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                  41 to 60 (of 86)
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                  third wife of Joseph Brant [Thayendanegea*]. Isabel T. Kelsay
                   
                  Karonghyonte (David Hill); m. Christiana Brant, second child of Thayendanegea* (Joseph Brant), and they had at least three children; d. 1834 of
                  Kerr* married Elizabeth Brant, daughter of Joseph [Thayendanegea*], thus strengthening the ties of the Kerrs with that prominent Mohawk
                  Brant, daughter of Joseph Brant [Thayendanegea*], and they had four
                  [Thayendanegea*], brother of Peter. By the late 1820s Peter Jones had persuaded almost all the band to become Christians. After he finished school Sawyer
                  [Thayendanegea*], she may have been born while her parents were living in the Ohio region. John Norton* in his Journal states that Joseph was
                  [Thayendanegea*] at Brantford. With his aristocratic features and bearing, and his imposing stature – he was over six feet and “still straight as an arrow” – the chief closely resembled the romantic
                  Brant [Thayendanegea*] in the American Revolutionary War. Her father, Peter Smith, a prosperous Mohawk farmer, served in the 1850s as the Six
                   
                  *], the well-regarded son of Joseph [Thayendanegea*], had tried to keep alive the cultural initiatives that his father had launched at the Grand
                   
                  [Thayendanegea*] early in 1798. By late 1801 Mallory had acquired stills, which he seems to have leased for some time since he did not possess a licence. On 2 April 1802 he took out a recognizance to
                   
                  Joseph Brant [Thayendanegea*], however, he was not involved as a major spokesman in dealings with other Indian peoples or with the government, nor
                   
                  , who after 1780 encouraged the formation of a confederacy to oppose American expansion [see Thayendanegea
                   
                  Caldwell* and Joseph Brant [Thayendanegea] in September 1778 against German Flats (near the mouth of West Canada
                   
                  Grand River settlement of Joseph Brant [Thayendanegea]. The long evening provided a study in contrasts: sumptuous
                  Indian clients to the Grand River valley, where they settled and did a little fur trading. In February 1787 Joseph Brant [Thayendanegea*] arranged
                  interpreter in the Indian Department at Niagara. Captain Joseph Brant [Thayendanegea*] soon drew
                   
                  . Hough (2v., Roxbury, Mass., 1866). W. L. Stone, Life of Joseph Brant – Thayendanegea . . . (2v., New York, 1838; repr. New York, 1969, and St Clair Shores, Mich
                   
                  Indians had fled. There she married the twice-widowed Joseph Brant [Thayendanegea*], first in the Indian manner and later, in the winter of 1779–80
                  . 28 Aug. 1863 Ellen Hill (Karakwineh, meaning “moving sun”), great-granddaughter of Joseph Brant [Thayendanegea
                  matters with Dorchester by offering Osgoode as his spokesman on two disputed questions, the lease of the Six Nations’ lands [see Thayendanegea
                  41 to 60 (of 86)
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