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Ephraim Webster

Ephraim Webster (June 30, 1762 - October 16, 1824) was the first white settler in Central New York when he arrived in 1786 to an area later named Syracuse. For three decades, the Onondagas trusted him more than any other non-tribe member.[1]

Ephraim Webster
Born(1762-06-30)June 30, 1762
DiedOctober 16, 1824(1824-10-16) (aged 62)
OccupationState agent in land treaties with the Onondaga nation
SpouseHannah Danks

Webster was a translator and acted as agent for the Onondagas on several land treaties with the State of New York and was instrumental in the eventual settlement by white pioneers of Syracuse, New York, although the Onondagas later felt betrayed by him.

Biography edit

Ephraim Webster was born on June 30, 1762, in Hampstead, New Hampshire, United States and was raised in Newbury, Vermont. He was the son of Ephraim Webster Sr. and Phebe Tucker.[2] He had nine siblings. His mother died when he was a teenager and his father, son of Samuel Webster and Mary Kimball, remarried on January 8, 1778, in Chester, New Hampshire, to Sarah Colby Wells, a widow. Ephraim Webster Sr. was very well-written and left an extensive family diary.[3]

Revolutionary war edit

In 1777, at age 15,[4] he served as a private in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War. During his time in service, he was called on by the commanders of Fort Ticonderoga in New York to volunteer with another soldier to swim Lake Champlain and carry dispatches to General Lincoln near Mount Independence, Vermont. The trip was a distance of 2 miles (3.2 km) and took place in the late autumn when the water was already quite cold. The two soldiers departed one evening and feared they would not make it alive. Webster completed the duty, however, nearly lost his life and had to be rescued by his companion, Wallace of Thetford.[5]

Early life edit

At age 21, in 1783, he tried his hand at shoemaking, a skill his father, a tailor, insisted he learn, however, he tired of it after a year. According to his brother, "He seemingly inherited my dissatisfaction with leaving a destiny to a father's whim, and he left to seek his fortune. He tried his luck in the towns of Boston, Philadelphia and New York City, but his fortune was not to be found in a city."[6]

Although he could make a living off of city jobs, Webster a wanted to be a frontiersman and went to Albany, New York, before heading out into the wilderness where he met an Indian hunting party.[6]

In his brother's words;

"My brother wandered about in this fashion until he fell in with the Six Nations about 150 miles (240 km) west of Albany at Onondaga. For the next four years, to his belief, he was the only white man in the area. He adapted well.

Ephraim also became adept with the Indian language, another instinct which saved his life. One night after drinking with a few Indians, he understood them to say they were going to kill him, because they believed he was a man who had, in the past, destroyed their wigwams. Soon two of them came and sat down, Ephraim said, one on each side of him. I can't even imagine his fear when one Indian held his arms and the other took the hatchet and told him that he was going to sing his 'death song' and kill him. However, on reflection, it is true that each of my children had extraordinary strengths and weaknesses, and in Ephraim's life, they were one and the same -- no fear.

Ephraim understood their culture as well as their language, and he motioned as if requesting a taste of their rum for a final drink. He took the cup and drank a toast to their chiefs, naming them in turn, beginning with Brant Buller. This caused great emotion, and the Indian with the hatchet threw it down, by this sign “burying it” forever with Ephraim. “You no enemy, my brother,” he reportedly said, and the man threw his arms around my son’s neck and, Ephraim said, the man then "wept like a child." From that day, they were as brothers. My son often claimed that his Indian brothers would 'go through fire and water for him and would not do any business without his orders'."[6]

Settler and trader edit

In 1786, at age 24, he arrived in Onondaga Hollow to make trade with the Onondagas. Webster eventually became the first white person to permanently settle in what later became Onondaga County.[1]

He built a trading post on a bank of Onondaga Creek, close to Onondaga Lake. According to his father, he became accostumed to Indian traditions and made a career off of trading them rum and ammunition."[6]

Webster was married to an Onondaga woman named "One-Eyed Nancy" late 1780s, [7] named so because of how she was blinded by smallpox. They later had a son.[1]

Although he had the trading post on the south shore of Onondaga Lake, Webster was afraid of getting swamp fever, so moved inland to Onondaga Hollow in 1788 and established Onondaga County's first permanent settlement.[4]

