Cayuga Nation



Ancestral Homeland: Cayuga Lake, New York

One of the Five/Six Nations of Iroquois (Seneca, Tuscarora, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida, and Mohawk)

The Cayuga Nation is primarily associated with the state of New York.

Linguistic group: Iroquoian

Tribal Headquarters
Cayuga Indians P. O. Box 11 Versailles, NY 14168-0011 Phone: 1.716.337.4270 Fax: 1.716.337.0268


 * Cayuga Nation Official Website

Brief History
Lived near Lake Cayuga in New York. Many moved to Canada during the Revolutionary War, others moved to Ohio, Wisconsin and Indian Territory

The Cayuga were a member of the confederation of the Five Nations of Iroquois (later six)

Brief Timeline

 * 1660: population estimated as 1,500
 * 1775-1783: American Revolution
 * 1778: population 1,100
 * 1784 October 22, treaty at Fort Stanwix with The Six Nations
 * 1789 January 9, treaty at Fort Harmar, with The Six Nations
 * 1792April 23, treaty with the Five Nations of Indians
 * 1794 November 11, treaty at Konondaigua
 * 1831-1832 removal of the Cayugas, Senecas and Delaware from the Sandusky region to Indian Territory (Oklahoma).
 * 1838 January 15, treaty at Buffalo Creek, treaty with New York - acknowledge

Reservations
The tribe is primarily associated with the Cayuga Reservation in New York.

The tribe was under the following jurisdictions

New York Agency

Six Nations Agency

Michigan Superintendency

Additional References to the History of the Tribe
Frederick Webb Hodge, in his Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico, gave a more complete history of the Cayuga Nation, with estimations of the population of the tribe at various time periods.

Agency Records
Correspondence and Census

Treaties
The year link (year of treaty) is a conncetion to an online copy of the treaty.


 * 1784 October 22, at Fort Stanwix with The Six Nations
 * 1789 January 9, at Fort Harmar, with The Six Nations
 * 1792April 23, with the Five Nations of Indians
 * 1794 November 11,at Konondaigua
 * 1838 January 15, at Buffalo Creek, treaty with New York - acknowledge

Important Web Sites

 * Cayuga Nation Official Website
 * Cayuga Nation Wikipedia
 * The Constitution of the Iroquois Nathions