retrieved August 17, 2015.
  6. ^ a b Skenando (Skenandoa) (1859). "Speech of Skenando". In Camp, Phinehas (ed.). Poems on the Mohawk Valley. Utica, New York: Self-published. Retrieved August 17, 2015. Speech of Skenando. Camp says that Rev. William Jenkins recorded this speech in shorthand, and that "the original was far more splendid." Other versions are recorded, but Camp and Jenkins' seems to be the original.
  7. ^ Michelson, Karen; Doxtator, Mercy (2002). "kanʌʔtú·saʔ". Oneida–English/English–Oneida Dictionary. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9780802035905.
  8. ^ Hauptman, Laurence; McLester, L. Gordon (1999). The Oneida Indian Journey. United States: The University of Wisconsin Press. p. 34. ISBN 0-299-16140-4. Retrieved August 17, 2015. (Citing William Beauchamp, "Johnko' Skeanendon" in "St. Regis Indians and Five of the Six Nations".)
  9. ^ Schoolcraft, Henry (1851–57). Historical and Statistical Information respecting the History, Condition, and Prospects of the Indian Tribes of the United States. p. Vol 5, p. 516. The author visited Skenandoa in 1810 and describes him thus: "He was tall, of stalwart frame, erect, bald, and sightless."
  10. ^ a b "Pine Tree Chiefs", Haudenosaunee Confederacy, accessed 20 May 2014
  11. ^ a b c d e f g John Warner Barber, Henry Howe, Historical Collections of the State of New York, "Account of the Death of Skenandoa"], S. Tuttle, 1842, pp. 362-364, accessed 5 July 2011
  12. ^ a b Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1900). "Skenando" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
  13. ^ Michael Nassar, "Five Native American Treasures Within Driving Distance", New York Daily News, 15 July 2008
  14. ^ Cheever, George Barrell (1853). "Sentiment of an Aged Chief". Cyclopaedia of Moral and Religious Anecdote. London: Richard Griffin and Company. p. 81. Retrieved August 17, 2015.
  15. ^ "Cultural Heritage: American Revolution", 5 July 2010, Oneida Tribe of Indians of Wisconsin
  16. ^ "The Revolutionary War", 5 July 2010, Oneida Indian Nation
  17. ^ "Polly Cooper", Oneida Indian Nation