In the spring of 1788, Webster used his influence with the Onondagas to get their consent to bring Major Asa Danforth from Montgomery County to Onondaga. Danforth was the second white man to settle in the area.[8] While on a hunting trip in Montgomery County, Webster slept in the barn of Danforth in Johnstown, New York. Webster's praise of Onondaga that Danforth's family and Comfort Tyler emigrated to the county and erected a home in the county.[9]

Indian interpreter edit

Webster conceived the idea of locating to Upstate New York during the last period of the American Revolutionary War when he was stationed at Greenbush, New York, and became acquainted with a Mohawk Indian named Peter Gain. He went with Gain to his home on West Canada Creek and spent three months there without speaking a word of English during the entire time. By the time he left there he was fluent in the Indian language.[10] Webster learned to speak or write a total of six Indian languages, and served as an interpreter for a salary of two dollars a day.

According to documents at the Onondaga Historical Association from reports by other pioneers such as Calvin Jackson, interviewed in 1837, who relayed that in 1793 he saw Webster "dressed in an Indian costume and painted (with) a jewel in his nose and ears. Had a squaw with him with one eye and a little boy with them. (They) called the boy William, but (he) has since gone by the name of Harry."[7]

Land treaties edit

Webster was a language interpreter for the Haudenosaunee, Onondaga Indian Iroquoian language. In 1793, he acted as translator at treaties where the Onondagas sold New York State an area of land approximately 70,000 acres (280,000,000 m2).[1] This amounted to 75 percent of their original, 100-square-mile (260 km2) reserve which they traded for a $410 down payment.[7]

By 1796, Webster was so well liked by the Onondagas, they were able to convince the governor of New York to give them a square mile of the land that they had sold to the state so Webster could build a home on it. It was the site of the fort built by William Johnson, British settler, thirty years previously.[11] The state deeded the acreage to Webster as "a free and voluntary gift", a reward for acting as a translator for the Onondagas. The property was located in an area later called the hamlet of Onondaga Hollow, which was located on the future site of the Seneca Turnpike, south of the present center of Syracuse.[1]

Family life edit

Webster's first Native American wife died shortly after marriage and he married a second time to another Native American woman.[9]

For the Onondagas, the gift of land to Webster carried an obligation and meant that the Onondagas believed he would become a permanent member of their community.[1]

There are conflicting reports of what became of his Onondaga wife, which include him divorcing her, or the possibility that she died.[1] According to Joel Cornish, who served on a trial in a property dispute filed by Harry Webster in 1837, the woman balked at a divorce, but was finally forced to leave. Several historical accounts maintain Onondaga chiefs accepted divorce in instances where wives were accused of drunken behavior.[7] His Onondaga wife, called "Nance" by white settlers, returned to live among the Onondagas with their son Harry and died not long after.[7]

He married a young white woman named Hannah Danks on November 19, 1795, just months after he received his square mile of land. She was the daughter of Captain Isaac Danks and Lucy Danks.[4] With his caucasian wife, he built a home in the square mile on the banks of Webster's Pond in Syracuse. Together, they had five children.[1]

In a 1962 article for the Onondaga Historical Association, historian Richard Wright said Webster gave up the Indian lifestyle on the urging of his newly arrived brother, Asahel Webster.[7]

 
Original home of Ephraim Webster on Valley Drive in Syracuse during the late 1890s

Webster eventually sold the majority of the square mile in small parcels for $9,000 each.[1] The last parcel was purchased by Joseph Forman, a merchant from Troy, New York, who had settled in Onondaga Hollow a few years earlier, for $6,250 on October 18, 1805. Forman was the father of a young lawyer named, Joshua Forman, who later founded the village of Syracuse.[4]

The original family home Webster built stood for many years at Valley Drive in Syracuse until it was destroyed by fire in the late 1890s.[4]

Friendly relations edit

In 1795, Webster was elected the supervisor of Onondaga [1] and in 1798, he was justice of the peace.[4] He served as a lieutenant and captain in the New York militia and was later appointed inspector of beef and pork.[10]

Even after he rejoined white society, he was on good terms with the Onondagas, and was appointed as the state's agent to live with the tribe in 1811.[1] He offered Onondaga troops to President James Madison during the War of 1812, and led the tribe in engagements against the British on two separate occasions.[1]

