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Katonah (Native American leader)

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settlers petitioned the colonial General Assembly at Hartford to remove the Ramapo. Katonah sold the Ramapo lands of 20,000 acres for 100 Pounds Sterling to the "Proprietors of Ridgefield". His name appears on land deeds up to 1743. The Remnant tribe of the Ramapo scattered to the north and
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Chief Katonah was the son of Onox (the elder) and the grandson of Ponus, Sachem of the Rippowams. Katonah was the successor to Powahay, his brother. Katonah had a brother named Onox and a son named Papiag who also signed land deeds. His uncle,
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Duncombe, Frances Riker. "Chapter 1: Explorers, Settlers, Indians." Katonah: the History of a New York Village and Its People. Salem, MA: Higginson Book, 1997. 1-13. Print.
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applied for a trademark on the Katonah name for a line of furniture. Members of the Ramapough Lenape Nation joined forces with local residents to oppose it.
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chieftaincy of the Wappinger (itself effectively a league or confederation of a dozen or so bands, sovereign to itself but linguistically at least a
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Legend has it that Katonah died of grief after his wife and son were killed by lightning. He is said to be buried with them in Katonah's Wood, off
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describes him laid beneath a giant boulder and the others under two smaller immediately adjacent boulders.
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in what is today the far southeastern part of mainland New York State and southwestern Connecticut: the
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people called the Ramapo (whose descendants today, largely in New Jersey, are known as the
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John Alexander Buckland, "The First Traders on Wall Street", Heritage Books, 2002, p 203
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John Alexander Buckland, "The First Traders on Wall Street", Heritage Books, 2002, p 201
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A history of the county of Westchester, from its first settlement to the present time
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The land of today's town of Bedford was purchased from Chief Katonah.
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Some believe the Ramapo Sachemdom - which later relocated across the
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Ruttember, E.F. "Indian Tribes of Hudson's River to 1700", p. 82
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The Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States
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Katonah was the sachem of the condensed remnants of a
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Father, Onox (the older); grandfather, Ponus. Uncles,
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Chief Katonah's Descendants Oppose Trademarking Name
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Bulletin of the Archaeological Society of New Jersey
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Index

Ramapo
Tapgow
Chickens Warrups

Lenape
sachem
Wappinger
Wiechquaeskeck
Greenwich
Stamford
Ramapo
Bedford, New York
Hudson River
New Jersey
Ramapo, New York
Ramapo Mountains
Tankiteke
Lenape
Wappinger
Ramapough Mountain Indians
Ridgefield
Tapgow
Pompton
Chickens Warrups

New York State Route 22
William Will
Katonah, New York
Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia
Norwalk: v. 1 and supplement

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