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Newsgroups: freenet.shrine.songs
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From: aa300 (Jerry Murphy)
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Subject: Speech by Dr. Grinde
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Date: Wed, 24 Jan 90 15:35:39 EST
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THE IROQUOIS AND THE ORIGINS OF AMERICAN DEMOCRACY
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Speech by Dr. Donald A. Grinde, Jr., Distinguished Professor of Interdiscipli-
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nary Studies, Gettysburg College, and Crawford Research Fellow, 1987-1988.
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Delivered at Cornell University September 11, 1987.
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(To be published by the Native American Studies Program at Cornell
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University in "Northeast Indian Quarterly, V (Winter, 1988))
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Permission granted by the author to post in the Cleveland Free-
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Net in a letter of May 6, 1988, addressed to Mr. Jerry Murphy.
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-------------------------
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First of all, I would like to thank the Iroquois people that I worked with some
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fifteen or more years ago. They gave me encouragement in this project since I
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did not receive much encouragement outside of the Iroquois people. I want to
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also thank the Indian Historian Press whose stated purpose, then as well as now,
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is to publish works by American Indian scholars and others that contribute to
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new viewpoints on American Indian history. Finally, I would like to thank
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Americans for Indian Opportunity and the Meredith Fund for research funds that
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made my present research possible.
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Today, I would like to share with you some of the new data that I have found in
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the last year or so that supplements my earlier findings. I will focus on four
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items:
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1) The Treaty Congress at Albany in August of 1775
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2) Benjamin Franklin and his ideas about the Covenant Chain
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of the Iroquois.
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3) Thomas Paine and some of the things that he wrote that
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have not been attributed to him.
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4) John Rutledge of South Carolina and how he learned of the
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Great Law of the Iroquois, and how he helped to write the first
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draft of the U. S. Constitution.
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As Eugene Crawford Memorial Fellow for 1987-1988, my purpose will be to analyze,
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from a historian's viewpoint, the extent and impact of the Iroquois ideas on
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American democracy. This analysis will include, of course, the U. S. Constitu-
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tion. I want to make this study an integral part of the analysis of the
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Constitution. In the future, I want to make sure that when people talk about
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the roots of the Constitution, they include the ideas of the Iroquois. Ancient
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Greece and Rome, John Locke and Jean Jacques Rousseau, no doubt, influenced the
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thinking of the Founding Fathers, but Iroquois concepts had a profound influence
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upon the formation of our government as well. The ideas of the Iroquois
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influenced the thinking of the English and the French theorists of the eigh-
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teenth century also. I will also attempt to approach the Founding Fathers
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as human beings, and this is extremely important since I have found that it is
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the best way to look at them. When one looks for Iroquois ideas in the Founding
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Fathers, I have to always remember that these men were politicians.. Many of
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them, of course, had a good education for the times and were wealthy. However,
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most of them had a fairly long history of political activity in one way or
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another.
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The noted Cherokee humorist, Will Rogers, said that politicians are like fog-
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horns; they call attention to the problems but they don't do a damned thing
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about them. When I read the Records of the Constitutional Convention and other
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materials leading up to the first draft of the Constitution, I see a lot of
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foghorn stuff. What about the problem of money and debts? What about the
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executive and legislative powers? How can we secure a stronger union? For
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brevity's sake, I will not go back to the Albany Plan of Union because I think
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that it will be discussed later, but Albany is an important place to begin the
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discussion of the Iroquois' influence on American democracy.
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In August of 1775, before the Declaration of Independence, the Continental
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Congress sent a group of treaty commissioners to speak with the Six Nations of
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the Iroquois Confederacy at Albany, New York. The Congress and the American
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people were contemplating independence and a long war. Already, there was much
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tension and the Congress did not want to fight a two front war against the
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British in the East and the Indians in the West. In the spring of 1775,
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Congress began to formulate a speech that was to be sent to the Iroquois in the
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summer of 1775. Signed by John Hancock, this speech recalls the history of the
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relations between the Iroquois and the American colonists since the 1740s. The
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speech quotes the Iroquois chief, Cannassatego, at the Treaty of Lancaster in
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1744. In that speech, Cannassatego admonishes the Americans to unite and become
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strong as the forefathers of the Iroquois had done under the Great Law. The
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speech from the Continental Congress said that the American people are united
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and have taken the advice of the Iroquois. The U. S. treaty commissioners
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added:
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"...the advice was good, it was kind. They said to one
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another, the Six Nations are a wise people, let us hearken
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to their Council and teach our children to follow it. Our
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old men have done so. They have frequently taken a single
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arrow and said, children, see how easy it is broken, then
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they have tied twelve together with strong cords--And our
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strongest men could not break them--See said they--this is
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what the Six Nations mean. Divided a single man may destroy
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you--United, you are a match for the whole world."