Broken trust edit

The trust the Onondagas held for Ephraim Webster was broken in 1817 after he acted as the state's agent and translator for them. In the treaty dated July 28, 1795,[12] Onondagas sold 4,000 acres (16,000,000 m2) to the State of New York for $1,000 and annual payments of $430, along with 50 bushels of salt.[1]

The treaty had a clause that required the Onondagas to give Webster 300 acres (1,200,000 m2) of their diminishing territory, which was not viewed favorably by the tribal leaders. Disagreements over the acreage prompted the Onondagas to accuse Webster of betraying them.[1] Webster had been leasing land from the Onondagas for a decade prior to the treaty. Their dispute was settled when Webster surrendered his ownership of a saw mill he owned located on the Onondagas' land, with the Onondagas agreeing not to pursue any land claims against him.[1]

The Onondagas wanted Governor Clinton to appoint a new agent, however that never occurred. In 1822, Webster acted as the interpreter at Onondagas' last treaty with New York State in which they sold more of their reservation for $1,700.[1]

Chief Leon Shenandoah, who served as tadadaho, the highest position in the Iroquois Confederacy in 1991, said that as a boy, listening to his elders in the longhouse, he heard the old chiefs talk of how Webster would invite Onondaga leaders to his house in an attempt to get them drunk whenever he needed a new piece of land.[7]

The Onondagas refused to part with any more land and were left with 7,300 acres (30,000,000 m2), which they still have possession of today.[1]

Later life edit

Webster died on October 16, 1824, at age 62 of Typhoid fever[11] at the Seneca Indian Reservation at Tonawanda, New York.

His will left all his possessions, including $2,000 worth of personal property, a large fortune for that time,[10] to his second wife, Hannah and to their children despite the Onondagas belief that the land should naturally return to them. Some members of the family lived on the 300 acres (1,200,000 m2), later called the "Half-Mile" until the late 19th century. He left nothing in his will to his son Harry Webster.[1]

After Webster's wife died, his son Harry Webster filed a suit in April, 1837 against Webster's family for some of the land inherited by his white half-siblings, however, he did not win.[7]

Harry Webster went on to become the Iroquois Confederacy's spiritual leader [1] before he died on January 28, 1864, at the age of 75 at Onondaga Castle.[4]

Familial ties disputed edit

Harry's relation to Ephraim Webster was the subject of debate several for years. In a letter to the Syracuse Herald in 1899, Orris D. Webster, one of Webster's descendants, insisted Ephraim Webster never fathered any Onondaga children and claimed that Harry Webster had filed a "bogus lawsuit"[1]

A lawsuit was filed and the trial began during which time, with Orris Webster not winning the lawsuit and later writing "they were beaten, lost their money and their case."[1]

Legacy edit

Webster's Pond in Syracuse, New York, was named after him.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u McAndrew, Mike. "First a friend, then a foe". The Post-Standard, Syracuse, N.Y., August 11, 2000. Archived from the original on 2013-02-03.
  2. ^ Glynn Patrick, Jody. . Glynn Patrick & Associates, 2010. Archived from the original on 2011-07-11.
  3. ^ "Descendants of Hugh Sargent". Ancestry.com, 2009. Archived from the original on 2013-01-24.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Campbell, Wallace Hamilton (July 25, 1964). "Historic Central New York". Syracuse Post-Standard. Syracuse, New York.
  5. ^ Ephraim Webster. Daughters of the American Revolution, Volume 11, July–December, 1897. 1897.
  6. ^ a b c d Glynn Patrick, Jody. . Glynn Patrick & Associates, 2010 and Dorothy & Allistair Frasier of British Columbia family document by Henry Webster, Ephraim’s son, of Jericho, Vermont, 1847. Archived from the original on 2011-07-11.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Kirst, Sean. "Pioneer hero left bitter Onondaga legacy". The Post-Standard, Syracuse, N.Y., May 22, 1991.
  8. ^ "Old Records, The Early History of Onondaga County". Syracuse Evening Herald. Syracuse, New York. June 6, 1894.
  9. ^ a b "New York, Syracuse". Atlantis, 2010. Retrieved November 3, 2010.
  10. ^ a b c "Plan to Place More Tablets To Mark Spot Where First White Settler Lived". Syracuse Herald. Syracuse, New York. September 12, 1915.
  11. ^ a b . Shades of Oakwood, 2010. Archived from the original on August 30, 2010. Retrieved November 5, 2010.
  12. ^ Crowell, Kathy. "The Onondaga Indians and their Reservation". Rootsweb, August 28, 1998.

