- by
Chief Newash had a
reserve in the area
totalling about 11,000
acres (45 km2; 4,500 ha). In 1842, they
established the
village of
Newash which initially...
-
Great Lakes, two
British armed topsail schooners, HMS Te****seth and HMS
Newash were laid up "in ordinary", and
eventually reported to have sunk at their...
- (Ryssota)
brookei (Adams & Reeve, 1848) In 1857, the
native village of
Newash in Grey County, Ontario, Canada, was
renamed Brooke and the
adjacent township...
-
Saugeen 29 Chief's
Point now
known as Chief's
Point 28 Owen
Sound Indians Newash Surrendered to the
Crown in 1857
under the
Peter Jones Treaty (also known...
- Map of the
reserves of
Chippewa of
Newash First Nation...
-
Individuals in South-Western
Ontario 1750–1850, Greg
Curnoe records James Newash as an Odawa. He is
reported to have
moved to
Saugeen after the War of 1812...
-
Boston -
schooner 1764 HMS Victory -
schooner 1764
Gladwyn -
schooner 1764
Newash -
schooner 1815 (1)
Minos -
steam vessel 1840 (1) (1) -
built in Chippawa...
- here: Bee -
gunboat Minos -
gunboat Mohawk -
steamer Te****seh -
schooner Newash -
brigantine Mosquito -
gunboat Wasp -
gunboat unnamed frigate 1814 The...
-
Nestor Netley Nettle Nettlham New
Adventure New
Betsey New
Zealand Newark Newash Newbark Newbury Newcastle Newfoundland Newhaven Newmarket Newport Newquay...
- of
buildings in the
Ojibwe settlement to the northwest,
which became the
Newash or
Nawash "Indian Village" and was an
official reserve. This
would only...