The delegates for both parties met from August 20, 1797, until September 16, 1797, at the rustic
log cabin of
James and
William Wadsworth, early settlers and land agents in the area, in what is now
Geneseo, New York. In attendance were nearly 3000 Seneca and other prominent members of the
Six Nations of the Iroquois. Representing them were their
hoyaneh chiefs:
Cornplanter,
Red Jacket,
Young King,
Little Billy,
Farmer's Brother,
Handsome Lake, Tall Chief,
Little Beard and others; the clan mothers of the nation; and
Mary Jemison. Those in attendance representing the United States were:
Colonel Jeremiah Wadsworth, Commissioner, who was assigned by President
George Washington to represent the
United States government; Captain Charles Williamson and
Thomas Morris, representing his father;
Robert Morris; General
William Shepard, representing
Massachusetts;
William Bayard, representing
New York; Captain Israel Chapin, representing the
Department of Indian Affairs; and James Rees as acting secretary. The official interpreters were
Horatio Jones and
Jasper Parrish. Also in attendance were representatives of the
Holland Land Company including
William Bayard,
Joseph Ellicott (
surveyor),
John Lincklaen,
Gerrit Boon, Jan Gabriel van Staphorst and Roelof Van Staphorst.
Mary Jemison, known as
The White Woman of the Genesee, who was captured in a raid and ended up marrying her Seneca captor, was an able
negotiator for the tribe and helped win them more favorable terms. According to accounts, all of the treaty delegates for the United States were housed in the Wadsworths' log cabin. A council house was erected nearby by the Seneca, and proceedings were held there. The treaty was signed on September 16, 1797, after nearly a month of often heated back-and-forth negotiations. Following negotiations, Robert Morris requested the $100,000 principal revert to his heirs if “the Seneca nation” should ever “become extinct.” The presiding
secretaries of Treasury and
State denied his request. This treaty is substantial as it opened up the rest of the territory west of the
Genesee River for settlement and established twelve
reservations, perpetual
annuities and
hunting and fishing rights for the Seneca in
Western New York. == Namesake ==