External links edit

  • Ephraim Webster. Written by his son, Henry Webster of Jericho, Vermont, March 11, 1847

ephraim, webster, june, 1762, october, 1824, first, white, settler, central, york, when, arrived, 1786, area, later, named, syracuse, three, decades, onondagas, trusted, more, than, other, tribe, member, born, 1762, june, 1762hampstead, hampshire, united, stat. Ephraim Webster June 30 1762 October 16 1824 was the first white settler in Central New York when he arrived in 1786 to an area later named Syracuse For three decades the Onondagas trusted him more than any other non tribe member 1 Ephraim WebsterBorn 1762 06 30 June 30 1762Hampstead New Hampshire United StatesDiedOctober 16 1824 1824 10 16 aged 62 Syracuse New York United StatesOccupationState agent in land treaties with the Onondaga nationSpouseHannah DanksWebster was a translator and acted as agent for the Onondagas on several land treaties with the State of New York and was instrumental in the eventual settlement by white pioneers of Syracuse New York although the Onondagas later felt betrayed by him Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Revolutionary war 1 2 Early life 1 3 Settler and trader 1 4 Indian interpreter 1 5 Land treaties 1 6 Family life 1 7 Friendly relations 1 8 Broken trust 1 9 Later life 1 10 Familial ties disputed 1 11 Legacy 2 References 3 External linksBiography editEphraim Webster was born on June 30 1762 in Hampstead New Hampshire United States and was raised in Newbury Vermont He was the son of Ephraim Webster Sr and Phebe Tucker 2 He had nine siblings His mother died when he was a teenager and his father son of Samuel Webster and Mary Kimball remarried on January 8 1778 in Chester New Hampshire to Sarah Colby Wells a widow Ephraim Webster Sr was very well written and left an extensive family diary 3 Revolutionary war edit In 1777 at age 15 4 he served as a private in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War During his time in service he was called on by the commanders of Fort Ticonderoga in New York to volunteer with another soldier to swim Lake Champlain and carry dispatches to General Lincoln near Mount Independence Vermont The trip was a distance of 2 miles 3 2 km and took place in the late autumn when the water was already quite cold The two soldiers departed one evening and feared they would not make it alive Webster completed the duty however nearly lost his life and had to be rescued by his companion Wallace of Thetford 5 Early life edit At age 21 in 1783 he tried his hand at shoemaking a skill his father a tailor insisted he learn however he tired of it after a year According to his brother He seemingly inherited my dissatisfaction with leaving a destiny to a father s whim and he left to seek his fortune He tried his luck in the towns of Boston Philadelphia and New York City but his fortune was not to be found in a city 6 Although he could make a living off of city jobs Webster a wanted to be a frontiersman and went to Albany New York before heading out into the wilderness where he met an Indian hunting party 6 In his brother s words My brother wandered about in this fashion until he fell in with the Six Nations about 150 miles 240 km west of Albany at Onondaga For the next four years to his belief he was the only white man in the area He adapted well Ephraim also became adept with the Indian language another instinct which saved his life One night after drinking with a few Indians he understood them to say they were going to kill him because they believed he was a man who had in the past destroyed their wigwams Soon two of them came and sat down Ephraim said one on each side of him I can t even imagine his fear when one Indian held his arms and the other took the hatchet and told him that he was going to sing his death song and kill him However on reflection it is true that each of my children had extraordinary strengths and weaknesses and in Ephraim s life they were one and the same no fear Ephraim understood their culture as well as their language and he motioned as if requesting a taste of their rum for a final drink He took the cup and drank a toast to their chiefs naming them in turn beginning with Brant Buller This caused great emotion and the Indian with the hatchet threw it down by this sign burying it forever with Ephraim You no enemy my brother he reportedly said and the man threw his arms around my son s neck and Ephraim said the man then wept like a child From that day they were as brothers My son often claimed that his Indian brothers would go through fire and water for him and would not do any business without his orders 6 Settler and trader edit In 1786 at age 24 he arrived in Onondaga Hollow to make trade with the Onondagas Webster eventually became the first white person to permanently settle in what later became Onondaga County 1 He built a trading post on a bank of Onondaga Creek close to Onondaga Lake According to his father he became accostumed to Indian traditions and made a career