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24 results for "Tuscarora Indians, Eastern--Wars, 1711-1713"
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Record #:
10442
Author(s):
Abstract:
Using an old handmade map, ca. 1710 or 1711, of eastern North Carolina, Holloman identifies and provides a brief description of Tuscarora Indian towns.
Source:
We the People of North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 23 Issue 9, Feb 1966, p16-17, 29-30, map
Record #:
10443
Abstract:
The Tuscarora War, 1711-1713, was confined to a large area in eastern North Carolina that, at the time, was known as Bath County. A map drawn after the war depicts the routes traveled by forces allied against the Tuscarora. The map was thought to have been drawn by Colonel James Moore between 1722 and 1728. The original document is in the British Museum.
Source:
We the People of North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 23 Issue 10, Mar 1966, p15-17, 30, il, map
Record #:
31431
Abstract:
In 1711, North Carolina's non-Indian population was only 9500 comprised mostly of German Palatines and Swiss settlers who had arrived to establish a colony on the Trent and Neuse Rivers. The settlers made good progress near New Bern until the Tuscarora Massacre in September 1711. New Bern lay under siege for twenty-two weeks.
Source:
We the People of North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 23 Issue 8, January 1966, p21-22, 28-30, il
Record #:
10441
Author(s):
Abstract:
The Tuscarora War raged off and on for a year and a half in eastern North Carolina. The war began with a general massacre of while settlers in Bath County on September 21, 1711, and ended with the four day battle at Fort Neoheroka, March 20-23, 1713. Over 600 whites and Indians were killed there. Holloman recounts the events.
Source:
We the People of North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 23 Issue 7, Dec 1965, p15-18, 30, 32, il, map
Record #:
31421
Abstract:
As the last stand of the armed resistance of the Tuscarora Indian Nation in North Carolina, Fort Nohoroco raged in battle for four days before resistance ceased. The battle at Fort Nohoroco brought an end to the Tuscarora War which raged for a year and half in eastern North Carolina.
Source:
We the People of North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 23 Issue 7, December 1965, p15-18, 30, il, map
Record #:
13128
Author(s):
Abstract:
This article by the late Chief Justice, was first published in the \"North Carolina Booklet,\" July, 1902. Many reasons were assigned as to why bloody outbreak of Indians occurred in 1711 including, the steady encroachment of whites on hunting grounds, conflicts between whites themselves, or instigation by outside parties. The Indians could muster quite a number of men and were lead mostly by the Tuscaroras on the 22nd of September.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 23 Issue 12, Nov 1955, p9-11, 24, il
Full Text:
Record #:
15490
Author(s):
Abstract:
North Carolinians celebrated the first Thanksgiving on September 22, 1712. The date was chosen to remember the Tuscarora massacre. This event happened on the same date in 1711 when a Tuscarora attack provoked settlers who retaliated and decimated the Tuscarora tribe around the Pamlico Sound.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 3 Issue 26, Nov 1935, p2, 22
Full Text:
Record #:
22117
Author(s):
Abstract:
This article examines the various Indian tribes of Eastern North Carolina and their interactions with each other and early English colonists. The article also provides additional information regarding the Tuscarora War and how the Indian tribes were affected by its outcome.
Full Text:
Record #:
37273
Author(s):
Abstract:
This is an article from 1964 about the Indian Wars up to the peace treaty signed on Feb. 11, 1715.