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Unity is a major concept in this speech by the Congress, and it is one of the
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foremost concepts of the Iroquois Great Law. Unity is not a novel concept, but
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the way in which the Iroquois did it, fascinated Europeans and particularly,
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American colonists. Hence, the treaty commissioners at Albany, in 1775, were
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not just engaging in the rhetoric of Iroquois diplomacy, they were demonstrating
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that they had a knowledge of and were using parts of the Great Law in their
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deliberations even before independence was declared. The speech goes on to
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point out that the American people have delegated leaders to go to Philadelphia
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and kindle a great fire and plant a Great Tree to become strong like the
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Iroquois. At the conclusion of the analogy, the treaty commissioners invited
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the Iroquois to come to Philadelphia to their "Grand Council".
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A few days after this speech, the treaty commissioners tell the Iroquois that:
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"We live upon the same ground with you--the same island is
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our common birthplace. We desire to sit down under the
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same Tree of Peace with you; let us water its roots and
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cherish its growth, till the large leaves and flourishing
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branches shall extend to the setting sun and reach the skies."
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In some more references to Iroquois cosmology, the Americans say when this
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"island began to shake and tremble along the Eastern Shore,
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and the Sun darkened by a Black cloud which arose from
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beyond the great water, we kindled up a Great Council Fire
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at Philadelphia...so...that we are now twelve colonies
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united as one man...And...As God has put it into our hearts
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to love the Six Nations...we now make the chain of
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friendship so that nothing but an evil spirit can or will
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attempt to break it."
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Through these words, we can see the extent of the Continental Congress' knowl-
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edge of the Great Law of the Iroquois and its cosmology a year before the
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Declaration of Independence. In an analysis of this cultural and intellectual
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exchange, it is significant (since it often goes unnoticed) that the Iroquois
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people delegated leaders or had self-appointed people to educate the colonists
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to the wisdom of unity.
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A generation before the conference at Albany in 1775, the Mohawk Chief, Hend-
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rick, had admonished the colonists to unify. In August of 1775, when the
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Iroquois chiefs had asked the Americans who should speak for the Iroquois at the
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conference, the Americans immediately asked that Abraham be appointed the main
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speaker. Abraham was the adopted brother of Hendrick, and the Americans
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remembered his words urging unity at the Albany conference in 1754. It should
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be noted that the treaty commissioners recognized that Abraham and Hendrick were
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part of an Iroquois tradition to teach the American people strength through
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unity. After he is made speaker, Abraham rose and stated that he was glad that
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"...your grandfathers had inculcated the doctrine into their children...". He
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noted that an invitation had been extended to go to Philadelphia where the Great
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Tree was planted and "...sit under it and water its roots, till the branches
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should flourish and reach to heaven...". Abraham said, "This the Six Nations
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say shall be done." In May of 1776, the Iroquois chiefs would go to Philadel-
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phia as the Continental Congress was readying itself for independence (the
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Iroquois camped outside of Independence Hall in the square). After John Hancock
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welcomed the Iroquois chiefs to the Congress as "brothers", an Onondaga chief
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named the President of the Continental Congress, (John Hancock), "Karanduawn, or
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the Great Tree", on June 11, 1776.
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In effect, the Iroquois were present during the debates on independence and when
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a draft of the Articles of Confederation was introduced (this draft was a
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revision of Franklin's Albany Plan and it has been demonstrated that it was
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borrowed from the Iroquois Great Law). With the Iroquois in the halls of
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government on the eve of independence, it is no longer a question of whether the
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Iroquois had an impact on the nature of American government but rather it now
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becomes a question of degree. We can now see that both the Americans and the
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Iroquois were aware of the interchange of ideas for over a generation. Essen-
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tially, the Iroquois had a tradition of instructing, cajoling and admonishing
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the colonies to unity, and the Americans were cognizant of this process in some
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very profound ways.
