Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-pjpqr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-14T04:05:23.842Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Population History of the Onondaga and Oneida Iroquois, A.D. 1500–1700

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Eric E. Jones*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC 27109 (jonesee@wfu.edu)

Abstract

Much of the discussion about North American precontact and contact-period populations has focused on continent-wide estimates. Although the associated work has produced valuable information on the demographic and cultural history of the continent, it has failed to generate agreed-upon estimates, population trends, or detailed demographic knowledge of Native American cultures. Using archaeological settlement remains and methods developed in recent research on Iroquoian cultures, this study estimates and examines population trends for the Onondaga and Oneida cultures of the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) from A.D. 1500 to 1700. Onondaga population appears to have increased until the mid—seventeenth century, when drastic declines in settlement area and population size occurred. This depopulation event is both several decades after first contact with Europeans and at least a decade after the first known depopulation event among the Haudenosaunee. Oneida populations show a much more complex history that suggests the need for more detailed analyses of contact-period Native American population data. In conjunction with archaeological evidence and ethnohistoric information, the population trends generated by this study create a model of two precontact Native American populations and display the effects of European contact on those populations.

Resumen

Resumen

Gran parte de las estimaciones sobre los números de las poblaciones en norte América pre- y durante el contacto con europeos se basan en discusiones poblacionales a nivel continental. Aunque estos estudios han producido información importante sobre la historia demográfica y cultural del continente, no han logrado generar un consenso acerca de los patrones de población o conocimiento demográfico detallado de las culturas norteamericanas. Por medio del análisis de material arqueológico de asentamientos y métodos desarrollados en investigaciones recientes sobre las culturas Iroquois, este estudio genera y examina patrones de población para las culturas Onondaga y Oneida del Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) del periodo de 1500 a 1700 d.C. La población Onondaga parece haberse incrementado hasta la mitad del siglo diecisiete cuando se registra un declive drástico en el área del asentamiento y en la población. Este decrecimiento poblacional parece haber ocurrido varias décadas después del primer contacto con europeos y por lo menos una década después del primer decrecimiento poblacional de los Haudenosaunee. Las poblaciones Oneida muestran una historia mucho más compleja que requiere de análisis más detallados del periodo de contacto con europeos. El análisis conjunto del material arqueológico y la información etnohistórica de este estudio generan patrones de población que permiten crear un modelo de dos grupos poblacionales de norte América antes del contacto con grupos Europeos y cuales fueron los efectos poblacionales de dicho contacto.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Society for American Archaeology 2010

