Friendly Association Papers

Haverford

The “Friendly Association for Regaining and Preserving Peace with the Indians by Pacific Measures” was established in 1756 by a group of eminent Quakers in Philadelphia following months of horrific violence between settlers and Native Americans on the Pennsylvania frontier.

The Friendly Association papers contain hundreds of unique and detailed accounts of behind-the-scenes treaty negotiations; historical documents dating back to the early years of Pennsylvania related to work with Indigenous groups; the correspondence of Pemberton and others relating to fund-raising and the exigencies of Pennsylvania politics; and missives from Indian leaders, transcribed or otherwise transmitted by an intricate network of Indian “go-betweens” who maintained almost constant contact with the Association.

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707 items [showing 381 - 400]

Pages

Meeting for Sufferings' address to the Governor of Pennsylvania, January 15, 1759
Israel Pemberton's letter to the Commissioners of Indian Affairs, January 16, 1759
Minutes of the Friendly Association, March 24, 1758
Extract from Charles Thompson's letter, June 10, 1758
Pemberton's Letter to Mary Pemberton
Proposal to Governor on message to the Munsies, October 1761
Bills and Receipts, October 11, 1759
Nathaniel Holland's letter to Israel Pemberton, March 27, 1759
Bills and Receipts
Mary Pemberton's letter to her husband, Israel Pemberton, June 17, 1762
Bills and Receipts, May 24, 1759
Journal of Christian Frederick Post, October 1758 to January 1759
Philadelphia Friends' message to Indians, September 7, 1773
Copy of the Deposition of Joseph Billings
Copy of the Deposition of Martha McCoy
Bills and Receipts, October 4, 1758
Bills and Receipts, March 1, 1759
General Amherst's message to the Indians, April 27, 1760
Zane's Expenses on going to Wyoming, May 20, 1758
Bills and Receipts, August 2, 1759

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