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Now, I would like to discuss Benjamin Franklin and his knowledge of Iroquois
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imagery and ideas. Franklin, of course, was the author of the Albany Plan of
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Union. However, an examination of the oral traditions about Franklin has
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yielded some interesting insights into Franklin's use of Iroquois ideas. By
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looking at the record of the people that knew Franklin in England before the
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Revolution and in France during the Revolution, it is apparent that Franklin
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talked a great deal about the Iroquois. In England, Franklin's circle of
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friends gave him a silver tea service that was engraved "keep bright the chain"
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because it was one of his favorite phrases. His friends remarked that he used
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it often and that they sought Franklin's ideas about American Indians.
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When Franklin goes to France in late 1776 as the Congress' Minister to France,
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he was welcomed as a hero. There was a rumor that he was coming with 100
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American Indian warriors. Once in France, Franklin "...loved to cite and to
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practice faithfully the proverb of his friends, the American Indians, "Keep the
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chain of friendship bright and shining", when discussing the concept of liberty
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among distinguished French philosophers like Turgot, Helvetius, La Rochefoucault
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and Condorcet. French observers in the salons stated that Franklin would dis-
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cuss the politics of the Indians with great exactness and interest. Further-
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more, Franklin thought the ways of American Indians more conducive to the good
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life than the ways of "...Civilized Nations". Frequently, Franklin used the
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French curiosity about Native Americans and particularly the Iroquois to his
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personal and diplomatic advantage.
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When Franklin came back to America after the Revolution, he became a member in
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the Constitutional Sons of Saint Tammany in Philadelphia. This was a society of
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non-Indians that dressed up as Indians, entertained Indian delegations to Phila-
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delphia, stood for a unicameral legislature like Franklin, and freely used
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Iroquois ideas and imagery in its rhetoric. In 1785, George Washington attended
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a St. Tammany society meeting in Richmond, Virginia. Washington was called our
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"Great Grand Sachem" and our "brother" by the society. Franklin was often
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toasted as "brother" also. During the Constitutional Convention, Franklin
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wrote several letters to American Indians like "the old chief", "the...Beloved
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Indian Woman", and the "Cornstalk". These terms and names were used by the
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Constitutional Sons of Saint Tammany. Since they were written on June 30, 1787
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after the bitter controversy over the Virginia and New Jersey Plans were
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resolved, they may well be "coded" letters to the Constitutional Sons of Saint
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Tammany. The Saint Tammany Society was intensely interested in the outcome of
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the Constitutional Convention and the structure of the new government. At any
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rate, Franklin stated in one of these letters that:
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"I am sorry that the Great Council fire of our nation is
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not now burning, so that you cannot do business there.
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In a few months, the coals will be rak'd out of the ashes
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and will again be rekindled."
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Franklin also had designed currency using the Iroquois Covenant Chain at the
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beginning of the Revolution that was reissued in 1787. The currency depicted a
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Covenant Chain of thirteen links with an admonition to unite. Hence, there is
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plenty of evidence that Franklin continued and cultivated his interest in the
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Iroquois after he used their ideas of unity to forge the Albany Plan of Union in
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1754.
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Thomas Paine was also influenced by the Iroquois. Although it is generally not
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acknowledged, Thomas Paine was a secretary to an Iroquois Treaty at Easton,
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Pennsylvania in early 1777. It appears that Paine heard an Iroquois prophecy
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about struggling beasts that would shake the very foundation of the League of
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the Iroquois. In the end, lesser beast (the Americans) would win and take up
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the ideas of the Iroquois. A pamphlet published by the Continental Congress
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recounts a similar prophecy. It is printed in France in 1777 before the French
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publicly began to support the American cause. Thomas Paine was appointed to the
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Committee for Foreign Affairs of the Continental Congress in April of 1777. He
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may have sent over to Franklin an account of the prophecy since Franklin and the
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other American ministers to France were constantly asking for good news (the
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good news would come late in 1777 with the victory at Saratoga). Again, it is
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important to note that the Continental Congress is writing propaganda using the
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imagery and prophecies of the Iroquois since they knew that the French were
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fascinated by Iroquois ideas. After Paine leaves America for France, he was
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reputed to have talked a great deal about the Iroquois.
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Finally, there is John Rutledge of South Carolina, chairman of the Committee of
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Detail that writes the first draft of the U. S. Constitution. According to his
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biographer, Rutledge learned of the Great Law while attending the Stamp Act
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Congress in New York City as a young man. During the Stamp Act Congress, Rut-
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ledge rented a cab and rode out to see Sir William Johnson and some Mohawks
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camped on the edge of Greenwich Village. Sir William Johnson was upset about
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the Stamp Act because it was cutting into his Indian trade. Sir William Johnson
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had come down in the fall from Albany to get supplies for the Indian trade.