off of trading them rum and ammunition 6 Webster was married to an Onondaga woman named One Eyed Nancy late 1780s 7 named so because of how she was blinded by smallpox They later had a son 1 Although he had the trading post on the south shore of Onondaga Lake Webster was afraid of getting swamp fever so moved inland to Onondaga Hollow in 1788 and established Onondaga County s first permanent settlement 4 In the spring of 1788 Webster used his influence with the Onondagas to get their consent to bring Major Asa Danforth from Montgomery County to Onondaga Danforth was the second white man to settle in the area 8 While on a hunting trip in Montgomery County Webster slept in the barn of Danforth in Johnstown New York Webster s praise of Onondaga that Danforth s family and Comfort Tyler emigrated to the county and erected a home in the county 9 Indian interpreter edit Webster conceived the idea of locating to Upstate New York during the last period of the American Revolutionary War when he was stationed at Greenbush New York and became acquainted with a Mohawk Indian named Peter Gain He went with Gain to his home on West Canada Creek and spent three months there without speaking a word of English during the entire time By the time he left there he was fluent in the Indian language 10 Webster learned to speak or write a total of six Indian languages and served as an interpreter for a salary of two dollars a day According to documents at the Onondaga Historical Association from reports by other pioneers such as Calvin Jackson interviewed in 1837 who relayed that in 1793 he saw Webster dressed in an Indian costume and painted with a jewel in his nose and ears Had a squaw with him with one eye and a little boy with them They called the boy William but he has since gone by the name of Harry 7 Land treaties edit Webster was a language interpreter for the Haudenosaunee Onondaga Indian Iroquoian language In 1793 he acted as translator at treaties where the Onondagas sold New York State an area of land approximately 70 000 acres 280 000 000 m2 1 This amounted to 75 percent of their original 100 square mile 260 km2 reserve which they traded for a 410 down payment 7 By 1796 Webster was so well liked by the Onondagas they were able to convince the governor of New York to give them a square mile of the land that they had sold to the state so Webster could build a home on it It was the site of the fort built by William Johnson British settler thirty years previously 11 The state deeded the acreage to Webster as a free and voluntary gift a reward for acting as a translator for the Onondagas The property was located in an area later called the hamlet of Onondaga Hollow which was located on the future site of the Seneca Turnpike south of the present center of Syracuse 1 Family life edit Webster s first Native American wife died shortly after marriage and he married a second time to another Native American woman 9 For the Onondagas the gift of land to Webster carried an obligation and meant that the Onondagas believed he would become a permanent member of their community 1 There are conflicting reports of what became of his Onondaga wife which include him divorcing her or the possibility that she died 1 According to Joel Cornish who served on a trial in a property dispute filed by Harry Webster in 1837 the woman balked at a divorce but was finally forced to leave Several historical accounts maintain Onondaga chiefs accepted divorce in instances where wives were accused of drunken behavior 7 His Onondaga wife called Nance by white settlers returned to live among the Onondagas with their son Harry and died not long after 7 He married a young white woman named Hannah Danks on November 19 1795 just months after he received his square mile of land She was the daughter of Captain Isaac Danks and Lucy Danks 4 With his caucasian wife he built a home in the square mile on the banks of Webster s Pond in Syracuse Together they had five children 1 In a 1962 article for the Onondaga Historical Association historian Richard Wright said Webster gave up the Indian lifestyle on the urging of his newly arrived brother Asahel Webster 7 nbsp Original home of Ephraim Webster on Valley Drive in Syracuse during the late 1890sWebster eventually sold the majority of the square mile in small parcels for 9 000 each 1 The last parcel was purchased by Joseph Forman a merchant from Troy New York who had settled in Onondaga Hollow a few years earlier for 6 250 on October 18 1805 Forman was the father of a young lawyer named Joshua Forman who later founded the village of Syracuse 4 The original family home Webster built stood for many years at Valley Drive in Syracuse until it was destroyed by fire in the late 1890s 4 Friendly relations edit In 1795 Webster was elected the supervisor of Onondaga 1 and in 1798 he was justice of the peace 4 He served as a lieutenant and captain in the New York militia and was later appointed inspector of beef and pork 10 Even after he rejoined white