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Saucunk

Coordinates: 40°42′11″N 80°17′0″W / 40.70306°N 80.28333°W / 40.70306; -80.28333
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Saucunk
Historic Native American village
Etymology: Unami: pasakunk "at the mouth or fork of a stream."[1]
Former location of Saucunk, present-day site of Rochester, Pennsylvania
Former location of Saucunk, present-day site of Rochester, Pennsylvania
Saucunk is located in Pennsylvania
Saucunk
Saucunk
Former location of Saucunk in Pennsylvania
Saucunk is located in the United States
Saucunk
Saucunk
Saucunk (the United States)
Coordinates: 40°42′11″N 80°17′0″W / 40.70306°N 80.28333°W / 40.70306; -80.28333
StatePennsylvania
Present-day CommunityRochester, Pennsylvania
Foundedabout 1725
AbandonedAugust, 1763
Population
 • Estimate 
(1758)
300−400
Sawcunk and other Native American villages, most circa 1750s

Saucunk or Sawcunk (also known as Soh-kon,[2] Sacung, Sankonk,[3]: 141  Sackum,[4] or Shingas' Town[5]) was a town established by the Lenape and Shawnees. It was the site of a Catholic mission and was visited by Conrad Weiser, Christian Frederick Post and George Croghan. The Lenape chiefs Tamaqua, Pisquetomen, Captain Jacobs and Shingas all lived there temporarily. Saucunk was abandoned after the Battle of Bushy Run in 1763.[6]

Etymology

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The name "Saucunk" is a corruption of the Lenape "pasakunk",[1] meaning "at the mouth or fork of a stream."[6][7]: 372 

Establishment, 1725

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Saucunk was established at the mouth of the Beaver Creek by the Lenape and Shawnees, possibly as early as 1725, during their westward migration. The settlement extended to the bluff above the Ohio about a mile below the mouth of the Beaver. It was near the site of present-day Rochester, Pennsylvania.[6] The town was for many years the main community of the Turtle Division of the Lenape.[8]: 74 [9]

Visit by Conrad Weiser, 1748

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Conrad Weiser went to Saucunk when on his mission to the Western Indians in 1748. He says in his Journal under date of August 30: "I went to Beaver Creek, an Indian Town, about 8 miles off (from Logstown), chiefly Delawares, the rest Mohocks, to have some belts of wampum made...We both (Weiser and Andrew Montour) lodged at this town at George Croghan's trading house."[5]

French and Indian War

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In 1755 Saucunk was used as a staging area by Captain Jacobs and Shingas for raids on British colonial settlements.[10] After the destruction of Kittanning in August, 1756, Shingas and his brother Pisquetomen lived at Saucunk until 1759, when the ongoing French and Indian War led them to move to Kuskusky.[11]: 29  During this time, the community was often referred to as Shingas' Town.[5]: 203 

Captives

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Marie Le Roy and Barbara Leininger, both age 12, were captured during the Penn's Creek massacre on 16 October 1755. In her account of her captivity, Marie Le Roy reports that in November, 1756 she and Barbara Leininger "accompanied our Indian master to Sackum [Saucunk], where we spent the winter, keeping house for the savages, who were continually on the hunt."[4]

Hugh Gibson, 14, was captured in July, 1756, by Lenape Indians, outside Robinson's Fort,[12] near present-day Southwest Madison Township, Pennsylvania. His mother and a neighbor were killed by the Indians, and he was brought to Kittanning, where he was adopted by Shingas' brother Pisquetomen.[13] In the spring of 1757 Gibson and Pisquetomen moved to "Soh’-koon, at the mouth of the Big Beaver," where they lived together with Pisquetomen's Dutch wife for a year, then moved to Muskingum. In March, 1759, Gibson escaped, together with Marie Le Roy and Barbara Leininger and a Scotsman named David Brackenridge, and walked 250 miles to Fort Pitt (then under construction).[2]

Marie Le Roy states that in October 1758, after French and Indian forces were defeated in an attack on the British outpost of Fort Ligonier, most of the population of the Kuskusky towns, Logstown and Saucunk fled to Muskingum.[4] John McCullough was 8 years old when he was captured by Lenape warriors in July, 1756, and brought to "Shenango," (a corruption of Chiningué). In his captivity narrative he reports living there with a Lenape family for two and a half years before moving to "Kseek-he-ooing" (possibly Saucunk) in late 1758. In December, 1764, McCullough was released along with over 200 other captives by order of Colonel Henry Bouquet.[14]