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References Cited

Anderson, David G. 1999 Examining Chiefdoms in the Southeast: An Application of Multiscalar Analysis. In Great Towns and Regional Polities in the Prehistoric American Southwest and Southeast, edited by Jill E. Neitzel, pp. 215241. Amerind Foundation New World Study Series 3. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Anthony, David W. 1990 Migration in Archeology: The Baby and the Bathwater. American Anthropologist 92:895914.Google Scholar
Bennett, Monte 1973 The Moot Site (Sullivan), Ond 3–4. New York State Archaeological Association Chenango Chapter Bulletin 14(1):125.Google Scholar
Bennett, Monte 1979 The Blowers Site, Ond 1–4: An Early Historic Oneida Settlement. New York State Archaeological Association Chenango Chapter Bulletin 18(2):125.Google Scholar
Bennett, Monte 1981 A Longhouse Pattern on the Cameron Site (Ond 8–4). New York State Archaeological Association Chenango Chapter Bulletin 19(2):123.Google Scholar
Bennett, Monte 1983 Glass Trade Beads from Central New York. In Proceedings of the 1982 Glass Trade Bead Conference, edited by Charles F. Hayes III, pp. 5158. Research Record 16. Rochester Museum and Science Center, Rochester.Google Scholar
Bennett, Monte 1984 The Stone Quarry Site (Msv 4-2): A Mid-Seventeenth Century Oneida Station. New York State Archaeological Association Chenango Chapter Bulletin 21(2).Google Scholar
Bennett, Monte 1991 Onneyuttehage, Thurston, Msv-1: A Story of a Screened Sidehill Midden. New York State Archaeological Association Chenango Chapter Bulletin 24(3).Google Scholar
Bond, Stanley C. 1982 The Relationship Between Soils and Settlement Patterns in the Mohawk Valley. In The Mohawk Valley Project: 1982 Field Season Report, edited by Dean R. Snow, pp. 1740. Institute for Northeast Anthropology, University at Albany, Albany.Google Scholar
Bradley, James W. 1977 The Pompey Center Site: The Impact of European Trade Goods 1600–1620. New York State Archaeological Association Beauchamp Chapter Bulletin 2(1):216.Google Scholar
Bradley, James W. 1987 Evolution of the Onondaga Iroquois. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse.Google Scholar
Bradley, James W. 2007 Before Albany: An Archaeology of Native-Dutch Relations in the Capital Region 1600–1664. New York State Museum Bulletin 509. Albany.Google Scholar
Brandāo, José António 2003 Nation Iroquoise: A Seventeenth-Century Ethnography of the Iroquois. Translated by Jose Antonio Brandão, with K. Janet Ritch. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln.Google Scholar
Centerwall, William 1968 A Recent Experience with Measles in a “Virgin-Soil” Population. In Biomedical Challenges Presented by the American Indian, pp. 7781. Pan American Sanitary Bureau, Pulicaciones Cientificas 165. World Health Organization, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
DeAngelo, Gordon C. 1987 Unpublished map of the Olcott Site. Manuscript on file, New York State Archaeological Association Beauchamp Chapter Library, Chittenango.Google Scholar
Denevan, William M. (editor) 1992 The Native Population of the Americas in 1492. 2nd ed. University of Wisconsin Press, Madison.Google Scholar
DeVoto, Bernard (editor) 1953 The Journals of Lewis and Clark. Houghton Mifflin, New York.Google Scholar
Dobyns, Henry F. 1966 Estimating Aboriginal American Population. Current Anthropology 7(4):395416.Google Scholar
Dobyns, Henry F. 1983 Their Number Become Thinned: Native American Population Dynamics in Eastern North America. University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Engelbrecht, William 1995 The Case of the Disappearing Iroquoians: Early Contact Period Superpower Politics. Northeast Anthropology 50:3559.Google Scholar
Engelbrecht, William 2003 Iroquoia: The Development of a Native World. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse.Google Scholar
Engelbrecht, William 2004 Northern New York Revisited. In A Passion for the Past: Papers in Honour of James F. Pendergast, edited by James V. Wright and Jean-Luc Pilon, pp. 125144. Mercury Series Archaeology Paper 164. Canadian Museum of Civilization, Gatineau.Google Scholar
Fenton, William N., and Tooker, Elisabeth 1978 Mohawk. In Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 15: Northeast, edited by Bruce D. Trigger, pp. 466480. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
Fitzgerald, William R. 2001 Contact, Neutral Iroquoian Transformation, and the Little Ice Age. In Societies in Eclipse: Archaeology of the Eastern Woodlands Indians, A.D. 1400–1700, edited by David S. Brose, C. Wesley Cowan, and Robert J. Mainfort Jr., pp. 3747. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
Funk, Robert E., and Kuhn, Robert D. 2003 Three Sixteenth-Century Mohawk Iroquois Village Sites. New York State Museum Bulletin 503. Albany.Google Scholar
