Interest in these Indians stem from the fact that I was born in Oneida, New York.

The Oneidas are a tribe of North American Indians belonging to the the Iroquois Confederacy. This name is a corruption of the native word meaning “standing rock” and refers to a sacred boulder near the site of their ancient village on Lake Oneida, New York. Their territory included the region surrounding the lake and later extended south to the Susquehanna River. While most Indians of the Confederacy were hostile to outsiders, this tribe was friendly toward the French colonists and Jesuit missionaries

During the American Revolution the Oneidas sided with the colonists but had to take refuge inside American settlements as other Iroquois tribes joined the British. After the war most of them moved to Canada and settled in the area of the Thames River, Ontario, where they are still found today. Between 1820 and 1835, most of the Oneida who had returned to their homes in New York State sold their land and moved to a reservation near Green Bay, Wisconsin. The Oneida number about 3500.