Catholic mission, 1757

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In July, 1757, Jesuit Father Claude Francis Virot founded a Catholic mission at Saucunk,[15]: 395  and was joined for a brief period by Father Pierre Joseph Antonie Rouboud. The Lenape Chief Pakanke, known for his dislike of missionaries, reportedly became jealous of Virot's influence over the community,[16]: 513  however, and the Jesuit was forced to leave after Fort Duquesne was captured by the British in November, 1758.[17]: 93–94 [11]: 1135  Virot is known as the only Jesuit who ever attempted to found a mission on the upper Ohio River.[17]: 95 

Visit by Christian Frederick Post, 1758

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Moravian missionary Christian Frederick Post visited Saucunk in the summer and autumn of 1758.[5] He found the people there hostile towards him, as they believed that the British were planning to take control of Lenape territory. Post writes:[3]

We set out from Kushkushkee for Sankonk. My Company consisted of 25 Horsemen and 15 Foot. We arrived at Sankonk in the Afternoon. The People of the Town were much disturbed at my coming, and received me in a very rough Manner. They surrounded me with drawn Knives in their Hands, in such a Manner that I could hardly get along; running up against me with their Breasts open, as if they wanted some Pretence to kill me. I saw by their Countenances they sought my Death. Their Faces were quite distorted with Rage, and they went so far as to say I should not live long.[18]: 43 

Post then met with White Eyes and Gelelemend, the two principal war captains of the Turtle tribe at Saukunk, who had once been very hostile to Post's peace negotiations, but who now "received me very kindly" and "apologized for their former rude behaviour." The two warriors then escorted Post back to Kuskusky for a Grand Council meeting.[8]: 80 

Visit by George Croghan, 1758

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The French burned and abandoned Fort Duquesne on 26 November and British forces led by John Forbes occupied it the next day. On 27 November, George Croghan and Andrew Montour crossed the Allegheny River and reached Saucunk on the 29th, where they were joined by Christian Frederick Post and Lieutenant John Hays.[19]: 300–301  Croghan's journal states that, "at Beaver Creek [Saucunk] there is thirty-eight houses, all built by the French for the Indians, some with stone chimneys. When all their men is at home they can Send out One Hundred Warriors."[20]: 43 

Meeting with Mercer, 1759

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1755 map by John Mitchell showing "Shingoes T.," just left of map's center.

On 7 February 1759, Colonel Hugh Mercer received a report from a Mohican scout that he had observed "at the Salt Spring above Kaskaskias Kuskusky a large number of [French] troops." Mercer then held an important council with the Delawares at Fort Pitt.

At that time, Tamaqua (also known as King Beaver) was living at Saucunk. At this council on February 24, he announced that the Delawares wanted to move in order to avoid any fighting between the French and the British, stating, "The Six Nations and you desire that I would sit down and smoke my pipe at Kuskusky. I tell you this that you may think no ill of my removing from Saucunk to Kuskusky, for it is at the great desire of my brothers, the English, and my uncles, the Six Nations, and there I shall always hear your words."

Mercer reportedly replied, "Your Brothers, the English, desire to see you live in Peace and Happiness, either at Saucunk, Kuskusky, or wherever you think proper, and by no means intend to Limit you to one Place or another." In the spring of 1759, the Delawares moved from Saucunk and Kuskuskee to communities on the Muskingum River and the Scioto River in Ohio.[11]: 29 

Abandonment, 1763

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The town was deserted after the Battle of Bushy Run, August 5 and 6, 1763. When Colonel Henry Bouquet's expedition passed through the place in the autumn of 1764 on its way to the Tuscarawas, the chimneys of the houses which the French had built for the Indians were still standing. In his journal, Bouquet wrote:

October 6: Big Beaver Creek...runs through a rich vale, with a pretty strong current, its banks high, the upland adjoining it very good, the timber tall and young. About a mile below [Beaver Creek's] confluence with the Ohio stood formerly a large town, on a steep bank, built by the French, of square logs, with stone chimneys, for some of the Shawanese, Delawares and Mingo Tribes, who abandoned it in the year 1758, when the French deserted Fort Du Quesne. Near the fording of Beaver Creek stood about seven houses, which were deserted and destroyed by the Indians after their defeat at Bushy Run (August 6, 1763) when they forsook all their remaining settlements in this part of the country.

