Portrait
The Romney Portrait
Painted during Thayendanegea's first London visit. The most iconic image of any 18th-century Indigenous leader. Shows Mohawk and European dress.
Portraits, maps, letters, treaties, and historical documents — each with provenance, dating, and context. Every source tells a piece of the story.
Portrait
Painted during Thayendanegea's first London visit. The most iconic image of any 18th-century Indigenous leader. Shows Mohawk and European dress.
Painted by America's foremost portraitist. One of the most reproduced images of Thayendanegea, showing him with a gorget and feathered headpiece.
Portrait
One of the last portraits painted during Thayendanegea's lifetime. Shows the leader in his final years — still dignified and purposeful.
Another late-life portrait, attributed to Ezra Ames. Depicts Thayendanegea in formal attire with both Mohawk and European elements.
The most significant symbol of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy. Five connected squares represent the five founding nations joined by the path of peace.
Shows the approximate territories of the Six Nations across present-day New York State before European encroachment accelerated.
The oldest Protestant church in Ontario. Built as part of Thayendanegea's vision for the Grand River community. Houses Queen Anne's silver communion set (1712).
Painted during Thayendanegea's visit to Philadelphia. Peale was America's leading portrait artist, known for his gallery of revolutionary-era figures.
The foundational document granting the Haudenosaunee land along the Grand River. Its legal interpretation remains contested to this day.
A major land-cession treaty in which Thayendanegea served as interpreter. Reshaped the map of Indigenous territory in the northeast.
Recognized Indigenous land rights and attempted to regulate colonial expansion. A foundational document in Indigenous land law still cited in Canadian courts.
One of the most visible public monuments to an Indigenous leader in Canada. Located in Victoria Park, Brantford, Ontario.
See where these sources connect to real places, real people, and the full narrative.