Ghere, David L. 1997 Myths and Methods in Demography: Abenaki Population Recovery, 1725–1750. Ethnohistory 60:511534.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gibson, Stanford 1986 A Report on Two Oneida Iroquois Indian Sites. New York State Archaeological Association Chenango Chapter Bulletin 22(1):110.Google Scholar
Hassan, Fekri 1981 Demographic Archaeology. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Hickerson, Daniel A. 1997 Historical Processes, Epidemic Disease, and the Formation of the Hasinai Confederacy. Ethnohistory 44(1):3152.Google Scholar
Hosbach, Richard E., and Gibson, Stanford 1980 The Wilson Site (Ond-9): A Protohistoric Oneida Village. New York State Archaeological Association Chenango Chapter Bulletin 18(4B).Google Scholar
Jones, Eric E. 2006 Applying GIS to the Settlement Demography of the Iroquois. Poster presented at the 71st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, San Juan.Google Scholar
Joralemon, Donald 1982 New World Depopulation and the Case of Disease. Journal of Anthropological Research 38(1):108127.Google Scholar
Kay, Jeanne 1984 The Fur Trade and Native American Population Growth. Ethnohistory 31:265287.Google Scholar
Keener, Craig 1999 An Ethnohistoric Analysis of Iroquois Assault Tactics Used Against Fortified Settlements of the Northeast in the Seventeenth Century. Ethnohistory 46:777807.Google Scholar
Kroeber, A. L. 1939 Cultural and Natural Areas of Native North America. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Livi-Bacci, Massimo 1992 A Concise History of World Population. Translated by C. Ipsen. Blackwell, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Lounsbury, Floyd G. 1978 Iroquoian Languages. In Handbook of North American Indians, edited by Bruce Trigger, Vol. 15:334343. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
Martin, Calvin 1978 Keepers of the Game: Indian-Animal Relationships and the Fur Trade. University of California Press, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Martin, Scott W. J. 2008 Languages Past and Present: Archaeological Approaches to the Appearance of Northern Iroquoian Speakers in the Lower Great Lakes Region of North America. American Antiquity 73:441463.Google Scholar
Milner, George R. 1980 Epidemic Disease in the Postcontact Southeast: A Reappraisal. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 5:3956.Google Scholar
Milner, George R., Anderson, David G., and Smith, Michael T. 2001 The Distribution of Eastern Woodlands People. In Societies in Eclipse: Archaeology of the Eastern Woodlands Indians, A.D. 1400–1700, edited by David S. Brose, C. Wesley Cowan, and Robert J. Mainfort Jr., pp. 918. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
Mook, Maurice A. 1944 The Aboriginal Population of Tidewater Virginia. American Anthropologist 46:193208.Google Scholar
Neel, James V. 1970 Lessons from a “Primitive” People. Science, N.S., 170:815822.Google Scholar
O’Callaghan, E. B. 1849–1851 The Documentary History of the State of New York. Weed, Parsons, and Co., Albany.Google Scholar
Paine, Richard R. 1997 The Need for a Multidisciplinary Approach to Prehistoric Demography. In Integrating Archaeological Demography, edited by Richard R. Paine, pp. 120. Center for Archaeological Investigations, Occasional Paper No. 24. Southern Illinois University, Carbondale.Google Scholar
Palkovich, Ann M. 1985 Historic Population of the Eastern Pueblos: 1540–1910. Journal of Anthropological Research 41(4):401426.Google Scholar
Peterson, James 1960 The Olcott Site and Palisades. The Bulletin: Journal of the New York State Archaeological Association 18:612.Google Scholar
Pratt, Peter P. 1976 Archaeology of the Oneida Iroquois, Vol. 1. Occasional Publications in Northeastern Anthropology 1. George’s Mills, New Hampshire.Google Scholar
Ramenofsky, Ann F. 1987 Vectors of Death: The Archaeology of European Contact. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Richter, Daniel K. 1992 The Ordeal of the Longhouse: The Peoples of the Iroquois League in the Era of European Colonization. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
Schacht, Robert M. 1981 Estimating Past Population Trends. Annual Review of Anthropology 10:119140.Google Scholar
Schacht, Robert M. 1984 Contemporaneity Problem. American Antiquity 49:678695.Google Scholar
Sempowski, Martha L., and Saunders, Lorraine P. 2001 Dutch Hollow and Factory Hollow: The Advent of Dutch Trade Among the Seneca, Pts. 1–3. Rochester Museum and Science Center, Research Records No. 24. Rochester.Google Scholar
Snow, Dean R. 1994 The Iroquois. Blackwell, New York.Google Scholar
Snow, Dean R. 1995a Microchronology and Demographic Evidence Relating to the Size of Pre-Colombian North American Indian Populations. Science 268:16011604.Google Scholar
Snow, Dean R. 1995b Mohawk Valley Archaeology: The Sites. State University of New York, Albany.Google Scholar
