Lunaapahkiing Princeton Timetree

Relations, Removals, Resurgence

Resources

References, Sources of Inspiration, and Further Reading

Armstrong, April C. “George Morgan White Eyes, Racial Theory at Princeton and Student

Financial Aid in the Eighteenth Century.” Mudd Manuscript Library Blog.

Armstrong, April C. “Can Nathaniel FitzRandolph’s Descendants Attend Princeton University for Free?” Mudd Manuscript Library Blog.

Brainerd, Rev. Thomas. The Life of John Brainerd, The Brother of David Brainerd and His Successor as Missionary to the Indians of New Jersey. 1865

Bush, Alfred L. “A Few Incidents from My Life Among the Indians on the Princeton Campus.” The Princeton University Library Chronicle, Vol. 78, No. 1. 2020.

Bush, Alfred L. “Otterskins, Eagle Feathers, and Native American Alumni at Princeton.” The Princeton University Library Chronicle, Vol. 67, No. 2. 2006).

Campanella, Thomas J. Brooklyn: The Once and Future City.

“Council, Civil Rights Commission Vote for Indigenous Peoples Day.” Letter to the Editor. Town Topics.

Deloria, Philip. “Lenape: Imagining the Indigenous States of America with Philip Deloria.”

Dowd, Gregory. The Indians of New Jersey.

Dunbar-Ortiz, Roxanne. _An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States. Beacon Press 2015.

Dyson, George. “The Tavern and the Meeting House.”

Estes, Nick. Our History is the Future. 2019.

Fluehr, Kathryn. “Prospect Farm,” Princeton & Slavery.

Glow, Beatrice. Mannahatta VR.

Sandy Grande. Red Pedagogy: Native American Social and Political Thought. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. 2015.

Hämäläinen, Pekka. Indigenous Continent: The Epic Contest for North America. 2022.

Hill, George A, Jr. “Delaware Ethnobotany.” 1971. 2nd Edition 2015, re-edited with Jim Rementer.

“Indigenous Foodways.” The Public History Project.

Juet, Robert. “Juet’s Journal of Hudson’s 1609 Voyage.”

Kerber, Jordan E, ed. Cross-Cultural Collaboration: Native Peoples and Archaeology in the Northeastern United States.

Kraybill, Diya. “Humanities Council Awards Grant to Launch Native American & Indigenous Studies Working Group.” The Daily Princetonian.

The Lenape Center, based in Manhattan.

“Lenape Talking Dictionary.”

Licht, Walter, et al. “The Original People and Their Land: The Lenape, Pre-History to the 18th Century.”

Mack, Jessica R. “William Potter Ross.” Princeton & Slavery.

Morales, Isabela R. “Slavery at the President’s House.” Princeton & Slavery.

“Nathaniel FitzRandolph.” Princetoniana Museum.

Nuclear Princeton.

“Our History.” Princeton University Website.

Peters, Chief Mark. Manhattan to Muncey.

Peters, Chief Mark. “Munsee History 14,000 BP – 1763).”

Peters, Chief Mark. “The Treaty of Easton, Signed by the Munsee Chief, Egohohowen, on October 1758.”

Pierce, Tina Marie. The Nanticoke Lenni-Lenape Indians: Restoration of a Tribal Identity.

“Removal History of the Delaware Tribe.” Official Website of the Delaware Tribe of Indians.

Schmidt, Ethan A._ Native Americans in the American Revolution: How the War Divided, Devastated, and Transformed the Early American Indian World_.

Smith, Richard D. Legendary Locals of Princeton, New Jersey.

Soderlund, Jean R. Lenape Country: Delaware Valley Society Before William Penn. 2016.

“Sycamore Trees.” Campus Art Princeton.

TallBear, Kim, “Caretaking Relations: Not American Dreaming.” Kalfou, Volume 6, Issue 1 (Spring 2019).

“Timeline of Dispossession, Enslavement and Extraction.” The Public History Project.

“To George Washington from George Morgan, 9 May 1779.” Founders Online.

“To George Washington from George Morgan White Eyes, 2 June 1789.” Founders Online.

“To George Washington from George Morgan White Eyes, 8 July 1789.” Founders Online.

“To George Washington from George Morgan White Eyes, 8 August 1789.” Founders Online.

“Tour of NYC Indigenous Presence.” Urban Archive.

Tuck, Eve and Yang, K. Wayne, “Decolonization is Not a Metaphor.” Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society. Vol. 1, No. 1, 2012.

Walling, Richard S. “Locating a Lenape Landscape: Tatamy’s Swamp.”

Wellenreuther, Hermann. “The Succession of Head Chiefs and the Delaware Culture of Consent: The Delaware Nation, David Zeisberger, and Modern Ethnography”, In A. G. Roeber, ed., Ethnographies and Exchanges: Native Americans, Moravians, and Catholics in Early America. University Park, Pa.: Pennsylvania State University Press.

Zotigh, Dennis. “A Brief Balance of Power – The 1778 Treaty with the Delaware Nation.” Smithsonian Magazine.

Treaties, Laws and Letters

Land deed: From Matappeas, Tawapung, and Seapoekne, Monmouth County, NJ, 1674

Concessions to the Province of Pennsylvania - July 11, 1681

The Walking Purchase, August 25, 1737

An Act for Regulating Indian Affairs, and to Prevent the Settling of Deer Traps within the Colony of New Jersey, 1757

Treaty of Easton, 1758

“Address from the Delaware Nation, 10 May 1779.” Founders Online.

Address to the Delaware Nation, 12 May 1779,” from George Washington. Founders Online.

“To George Washington from George Morgan, 9 May 1779.” Founders Online.

“To George Washington from George Morgan White Eyes, 2 June 1789.” Founders Online.

“To George Washington from George Morgan White Eyes, 8 July 1789.” Founders Online.

“To George Washington from George Morgan White Eyes, 8 August 1789.” Founders Online.

Brotherton statement of refusal to leave New Jersey, January 20, 1798

Statement opposing white settlement on Indian land in Brotherton, New Jersey, January 6, 1780

Treaty of Greenville, Ohio, August 3, 1795

Indian Removal Act, 1830

Treaty with the Delawares, 1866

Treaty With The Cherokee, 1866

Indian Citizenship Act, August 11, 1978

The American Indian Religious Freedom Act, August 11, 1978

In collaboration with:

Native American and Indigenous Studies Initiative at Princeton VizE Lab, Anthropology Princeton Department of History Princeton Department of English licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License AccessibilityPrinceton University