Cultures at the Confluence

17th-18th Native American Settlements of the Susquehanna River

 
   
   

Works Cited

Cummings, Hubertis M.  Scots Breed and Susquehanna.  Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1964.

Donehoo, George P. Indian Villages and Place Names In Pennsylvania.  Gateway Press, Inc: Baltimore: 1995.

Donehoo, George P.  Pennsylvania: A History.  New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, Inc.  1926.

Eshleman, H. Frank.  Annals of the Susquehannocks and Other Indian Tribes of Pennsylvania.  Lewisburg: Wennawoods Publishing, 2000

Garbarino, William M.  Indian Villages of Pennsylvania.  Midway, Pennsylvania:  Midway Publishing, 2004.

Groff, George G.  “Description of Physical Features and Geology—Botany.”  The Susquehanna and Juniata Valleys, Pennsylvania.  Vol 1.  Ed. Everts, Peck and Richards.  Philadelphia: 1886. 

Guss, Abraham L.  Early Indian History on the Susquehanna.  Harrisburg, Washington DC: Lane S. Hart, 1883. 

Guss, A.L.  “Early View of the Pennsylvania Interior—the Juniata and the Tuscarora Indians—Explorations of the Indian Traders.”  The Susquehanna and Juniata Valleys, Pennsylvania.  Vol 1.  Ed. Everts, Peck and Richards.  Philadelphia: 1886.

Hanna, Charles A. The Wilderness Trail: Or, The Ventures and Adventures of the Pennsylvania Traders on the Allegheny Path. G. P. Putnam's sons, 1911.

Heisey, Henry W. and Witmer, J. Paul.  “Of Historic Susquehannock Cemeteries.”  Pennsylvania Archaologist.  Ed. P. Schuyler Miller.  Pittsburgh, Pa, 1965.  99-130.

Hoffman, Bernard G.  Ancient Tribes Revisited: A Summary of Indian Distribution and Movement in the Northeastern United States from 1534 to 1779.  Parts I-III.  Ethnohistory, Vol 14, No. ½.  Duke University Press:  1967.

Jennings, Francis.  The Ambiguous Iroquois Empire.  New York: WW Norton & Company, 1894.

Jennings, Francis.  The Founders of America:  How Indians discovered the land, pioneered in it, and created great classical civilizations; how they were plunged into a Dark Age by invasion and conquest; and how they are now reviving.  WW Norton & Company, New York: 1993.

Jennings, Francis.  Glory, Death, and Transfiguration: The Susquehannock Indians in the Seventeenth Century.  Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, Vol. 112, No. 1, (Feb. 15, 1968), pp. 15-53.

Jennings, Francis.  The Invasion of America: Indians, Colonialism, and the Cant of Conquest.  Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 1975.

Kenner, Craig S.  “An Ehtnohistoristorical Analysis of Iroquois Assault Tactics Used against…”

Kent, Barry C.  Susquehanna’s Indians.  Harrisburg: Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission: 1984.  Vol. 6.

Kinsey, W. Fred.  A Susquehannock Longhouse.  American Antiquity, Society for American Archaeology: Vol. 23, No. 2, (Oct., 1957), pp. 180-181.

Knauss, Christopher.  Selected photos: Maritime Cecil County.

Larrabee, Edward.  Recurrent Themes and Sequences in North American Indian-European Cultural Contact.  Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, New Series, Vol. 66, No. 7, 1976

Myers, Richmond E.  The Long Crooked River (The Susquehanna).  The Christopher Publishing House, Boston, Massachusetts: 1949.

Olmstead, Kevin. "Sullivan's 1779 Campaign." Towanda Daily Review 2001.

Purdy, Truman.; Darley, Felix Octavius Carr; Lummis, F.E.  Legends of the Susquehanna and Other Poems.  Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Co. 1888.

Richter, Daniel.  A Framework for Pennsylvania History.

Sturtevant, William C.  Handbook of North American Indians.  Smithsonian Institution: 1978. 

Williams, John Page.  Chesapeake: Exploring the Water Trail of Captain John Smith. Washington DC:  National Geographic Press, 2006.

Van Zandt, Cynthia.  Mapping and the European Search for Intercultural Alliances in the Colonial World

 

 

 
 
 
 

Sponsored By: John Ben Snow Memorial Trust Fund