Everything about Buckongahelas totally explained
Buckongahelas (
1720? - May
1805) was a regionally and nationally renowned
Lenni-Lenape chief, counselor and warrior. He lived during the days of the
French and Indian War and when the young American republic began advancing westward. It is known that he moved his people from the
U.S. state of
Delaware westward eventually to the present-day city of
Muncie, Indiana.
Buckongahelas is known to have lived some time in what is now the City of
Buckhannon in
Upshur County, West Virginia. He had a son named Mahongeon who was killed by Captain William White, a native of
Frederick County, Virginia. Local legend states that Mahongeon is buried under the current Upshur County Courthouse. White was never known to show mercy to Native Americans. He shot and killed the chief's son in the abdomen in the June of 1773. This local account is part of the 1927 historical romance novel
The Scout of the Buckongehanon, written by the late Buckhannon judge,
John Camillus McWhorter (1866 - 1937).
Local legend suggests Buckongahelas took revenge on White after covertly trailing his son's killer for a period of nine years (1773-1782). The captain was in fact killed, within sight of Bush Fort, in the vicinity of the
Buckhannon River, near a tree with upturned roots. History proves this story of revenge false due to the chief's physical presence in Ohio in 1781. Captain William White was slain on the evening of Friday,
March 8,
1782, coincidentally the same date as the
Gnadenhütten massacre.
During the
American Revolutionary War, Buckongahelas led his followers against the
United States and again in the
Northwest Indian War. In the latter war, he helped win the most devastating military victory ever achieved by
American Indians. Buckongahelas translates as a "Giver of Presents." He was also known as "Pachgantschihilas" and "Petchnanalas" meaning a "fulfiller" or "one who succeeds in all he undertakes." A U.S. official, who knew Buckongahelas, characterized him as the "
George Washington" of the Delaware people. He stood at a height of 5 feet, 10 inches and was strong with powerful muscles. He apparently had a
physiognomy resembling
Benjamin Franklin.
Early in the American Revolutionary War, Buckongahelas broke away from the neutral and pro-American Delawares led by
White Eyes, and established a town near the war leader
Blue Jacket of the
Shawnee. The two men became close allies.
During the war, a number of Delawares who had converted to
Christianity lived in dangerously exposed frontier villages run by
Moravian missionaries. In April 1781, at the Ohio village of
Gnadenhütten, Buckongahelas warned these Delawares that an American militia from Pennsylvania would come execute any Indians in their warpath. He urged these Christian Delawares to follow him and move further west out of encroaching American territory. Moving westward "from the rising sun," these people could live where the land was good and his warriors would protect them. These Delawares didn't heed the words of this concerned warrior and councillor. Eleven months later on Friday
March 8,
1782, this horrible incident was fulfilled as Buckongahelas had thoroughly explained. This event is known as the
Gnadenhütten massacre.
A Moravian missionary, named John Gottlieb Ernestus Heckewelder, accounts that Buckongahelas' oration to these Christian Indians was told "with ease and an eloquence not to be imitated." He continues that "Eleven months after this speech was delivered by this prophetic chief, ninety-six of these same Christian Indians, about sixty of them women and children, were murdered at the place where these very words had been spoken, by the same men he'd alluded to, and in the same manner that he'd described."
The United States compelled a number of Indian leaders to sign treaties after the Revolutionary War, claiming the
Ohio Country by right of conquest. In the late 1780s he joined a Shawnee-led confederacy that won several battles against the Americans (the
Northwest Indian War), before ultimately being defeated at the
Battle of Fallen Timbers in 1794. When the British failed to support the Indian confederacy after Fallen Timbers, Buckongahelas signed the
Treaty of Greenville on Monday
August 3,
1795. In this treaty, the Delawares gave up much land in
Pennsylvania and
Ohio.
On Tuesday,
June 7,
1803, he signed the
Treaty of Fort Wayne in
Indiana; new boundaries were set for the Delawares and other nations. Salt springs were also ceded. Algonquian tribes ceded large land tracts to the United States. Lastly, he signed the
Treaty of Vincennes on Saturday
August 18,
1804 in Vincennes, Indiana. The Delaware ceded lands between the Ohio and
Wabash Rivers. This treaty helped open settlement to the Ohio and Indiana territories. Buckongahelas made "X" signatures on these three treaties.
Buckongahelas spent his final years living with his people on the
White River near present-day
Muncie, Indiana. He died at the age of 85 from
smallpox or
influenza in May 1805. It was believed by many local Indians to have been the work of witchcraft; a witch-hunt followed, leading to the execution of several suspected Delaware witches, and the rise to prominence of the Shawnee prophet and witch hunter
Tenskwatawa / Tenskatawa.
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