BuffaloResearch.com: Digital Library

BuffaloResearch.com: Digital Library

#Seneca-Haudenosaunee
What’s in a Name?: The Connection Between the Native Americans and the Streets of Buffalo, 1802-1857
What’s in a Name?: The Connection Between the Native Americans and the Streets of Buffalo, 1802-1857
This article focuses on how the street names of Buffalo, New York, have evolved over time in response to shifting sentiment toward the Native American population. Though the street names in Buffalo started off as primarily Germanic and Anglo-Saxon, as tensions rose between the white inhabitants of Buffalo and the Native population, more street names were named with tribal words. This was played out against the dramatic backdrop of Native American legal battles against the city of Buffalo and other land companies for the right to stay on their ancestral lands. In 1857, the Seneca Nation won ...
·digitalcommons.buffalostate.edu·
What’s in a Name?: The Connection Between the Native Americans and the Streets of Buffalo, 1802-1857
Aaron Hamton Diary Transcript, 1813
Aaron Hamton Diary Transcript, 1813
Pocket diary of a journey taken by the author and several fellow Quakers from Kingswood, NJ to a settlement that is now in Erie County. It provides detailed descriptions of frontier and pioneer life; the social life and customs of native peoples, particularly the Seneca Indians on the Buffalo Creek Reservation. The diary provides many details of the Quaker settlement situated along Eighteen Mile Creek in the Holland Purchase. Original is at the New York State Library.
·128.121.13.244·
Aaron Hamton Diary Transcript, 1813