society he was on good terms with the Onondagas and was appointed as the state s agent to live with the tribe in 1811 1 He offered Onondaga troops to President James Madison during the War of 1812 and led the tribe in engagements against the British on two separate occasions 1 Broken trust edit The trust the Onondagas held for Ephraim Webster was broken in 1817 after he acted as the state s agent and translator for them In the treaty dated July 28 1795 12 Onondagas sold 4 000 acres 16 000 000 m2 to the State of New York for 1 000 and annual payments of 430 along with 50 bushels of salt 1 The treaty had a clause that required the Onondagas to give Webster 300 acres 1 200 000 m2 of their diminishing territory which was not viewed favorably by the tribal leaders Disagreements over the acreage prompted the Onondagas to accuse Webster of betraying them 1 Webster had been leasing land from the Onondagas for a decade prior to the treaty Their dispute was settled when Webster surrendered his ownership of a saw mill he owned located on the Onondagas land with the Onondagas agreeing not to pursue any land claims against him 1 The Onondagas wanted Governor Clinton to appoint a new agent however that never occurred In 1822 Webster acted as the interpreter at Onondagas last treaty with New York State in which they sold more of their reservation for 1 700 1 Chief Leon Shenandoah who served as tadadaho the highest position in the Iroquois Confederacy in 1991 said that as a boy listening to his elders in the longhouse he heard the old chiefs talk of how Webster would invite Onondaga leaders to his house in an attempt to get them drunk whenever he needed a new piece of land 7 The Onondagas refused to part with any more land and were left with 7 300 acres 30 000 000 m2 which they still have possession of today 1 Later life edit Webster died on October 16 1824 at age 62 of Typhoid fever 11 at the Seneca Indian Reservation at Tonawanda New York His will left all his possessions including 2 000 worth of personal property a large fortune for that time 10 to his second wife Hannah and to their children despite the Onondagas belief that the land should naturally return to them Some members of the family lived on the 300 acres 1 200 000 m2 later called the Half Mile until the late 19th century He left nothing in his will to his son Harry Webster 1 After Webster s wife died his son Harry Webster filed a suit in April 1837 against Webster s family for some of the land inherited by his white half siblings however he did not win 7 Harry Webster went on to become the Iroquois Confederacy s spiritual leader 1 before he died on January 28 1864 at the age of 75 at Onondaga Castle 4 Familial ties disputed edit Harry s relation to Ephraim Webster was the subject of debate several for years In a letter to the Syracuse Herald in 1899 Orris D Webster one of Webster s descendants insisted Ephraim Webster never fathered any Onondaga children and claimed that Harry Webster had filed a bogus lawsuit 1 A lawsuit was filed and the trial began during which time with Orris Webster not winning the lawsuit and later writing they were beaten lost their money and their case 1 Legacy edit Webster s Pond in Syracuse New York was named after him References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u McAndrew Mike First a friend then a foe The Post Standard Syracuse N Y August 11 2000 Archived from the original on 2013 02 03 Glynn Patrick Jody Ephraim Webster Biography Glynn Patrick amp Associates 2010 Archived from the original on 2011 07 11 Descendants of Hugh Sargent Ancestry com 2009 Archived from the original on 2013 01 24 a b c d e f g Campbell Wallace Hamilton July 25 1964 Historic Central New York Syracuse Post Standard Syracuse New York Ephraim Webster Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 11 July December 1897 1897 a b c d Glynn Patrick Jody Ephraim Webster Story Glynn Patrick amp Associates 2010 and Dorothy amp Allistair Frasier of British Columbia family document by Henry Webster Ephraim s son of Jericho Vermont 1847 Archived from the original on 2011 07 11 a b c d e f g h Kirst Sean Pioneer hero left bitter Onondaga legacy The Post Standard Syracuse N Y May 22 1991 Old Records The Early History of Onondaga County Syracuse Evening Herald Syracuse New York June 6 1894 a b New York Syracuse Atlantis 2010 Retrieved November 3 2010 a b c Plan to Place More Tablets To Mark Spot Where First White Settler Lived Syracuse Herald Syracuse New York September 12 1915 a b Early History of Syracuse Shades of Oakwood 2010 Archived from the original on August 30 2010 Retrieved November 5 2010 Crowell Kathy The Onondaga Indians and their Reservation Rootsweb August 28 1998 External links editEphraim Webster Written by his son Henry Webster of Jericho Vermont March 11 1847 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ephraim Webster amp oldid 1213163222, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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