
Map showing the Lenapehoking region.
'Lenapehoking' is a term ascribed to the
Lenape American Indians as the name in the
Delaware language of the region they inhabited along the East Coast of the
United States. Like much of
Algonquian toponymy, there is some confusion about the meaning and history of the name.
At the time of the arrival of the
Europeans in the
16th and
17th century, the Lenape homeland generally encompassed the territory adjacent to the
Delaware and lower
Hudson river valleys, as well the territory between them. It stretched from modern-day
Delaware to western
Connecticut and
Long Island and included parts of eastern
Pennsylvania all of present day
New Jersey,
New York Bay, and the southern counties of
New York State, including
New York Harbor and the five boroughs of
New York City.
According to some people, who have misunderstood the origin of this word, the Lenape called this territory "Lenapehoking", meaning "in the land of the Lenape." This assertion has gained widespread acceptance and is found widely in recent literature on the Lenape, including in the websites of purported Lenape people.
Ray Whritenour, a philologist, says that the term does not appear in any sources from the 18th century, but is a modern name coined by
Nora Thompson Dean ("Touching Leaves Woman") in 1984, in order to provide the archaeologist/author,
Herbert C. Kraft, with a convenient term for the area once inhabited by ancestors of the Lenape people.
Other Lenape place names
Lenape place names within the region included:
★
Manhattan
★
★ 'Sapokanikan' - habitation site and cultivated area on the
Hudson River north of, or around, present day
Greenwich Village
★
★ 'Nechtanc' - habitation site along the
East River near the present location of the
Manhattan Bridge, in what is now part of
Chinatown.
★
Staten Island
★
★ 'Aquehonga' - name for Staten Island
★
★ 'Manacknong' - name for Staten Island
★
★ 'Shawkopoke' - habitation site and cultivated area along
Great Kills Harbor
★
Brooklyn
★
★ 'Nayack' or 'Wichquawanck' - habitation in Bay Ridge near the present location of the
Verrazano Narrows Bridge
★
★ 'Gowanus' - habitation site along the south bank of
Gowanus Creek
★
★ 'Sassian' - habitation site in present
Red Hook
★
Upstate New York
★
★ '
Monsey' - from the name of the Munsees, northern branch of the Lenapes
★
New Jersey
★
★ '
Manalapan' - municipality's name is said to have come from Lenape and is said to mean "land of good bread"
★
★ '
Absecon' - meaning: "place of swans"
[1]
★
★ '
Assunpink Creek' - meaning: "Stony Creek"
[1]
★
★ 'Communipaw' (in
downtown Jersey City) - "riverside landing place"
[1]
★
★ '
Hackensack' - "stream flowing into another on a plain/ in a swamp/ in a lowland"
[1]
★
★ '
Hoboken' - "where pipes are traded"
★
★ '
Hohokus' - "red cedars"
[1]
★
★ '
Manahawkin' - "place where there is good land"
★
★ '
Mantua' - said to have come from the "Munsees", North Jersey Lenapes, but the township is in South Jersey.
[1]
★
★ '
Matawan' - "hill on either side"
[1]
★
★ '
Metuchen' - "dry firewood"
[1]
★
★ '
Minisink' - "from the rocky land", is the old name for the Munsee, and the name of an ancient Lenape trade route that ran along a good part of what is now US Highway 46 in Northern New Jersey
★
★ '
Passaic' - "valley" or "river flowing through a valley"
[1]
★
★ '
Peapack' - "place of water roots"
[1]
★
★ '
Raritan' - original form was 'Naraticong' - may have meant "river behind the island" or "forked river".
[1]
★
★ 'Scheyichbi'. Meaning of name varies.
[http://www.rootsweb.com/~njmorris/indian.htm Rootsweb.com] notes two possible meanings: the land that the Lenapes called their country, or "land of the shell money (wampum)". [1]]
★
★ 'Secaucus' - "black snakes". [1]
★
★ 'Weehawken' - "place of gulls". [1]
★ Pennsylvania
★
★ 'Manayunk' - "place where we go to drink"
★
★ 'Shackamaxon', on the site of Penn Treaty Park near Philadelphia.
★
★ 'Conshohocken', pleasant valley.
Order of the Arrow Lodge IX
Lenapehoking is also the name of an Order of the Arrow lodge, number IX, in the Northern New Jersey Council of the Boy Scouts of America.
Lenapehoking Lodge IX was chartered in 1999 in the Northern NJ Council. It was born of the merger of Mantowagan Lodge #14, Meechgalanne Lodge #178, Oratam Lodge #286 and Aquaninocke Lodge #359.
Lodge IX can trace it's history to co-founder of the Order of the Arrow, Carroll A. Edson. Mr. Edson founded Achtu Lodge #37 during his tenure as Scout Executive of Jersey City, NJ. He was also the first Vigil Honor member of Achtu Lodge #37. Achtu was merged with Chinchewunska Lodge #440 in 1969. Ultimately, Achtu #37 and Chinchewunska #440 merged to form Elauwit #37. As the result of the merge of Hudson Hamilton Council and Bayonne Council, Pamrapaugh Lodge #14 merged with Elauwit #37 in 1994 to form Mantowagan Lodge #14. Pamrapaugh #14 is known to have been represented at the Grand Lodge organizational meeting held on October 7, 1921. However, there is some confusion as to the original date of Pamrapaugh's charter; as of that meeting there were only 10 chartered lodges in operation, yet in 1926, Pamrapaugh was assigned a lodge number of 14. There is some evidence that Pamrapaugh Lodge may have existed prior to Minsi Lodge #5.
Meechgalanne Lodge #178 was chartered in 1976 in the Essex Council located in Newark, New Jersey. In 1976, Meechgalanne Lodge was formed from the merger of Mohican Lodge #178, Ken Etiwa Pec Lodge #362, and Oleleu Lodge #515.
Oratam Lodge #286 was chartered in 1996 in the Bergen Council located in River Edge, New Jersey.
Aquaninocke Lodge #359 was chartered in 1974 in the Passaic Valley Council located in Wayne, New Jersey. In 1974, Aquaninocke Lodge was formed from the merger of Aheka Lodge #359 and Minisi Lodge #449.
See also
★ History of New York City
★ New Amsterdam
References
1. http://www.rootsweb.com/~njmorris/indian.htm
2. http://www.rootsweb.com/~njmorris/indian.htm
3. http://www.rootsweb.com/~njmorris/indian.htm
4. http://www.rootsweb.com/~njmorris/indian.htm
5. http://www.rootsweb.com/~njmorris/indian.htm
6. http://www.rootsweb.com/~njmorris/indian.htm
7. http://www.rootsweb.com/~njmorris/indian.htm
8. http://www.rootsweb.com/~njmorris/indian.htm
9. http://www.rootsweb.com/~njmorris/indian.htm
10. http://www.rootsweb.com/~njmorris/indian.htm
11. http://www.rootsweb.com/~njmorris/indian.htm
12. http://www.rootsweb.com/~njmorris/indian.htm Rootsweb.com] notes two possible meanings: the land that the Lenapes called their country, or "land of the shell money (wampum)". [http://www.rootsweb.com/~njmorris/indian.htm]
13. http://www.rootsweb.com/~njmorris/indian.htm
14. http://www.rootsweb.com/~njmorris/indian.htm