Research

Scope and Content Note

This series contains Indian deeds recorded by the provincial secretary and Indian treaties or deeds of cession recorded by the secretary of state. There are 43 deeds and one agreement from the colonial period. Almost all the colonial Indian deeds date from the period 1748-1769, and most cede lands located in the Mohawk and upper Susquehanna Valleys. There are two exceptions: 1) an agreement between the Montauk Indians and the inhabitants of the town of Easthampton, Suffolk County, regarding rights to fenced fields and pastures and to use of timber, dated 1703; and 2) the Indian deed for the Wawayanda patent, Ulster and Orange Counties, dated 1712-13 (both these documents were recorded after 1748).

The colonial Indian deeds take the form of a deed or release from the native owners or proprietors of a particular tract of land to the king of Great Britain. The national or tribal affiliation of the native owners is seldom stated; however, most of the deeds appear to concern lands within the traditional territories of the Mohawk and Oneida nations. The document states the names of the individuals who have petitioned the governor in council for a grant of lands held by the Indians; describes the lands; and states the consideration given. The names of the native owners or proprietors are stated at the end of the document, and in many cases their marks (such as animal figures) are reproduced. Names of witnesses and date of recording are stated at the end of each deed.

The post-Revolutionary War treaties and related documents date between 1785 and 1871. The native groups involved in the treaties recorded in this series were the Oneida, Brothertown, Stockbridge, Cayuga, Mohawk, Seneca, Onondaga, and Tuscarora Indians, and the Seven Nations of Canada. The "treaties" generally take the form of a deed of cession from the sachems, chiefs, and warriors of a particular nation or group to the people of the state of New York. The location and date of the treaty, and the parties to the treaty are stated at the beginning of the document.

The lands ceded are described, and the consideration is stated. The names of the parties, including the governor or his representatives (commissioners of the land office), and the sachems, chiefs, and warriors are stated at the end of the document, along with names of the witnesses and the representative (if any) of the United States government. The date of recording is stated. Several powers of attorney and a few other non-treaty documents are recorded in the volume containing treaties with the state of New York. A preceding volume, which commenced in 1692, was destroyed in the Capitol fire of 1911. Incorporated in this series is a copy of the published proceedings of the New York Commissioners of Indian Affairs for the years 1784-1790.