Fort McIntosh

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In 1778, British general Lachlan McIntosh ordered Fort McIntosh to be constructed at the site of the village.[5] The fort became the headquarters for the Department of the West. The construction of the fort likely destroyed any evidence of the occupation of the historic Native Americans at this location.[21]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b The Lenape Talking Dictionary
  2. ^ a b Timothy Alden, "An Account of the Captivity of Hugh Gibson among the Delaware Indians of the Big Beaver and the Muskingum, from the latter part of July 1756, to the beginning of April, 1759," Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society, 1837
  3. ^ a b Frederick Christian Post, The journal of Christian Frederick Post, in his journey from Philadelphia to the Ohio, on a message from the government of Pennsylvania to the Delaware, Shawanese and Mingo Indians settled there, and formerly in alliance with the English. Philadelphia, 1867
  4. ^ a b c Le Roy, Marie; Leininger, Barbara (1759). The Narrative of Marie le Roy and Barbara Leininger, for Three Years Captives Among the Indians. Translated by Rev. Edmund de Schweinitz. The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography – via The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography volume 29, 1905.
  5. ^ a b c d e Donehoo, George P. A History of the Indian Villages and Place Names in Pennsylvania, Papamoa Press, 2019.
  6. ^ a b c Chester Hale Sipe, "The Principal Indian Towns of Western Pennsylvania," Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine, v. 13, no. 2; April 1, 1930; pp. 104-122
  7. ^ Charles Augustus Hanna, The Wilderness Trail: Or, The Ventures and Adventures of the Pennsylvania Traders on the Allegheny Path, Volume 2, Putnam's sons, 1911
  8. ^ a b Richard S. Grimes, "The emergence and decline of the Delaware Indian nation in western Pennsylvania and the Ohio country, 1730--1795," Doctoral Dissertation, Eberly College of Arts and Sciences, West Virginia University, 2005
  9. ^ Champagne, Duane. "The Delaware Revitalization Movement of the Early 1760s: A Suggested Reinterpretation." American Indian Quarterly, 12 (Spring 1988): 107-126
  10. ^ Michael N. McConnell, "Kuskusky Towns and Early Western Pennsylvania Indian History," Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 116:33-58
  11. ^ a b c Joseph M. Bausman, History of Beaver County, Pennsylvania and Its Centennial Celebration, vol. 1, New York: The Knickerbocker Press, 1904
  12. ^ D. A. Kline, Luke Baker, "Account of Fort Robinson," Historical Society of Perry County, Pennsylvania, 1924
  13. ^ "An Account of the Captivity of Hugh Gibson," in Archibald Loudoun, A Selection of Some of the Most Interesting Narratives, of Outrages, Committed by the Indians, in Their Wars with the White People, A. Loudoun Press, Carlisle, 1811; pp. 181-186
  14. ^ Charles McKnight, "The Captivity of John McCullough," in Our Western Border, Its Life, Combats, Adventures, Forays, Massacres, Captivities, Scouts, Red Chiefs, Pioneer Women, One Hundred Years Ago. Philadelphia: J.C. McCurdy, 1876; pp 204-224
  15. ^ History of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania: Including Its Early Settlement and Progress to the Present Time, with Portraits of Some of Its Prominent Men, and Biographies of Many of Its Representative Citizens, vol 1. Western Pennsylvania Genealogical Society, United States: Unigraphic, 1889.
  16. ^ James Constantine Pilling, Bibliography of the Algonquian Languages, Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of Ethnology, Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1891.
  17. ^ a b A. A. Lambing, "Father Virot, A Forgotten Missionary," in Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine, vol 3, no 1, January 1930. Pittsburgh: Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania
  18. ^ Reuben Gold Thwaites, ed. "The journal of Christian Frederick Post, in his journey from Philadelphia to the Ohio, on a message from the government of Pennsylvania to the Delaware, Shawanese and Mingo Indians settled there, and formerly in alliance with the English," in Early Western Journals 1748-1765, Cleveland: Arthur H. Clark, 1904
  19. ^ Pennsylvania Archives. 1st Series, Vol. 3, Samuel Hazard, ed., Philadelphia: Joseph Severns & Co., 1853
  20. ^ Reuben Gold Thwaites, ed. "Conrad Weiser's journal of a tour to the Ohio, August 11, October 2, 1748," in Early Western Journals 1748-1765, Cleveland: Arthur H. Clark, 1904
  21. ^ Pennsylvania Archaeological Data Synthesis: The Beaver Creek Watershed (Watershed B of the Ohio River Subbasin 20), State Street Bridge Replacement Project, Mahoning Township, Lawrence County, Pennsylvania (ER #1999-6092-073)," A.D. Marble & Company, prepared for Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, July 2011

40°42′11″N 80°17′0″W / 40.70306°N 80.28333°W / 40.70306; -80.28333