

Articles concluded at Fort Stanwix, on the twenty-second
day of October, one thousand seven hundred and eighty-four, between Oliver
Wolcott, Richard Butler, and Arthur Lee, Commissioners Plenipotentiary
from the United States, in Congress assembled, on the one Part, and the
Sachems and Warriors of the Six Nations, on the other.
The United States of America give peace to the Senecas,
Mohawks, Onondagas and Cayugas, and receive them into their protection
upon the following conditions:
ARTICLE 1.
Six hostages shall be immediately delivered to the commissioners
by the said nations, to remain in possession of the United States, till
all the prisoners, white and black, which were taken by the said Senecas,
Mohawks, Onondagas, and Cayugas, or by any of them, in the late war, from
among the people of the United States, shall be delivered up.
ARTICLE 2.
The Oneida and Tuscarora nations shall be secured in
the possession of the lands on which they are settled.
ARTICLE 3.
A line shall be drawn, beginning at the mouth of a creek
about four miles east of Niagara, called Oyonwavea, or Johnston's Landing-Place,
upon the lake named by the Indians Oswego, and by us Ontario; from thence
southerly in a direction always four miles east of the carrying path, between
Lake Erie and Ontario, to the mouth of Tehoseroron or Buffalo Creek on
Lake Erie; thence south to the north boundary of the state of Pennsylvania;
thence west to the end of the said north boundary; thence south along the
west boundary of the said state, to the river Ohio; the said line from
the mouth of the Oyonwayea to the Ohio, shall be the western boundary of
the lands of the Six Nations, so that the Six Nations shall and do yield
to the United States, all claims to the country west of the said boundary,
and then they shall be secured in the peaceful possession of the lands
they inhabit east and north of the same, reserving only six miles square
round the fort of Oswego, to the United States, for the support of the
same.
ARTICLE 4.
The Commissioners of the United States, in consideration
of the present circumstances of the Six Nations, and in execution of the
humane and liberal views of the United States upon the signing of the above
articles, will order goods to be delivered to the said Six Nations for
their use and comfort.
Oliver Wolcott
Richard Butler
Arthur Lee
. . . . . . .
Otyadonenghti, his x mark (Oneida)
Dagaheari, his x mark (Oneida) . . .
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