Thayendanegea or Joseph Brant (sometimes spelled Brandt or Brand) (c. 1742 – 24 November 1807) was a Mohawk leader and British military officer during the American Revolutionary War. Brant was perhaps the most well-known North American Indian of his generation. He met many of the most significant people of the age, including George Washington and King George III. The American folk image emphasized the atrocities his forces committed against settlers on the western frontier.
Starting at about age 15, Brant took part in a number of French and Indian War expeditions, including James Abercrombie’s 1758 invasion of Canada via Lake George, William Johnson's 1759 expedition against Fort Niagara, and Jeffery Amherst's 1760 siege of Montreal via the St. Lawrence River. He also acted as interpreter for an Anglican missionary named John Stuart, with whom he translated the Gospel of Mark into the Mohawk language. He became a lifelong supporter of Christianity, and would build the first Anglican church in Ontario.
Brant became infamous for the Wyoming Valley "massacre", which it was widely believed he led, although he was not present at the battle. During the war, he was known as the Monster Brant and stories of his massacres and atrocities created a hatred of Indians that soured relations for 50 years. In later years historians have argued that he actually been a force for restraint in the violence that characterised many of the actions in which he was involved.
In negotiating the Paris peace treaty that ended the war, Britain ignored the needs of its Six Nations allies, and ceded Indian territory to the United States. At Brant's urging, British General Sir Frederick Haldimand arranged for a grant of land for a Mohawk reserve on the Grand River in Ontario (see Six Nations of the Grand River). For the next twenty years, Brant would act as a tireless negotiator for the Six Nations, playing on British fears of Indian alliances with the Americans and/or the French, to preserve the Grand River land from encroachment by whites in and out of the Canadian government.
After the American Revolution, Brant also worked to bring about a confederation of the Six Nations with the tribes of the western United States, in order to resist U.S. expansion into the Northwest Territory. His attempt to create pan-tribal unity proved unsuccessful, though his efforts would be taken up a generation later by the Shawnee leader Tecumseh. When the resistance in the Northwest became full-scale warfare (the Northwest Indian War), Brant was asked to negotiate a settlement by the administration of U.S. President George Washington. Brant was unable to arrange a truce, and the war continued, ending with the Battle of Fallen Timbers in 1794.
He died in his house at the head of Lake Ontario (site of what would become the city of Burlington, Ontario) on November 24, 1807. The house was owned by descendants until the late 19th century, and is now the Joseph Brant Museum. In 1850, his remains were carried 34 miles (55 km) in relays on the shoulders of young men of Grand River to a tomb at Her Majesty's Chapel of the Mohawks in Brantford. The City of Brantford and the County of Brant, Ontario, located on part of his land grant, is named for him. A statue of Brant, located in Victoria Square, Brantford, was dedicated in 1886. The township of Tyendinaga and the Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory Indian reserve are also named for Brant, taking their name from an alternate spelling of his traditional Mohawk name.
1742 births | 1807 deaths | Native Americans in the American Revolution | British Army officers | Pre-Confederation Ontario people | Dartmouth College alumni | First Nations leaders | Mohawk people | Native American leaders | People from Ohio
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