CAYUGA NATION

History & Culture

The Cayuga Nation inhabited the Great Lake region of
modern-day New York for thousands of years before the arrival of Europeans. Cayuga communities are reflective of the larger Haudenosaunee culture, in which they practiced matrilineal descent and communal organizations (Berkin, 108-109). Unlike the colonists who would settle in their ancestral homelands, women within Cayuga communities maintained agricultural fields and were able to hold socio-political positions of power (Berkin, 108-109). Women traditionally grew a variety of crops, including maize and fruit trees, while men hunted game for other subsistence (Berkin, 108-109).

Households were further reflective of their communal organization, in which the Cayuga lived in large longhouses that could hold many families tied to a matrilineal lineage (Speck and General, 49-55). Longhouses also served important functions within communal ceremonies, as rennual rites, such as the Midwinter Ceremony, would take place within these structures (Speck and General 41).

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North American Indian with gun stock war club ; woman and child
Source: NYPL
Hodenosote, or long house of the Iroquois Source: NYPL
Map of Gen. Sullivan’s march from Easton to the Senaca & Cayuga countries.
Source: Library of Congress

The Revolutionary War

With the onslaught of the American Revolution, the Cayuga would be directly involved and affected by the conflict. Although the Cayuga would originally declare neutrality like the other groups of the League of Six Nations, they would soon support become involved at the forefront of the Revolutionary War (Kane 90). With the war wreaking havoc on their communities and land, Cayuga communities would be devastated by food shortages, in which British Loyalists promised the Cayuga supplies and the return of the ancestral land with the conclusion of the Revolution (Schmidt 131-132). Breaking their initial declaration of neutrality, the Cayuga would accept the terms of the British, and supplied men and allegiance to the Crown (Schmidt 136).



References:
Berkin, Carol. “The Women Must Hear Our Words:” The Revolution in the Lives of Indian Women.” Revolutionary Mothers: Women in the Struggle for America’s Independence. Alfred A. Knopf, 2005, pp. 108-119. Accessed November 28. 2022.

Kane, Maeve. “She Did Not Open Her Mouth Further” Haudenosaunee Women as Military and Political Targets during and after the American Revolution.” Women in the American Revolution. University of Virginia Press, 2019, p. 83–98. https://web.s.ebscohost.com/ehost/detail/detail?vid=0&sid=74b1b21e-eee8-4a39-be46-f92076fd38cc%40redis&bdata=JkF1dGhUeXBlPWlwLHNzbyZzaX
RlPWVob3N0LWxpdmUmc2NvcGU9c2l0ZQ%3d%3d#AN=2095215&db=nleb. Accessed November 28, 2022.

New York (State) Secretary’s Office, “Journal of Jeremiah Fogg” found in Journals of the Military Expedition of Major General John Sullivan Against
the Six Nations of Indians in 1779: With Records of Centennial Celebrations. Prepared pursuant to chapter 361, laws of the state of New York of
1885, 1887
. Retrieved from the Digital Public Library of America, http://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/000362150. Accessed December 1, 2022.

Schmidt, Ethan A. “The Revolutionary War in the North.” Native Americans in the American Revolution: How the War Divided, Devastated, and Transformed
the Early American Indian World.
Praeger, 2014, pp. 117-138.
https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/uark-ebooks/reader.action?docID=1779805&ppg=148. Accessed November 28, 2022.

Speck, Frank G., and Alexander General. “Timing and Preparatory Rites of the Midwinter Ceremony” in Midwinter Rites of the Cayuga Long House, 49–55.
University of Pennsylvania Press, 1949. http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv4s7gj7.10. Accessed November 30, 2022.

Imbedded Images:
https://www.loc.gov/resource/g3791s.ar106400/?r=-0.727,-0.074,2.455,1.129,O
https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/510d47e1-1a2d-a3d9-e040-e00a18064a99
https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/510d47e1-16f3-a3d9-e040-e00a18064a99

Imbedded website:
https://cayuganation-nsn.gov/tribal-history.html