Raritan people
Template:Short description Template:Use American English Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox ethnic group The Raritan were two groups of Lenape people who lived around the lower Raritan River<ref name=ives213>Ives Goddard, "Delaware," p. 213.</ref> and the Raritan Bay, in what is now northeastern New Jersey, in the 16th century.<ref name=ives213/>
Name
The name Raritan likely came from one of the Lenape languages (among the languages in the Algonquian language group), though there are a variety of interpretations as to its meaning. It may derive from Naraticong <ref>Template:Cite web </ref> meaning "river beyond the island."
Raritan is a Dutch pronunciation of wawitan or rarachons, meaning "forked river" or "stream overflows".<ref>Virginia B. Troeger and Robert James McEwen, New Jersey's Oldest Township, Charleston, SC: Acadia Publishing, 2002, p. 18</ref>
The first group known as the Raritan was also known as the Sanhicans.<ref name="wright">Template:Cite web</ref> A second group, known as the Wiechquaeskecks,<ref name=ives213/> Wisquaskecks, Roaton, Raritanghe,<ref name=devries>David de Vries's Notes, Narratives of New Netherland, p. 208.</ref> and Raritanoos settled the Raritan watershed area after the first departed.<ref name=wright/><ref name=ives213/>
History
17th century
The original Raritans, the Sanhicans, lived along Raritan Bay's west shore<ref name=wright/> until 1640s, when attacks from the Delaware River Indians and Dutch settlers drove them inland.<ref name=ives213/>
The Wisquaskecks had lived in what is now Westchester County, New York.<ref>Ives Goddard, "Delaware," p. 237.</ref> After the Sanhicans migrated east, the Wisquaskecks<ref name=wright/> moved into the area by 1649 and then also became known as the Raritans.<ref name=ives213/>
The Raritan had early contact with settlers in the colony of New Netherland.<ref name=shorto>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Dutch colonist David Pietersz. de Vries described the Raritans as "a nation of savages who live where a little stream [the Raritan River] runs up about five leagues behind Staten Island."<ref name=devries/> He wrote that Cornelis van Tienhoven took more than one hundred men to the Wisquaskecks to address their theft of pigs and attempt theft of a yacht. Van Theihoven's group killed several of the Wisquaskecks and took their chief's brother as a hostage.<ref name=devries/> Van Theihoven tortured the prisoner, and the Wisquaskecks responded to the attack by killing several Dutch settlers.<ref name=devries/> William Kieft, governor of New Netherland, had planned the extermination campaign against them. The attack against the American Indians was a contributing event to the bands' allying in Kieft's War (1643-45) against the settlements of New Netherland.<ref name=shorto/>
In 1649, the Wisquaskecks held a peace conference with the Dutch settlers. Pennekeck, a leader from Newark Bay, "said the tribe called Raritanoos, formerly living at Wisquaskeck had no chief, therefore he spoke for them, who would also like to be our friends...."<ref name=wright/> The Sanhicans unsuccessfully tried to contest Pennekeck.<ref name=wright/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
19th century
According to Encyclopedia of New Jersey Indians, the surviving Raritans sold the last of their lands and moved to the Brotherton Reservation in Burlington County, New Jersey.<ref name=ricky>Template:Cite book</ref> Their descendants are part of larger Lenape communities including the Stockbridge Munsee Community in Wisconsin,<ref name=ricky/> Delaware Tribe of Indians, Delaware Nation, Moravian of the Thames First Nation, and the Delaware First Nation of the Six Nations of the Grand River in Ontario.
See also
Notes
References
External links
Template:Raritan Valley navigation Template:Authority control