- "downstream people." Some
scholars contended the
Miami called themselves the
Twightwee (also
spelled ****wa),
supposedly an
onomatopoeic reference to
their sacred...
- 1786, a
Wyandot messenger named Scotosh warned Congress that the Wabash,
Twightwee, and
Miami nations would disrupt U.S. surveyors, and
Congress promised...
-
subsequent attacks, the
leaders of
Lower Shawneetown had
refused to join the
Twightwee Indians in
their fight against the French. Even
after the
expulsion of...
- the British.
Deputy commissioner George Croghan described Kekionga: The
Twightwee Village is
situated on both
Sides of a
River called St. Joseph's ... The...
- 'downstream people’. Some
scholars contended the
Miami called themselves the
Twightwee (also
spelled ****wa),
supposedly an
onomatopoeic reference to
their sacred...
- the
Native American tribes living in the region,
primarily the
Miamis (
Twightwees), the
Wyandots (Hurons), and the Shawnees.
English traders from Pennsylvania...
- 1941, the So-Lo
Works division acquires a one-story
factory building at
Twightwee near the
Little Miami River in Loveland, Ohio, from the
former occupant...
- to
Kekionga providing a
critical account: The
Twightwee village [the
English called the
Miamis "
twightwees"] is
situated on both
sides of a
river called...
- Next, the
nations in the Ohio
River Valley, the Delaware, Shawnee, and
Twightwee,
would attack the
smaller forts around Fort Pitt. The
Mingo and other...
- the
English against the
French after the
French reportedly killed some
Twightwee warriors. Big Hominy,
Loapeckaway (Loyparcowah, Opessa's son), Nickiphock...