Snow, Dean R. 2001 The Evolution of the Mohawk Iroquois. In Societies in Eclipse: Archaeology of the Eastern Woodlands Indians, A.D. 1400–1700, edited by David S. Brose, C. Wesley Cowan, and Robert J. Mainfort Jr., pp. 1925. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Snow, Dean R., Gehring, Charles T., and Starna, William A. 1996 A Journey into Mohawk and Oneida Country, 1634—1635. In Mohawk Country: Early Narratives About a Native People, edited by Dean R. Snow, Charles T. Gehring, and William A. Starna, pp. 113. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse.Google Scholar
Snow, Dean R., and Lanphear, Kim M. 1988 European Contact and Indian Depopulation in the Northeast: The Timing of the First Epidemics. Ethnohistory 35:1533.Google Scholar
Snow, Dean R., and Starna, William A. 1989 Sixteenth-Century Depopulation: A View from the Mohawk Valley. American Anthropologist 91:142149.Google Scholar
Starna, William A. 1980 Mohawk Iroquois Populations: A Revision. Ethnohistory 27:371382.Google Scholar
Starna, William A., Hamell, George R., and Butts, William L. 1984 Northern Iroquoian Horticulture and Insect Infestation: A Cause for Village Removal. Ethnohistory 31:197207.Google Scholar
Sykes, Clark M. 1980 Swidden Horticulture and Iroquoian Settlement. Archaeology of Eastern North America 8:4552.Google Scholar
Thornton, Russell 1987 American Indian Holocaust and Survival: A Population History Since 1492. University of Oklahoma Press, London.Google Scholar
Thornton, Russell 1997 Aboriginal North American Population Decline and Rates of Decline, ca. A.D. 1500–1900. Current Anthropology 38:310315.Google Scholar
Thornton, Russell, and Marsh-Thornton, Joan 1981 Estimating Prehistoric American Indian Population Size for United States Area: Implications of the Nineteenth Century Population Decline and Nadir. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 55:4753.Google Scholar
Thornton, Russell, Miller, Tim, and Warren, Jonathan 1991 American Indian Population Recovery Following Smallpox Epidemics. American Anthropologist 93(1):2845.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thwaites, Rueben Gold (editor) 1959 The Jesuit Relations and Allied Documents 1610–1791. 73 vols. Pageant, New York.Google Scholar
Tuck, James A. 1971 Onondaga Iroquois Prehistory: A Study in Settlement Archaeology. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse.Google Scholar
Ubelaker, D. H. 1976 Prehistoric New World Population Size: Historical Review and Current Appraisal of North American Estimates. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 45:661666.Google Scholar
Ubelaker, D. H. 1988 North American Population Size, A.D. 1500 to 1985. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 77:289294.Google Scholar
Vandrei, Charles E. 1986 A Preliminary Report on the 1983 and 1984 Excavations at Bosley's Mills, HNE 57–3: A Seventeenth Century Seneca Iroquois Community. Prepared for the Rock Foundation and the Research Division of the Rochester Museum and Science Center. Report on file, Rochester Museum and Science Center, Rochester.Google Scholar
Warrick, Gary A. 2000 The Precontact Iroquoian Occupation of Southern Ontario. Journal of World Prehistory 14:415465.Google Scholar
Warrick, Gary A. 2003 European Infectious Disease and Depopulation of the Wendat-Tionontate (Huron-Petun). World Archaeology 35(2):258275.Google Scholar
Warrick, Gary A. 2008 A Population History of the Huron-Petun, A.D. 500–1650. Cambridge University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Whitney, Theodore 1964 Thurston, Onneyuttehage, Msv 1. New York State Archaeological Association Chenango Chapter Bulletin 6(1):114.Google Scholar
Whitney, Theodore 1967 The Bach Site. New York State Archaeological Association Chenango Chapter Bulletin 8(4):110.Google Scholar
Whitney, Theodore 1970 The Buyea Site, Ond 13–3. The Bulletin: Journal of the New York State Archaeological Association 50:120.Google Scholar
Whitney, Theodore 1971 The Olcott Site, Msv-3. Chenango Chapter Bulletin of the New York State Archaeological Association 12(3):119.Google Scholar
Wonderley, Anthony 2004 Oneida Iroquois Folklore, Myth, and History. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse.Google Scholar
Wonderley, Anthony 2006 Archaeological Research at the Oneida Vaillancourt Site. The Bulletin: Journal of the New York State Archaeological Association 122:126.Google Scholar
Wray, Charles F., Sempowski, Martha L., and Saunders, Lorraine P. 1991 Tram and Cameron: Two Early Contact Era Seneca Sites. Research Records No. 21. Rochester Museum and Science Center, Rochester.Google Scholar
Wray, Charles R., Sempowski, Martha L., Saunders, Lorraine P., and Cervone, Gian Carlo 1987 The Adams and Culbertson Sites. Research Records No. 19. Rochester Museum and Science Center, Rochester.Google Scholar
Wright, James V. 1974 The Nodwell Site. Mercury Series, Archaeological Survey of Canada Paper 22. National Museum of Man, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Wright, Milton J. 1986 The Uren Site AfHd-3: An Analysis and Reappraisal of the Uren Substage Type Site. Monographs in Ontario Archaeology 2. Ontario Archaeological Society, Toronto.Google Scholar