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Johnson greeted Rutledge by saying: "I see you've come to comb the King's hair",
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and Rutledge was puzzled by this phrase (an obvious allusion to the evil
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Onondaga wizard, Tadodaho, that Hiawatha tamed to pave the way for the creation
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of the Great Law of the Iroquois). In this way, Johnson characterized the Stamp
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Act Congress as attempting to pacify the King's mind about taxation and other
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things. With this opening remark, John Rutledge sits down and has a few glasses
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of rum with Johnson and the Mohawks and gets his first lesson about the Great
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Law of the Iroquois.
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In late July, 1787, twenty years after the Stamp Act Congress, John Rutledge
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found himself chairing the Committee of Detail at the Constitutional Convention.
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The Committee was charged with taking all of the resolutions that had been
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passed in Convention and drafting a document that could be polished and refined
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through debate on the floor of the convention. Rutledge's biographer states
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that he opened the meeting with some passages from the Great Law of the Iro-
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quois. The main passages relate to the sovereignty of the people, peace and
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unity. Rutledge had asserted earlier that a great empire was being created so
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it must be firmly rooted in American soil. With this said, Rutledge bent over
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and began the task of drafting the Constitution.
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Pressure in the printed media was already being brought to bear upon the Framers
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of the U. S. Constitution. In the August, 1787 issue of The American Museum (a
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Philadelphia magazine), "A Fable - Addressed to the Federal Convention" was
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printed that used the bundle of arrows imagery of the Iroquois Constitution
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(Section 57) and styled the Iroquois as "fathers" urging unity to their "sons".
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No doubt, the Constitutional Sons of Saint Tammany were, in part responsible for
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this reference. Alexander Hamilton, in Federalist No. 69, felt compelled to
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address an editorial written by 'Tamony' that expressed reservations about the
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executive powers in the proposed constitution. Appearing in Virginia and
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Pennsylvania newspapers, the editorial clearly represented the fears of the St.
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Tammany Society of a strong executive in peacetime. These examples are but a
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few of the references to the Iroquois roots of American government.
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The major thing to remember is that if you know the code words like "combing the
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King's hair" or "keep the chain bright" the Iroquois influence can be easily
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seen. Indeed, there seems to be a kind of ignoring of these references in the
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records. This ignoring of important references glosses over the fact that
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Iroquois images were used frequently in eighteenth century America.
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But to modern scholars such references probably appear as anomalies since many
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people are unfamiliar with the rhetoric and imagery of the Iroquois. In short,
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the attitude might be: "What's this, Thomas Paine writing an Indian treaty?"
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What does this have to do with political theory or his ideas?
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In conclusion, I think that the concept of unity was an important transference
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that went on for generations bewteen the colonists and the Iroquois. Rutledge
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recalled that exchange as he began to write the first draft of the Constitution
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(the press of Philadelphia and the Saint Tammany society were also bound to
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remind him and the other delegates to the convention of the American roots of
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our unity and freedom). Federalism is another important concept here. The
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Iroquois had a working federalism that gave maximum internal freedom while
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providing for a strong defense.
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I think it is time to take away the veil that has deprived Americans from
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realizing the Iroquois roots of American democracy. The new evidence that we
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have all brought to bear here is extremely exciting. I hope that it will
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convince people that when they look at the origins of American democracy that
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one can no longer look only to the ancient Greeks and John Locke for sources but
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you must also look to the Great Law of the Iroquois as a valid source of
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ideas for the formation of our nation. With evidence at hand, the question is
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not whether the Iroquois had an influence on formation of the American govern-
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ment but to what degree.
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The next job. after this conference, is to increase cross-cultural kinds of
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studies. I think that research funds in the institutions that study Indians
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should be allocated in ways that reflect more the interests and questions that
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are important to Indian people. Certainly, American Indian people and American
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Indian scholars should have a greater say over research priorities and the
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allocation of funds in places like the Smithsonian Institution. In the final
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analysis, it was the Iroquois people that came to me and said "we're interested
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in this, are you interested in the Iroquois roots of American democracy?" In
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the future, questions that American Indian people deem important should have a
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great deal of validity in institutions of culture and learning, i.e. the
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National Endowment for the Humanities and the Smithsonian. Let us hope that the
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call is heeded. Why can't people recognize that Native Americans have priorit-
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ies about their history? American Indian people should not be ignored in their
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pursuit of a new Native American history.
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Thank you.
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