A Treatise on the Six-Nation Indians

audiobook

A Treatise on the Six-Nation Indians

by J. B. Mackenzie

EN·~1 hours·25 chapters

Chapters

25 total

A TREATISE ON THE SIX-NATION INDIANS BY J. B. MACKENZIE - PREFACE.

0:17

J. B. M. - A TREATISE ON THE SIX NATION INDIANS - INTRODUCTORY

1:48

Produced by Sean Barrett, Charles Franks

0:49

THE INDIAN'S CONDITIONS OF SETTLEMENT.

5:16

HIS MEETINGS OF COUNCIL.

10:21

HIS ORATORY.

5:15

HIS PHYSICAL MIEN AND CHARACTERISTICS.

8:07

HIS CHIEFS AND THEIR FUNCTIONS.

4:57

HIS CHARACTER, MORAL AND GENERAL.

12:16

HIS PRONENESS TO DRINK.

3:25

Description

In this lucid lecture‑style work, the author turns his attention to the six original Iroquois nations—Mohawk, Tuscarora, Onondaga, Seneca, Oneida, and Cayuga—tracing their journey from early settlement along the Grand River to their present‑day communities. Drawing on personal visits to the Brant County reserve, he weaves together oral testimony, government records, and contemporary accounts to paint a picture of daily life, land agreements, and the uneasy balance between tribal autonomy and colonial oversight. The narrative is anchored in the author's own reflections on how stereotypes of “revenge” and “mercilessness” have been projected onto both Indigenous peoples and white settlers.

Listeners will discover how the government's land‑cession policies shaped the reserve’s boundaries, the financial trusts set up for each family, and the practical realities of farming, leasing, and occasional land sales among the Six Nations. The author also highlights the subtle ways in which traditional customs adapt to new economic pressures without losing their core identity. By the end of the first act, the treatise offers a snapshot of a community negotiating its past and future amid competing cultural narratives.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (91K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2004-09-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

JB

J. B. Mackenzie

1851–1919

A Canadian writer with a wide range, he wrote on Indigenous history, turned Joseph Brant’s life into drama, and published patriotic poetry in the early 1900s. His surviving books suggest a writer interested in both national history and literary performance.

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