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  1. Logan the Orator (c. 1723 – 1780) was a Cayuga orator and war leader born of one of the Six Nations of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy. After his 1760s move to the Ohio Country, he became affiliated with the Mingo, a tribe formed from Seneca, Cayuga, Lenape and other remnant peoples.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Logan's_WarLogan's War - Wikipedia

    Logan's War was a 1774 retribution campaign or "mourning war" led by Mingo leader Logan in retaliation for the Yellow Creek massacre. Lord Dunmore's War was a direct result of Logan's campaign.

  3. 29 kwi 2022 · Genealogy for John Tahgahute Logan, Logan the Mingo (1725 - 1786) family tree on Geni, with over 250 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.

  4. 26 sty 2014 · Although Logan was of the Cayuga nation, after his 1760s move to the Ohio Country, he was sometimes referred to as a Mingo. This suggests that Mingo may have been a differentiation of location, not of tribe.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › MingoMingo - Wikipedia

    Logan and the Mingo in the period following Lord Dunmore's War are featured prominently in the Gothic novel Logan (1822) by John Neal. [2] The story can be read as issuing an indictment of American imperialism [ 3 ] by depicting Indigenous genocide as central to the American story.

  6. Logan, or Tahgahjute, was a Mingo chief who sought revenge for the gruesome torture and murder of his family by vengeful Americans on the Ohio River in 1773. A year later Logan led Shawnee and Mingo raiders to the Clinch River settlements in Kentucky, where after some minor successes, they were defeated.

  7. During the French-and-Indian war with England, and during the war waged by Pontiac, there was one prominent chief who did not take up the hatchet. His name was the English one of John Logan. He was a Mingo, or Iroquois, of a Cayuga band that had drifted south into east central Pennsylvania.

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