Home Infusion, Or Long-Term Care Services.The Pharmacy Network May Change at Any Time

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Home Infusion, Or Long-Term Care Services.The Pharmacy Network May Change at Any Time Additional Indian/Tribal/Urban (I/T/U), Home Infusion and Long-Term Care Pharmacies for All Other UnitedHealthcare Plans The following list includes additional pharmacies available with Indian/Tribal/Urban (I/T/U), Home Infusion, or Long-Term Care services.The pharmacy network may change at any time. You will receive notice when necessary. For additional information, please contact UnitedHealthcare Customer Service. Updated: September 1, 2021 Long Home Indian PHARMACY ADDRESS CITY ST ZIP PHONE Term Care Infusion & Tribal Pharmacy Specialty Urban ALASKA NATIVE MEDICAL CTR PHA 4315 DIPLOMACY DR ANCHORAGE AK 99508 9077292112 N N Y ANCHORAGE NATIVE PRIMARY CARE CTR 4320 DIPLOMACY DR ANCHORAGE AK 99508 9077294172 N N Y SCF RASU PHARMACY 4160 TUDOR CENTRE DR ANCHORAGE AK 99508 9077294157 N N Y ALASKA NATIVE MEDICAL CTR MED 3900 AMBASSADOR DR ANCHORAGE AK 99508 9077292199 N N Y ANTHC OUTPATIENT SURGERY CTR 3801 UNIVERSITY LAKE DR ANCHORAGE AK 99508 9077292112 N N Y ANTHC INTERNAL MEDICINE PHARMACY 3900 AMBASSADOR DR ANCHORAGE AK 99508 9077292112 N N Y GENEVA WOODS MEDSET PHARMACY 501 W INTRNTNL AIRPORT RD ANCHORAGE AK 99518 9075622414 Y N N PIONEERS HOME PHARMACY 923 W 11TH AVE ANCHORAGE AK 99501 9073437294 Y N N PROVIDENCE APOTHECARY 920 COMPASSION CIR ANCHORAGE AK 99504 9072129251 Y N N GENOA HEALTHCARE 4020 FOLKER ST ANCHORAGE AK 99508 9078917079 Y N N RELIANCE MEDSETS 1035 W FIREWEED LN ANCHORAGE AK 99503 9077700649 Y N N SAMUEL SIMMONDS MEM HOSP PHARMA 7000 UULA ST BARROW AK 99723 9078529277 N N Y YUKON KUSKOKWIM DELTA REG HOSP 700 CHIEF EDDIE HOFFMAN HWY BETHEL AK 99559 9075436000 N N Y CORDOVA COMMUNITY MEDICAL CTR 602 CHASE AVE CORDOVA AK 99574 9074248017 Y N N KANAKANAK HOSP 6000 KANAKANAK RD DILLINGHAM AK 99576 9078429235 N N Y FAIRBANKS MEMORIAL HOSP PHARMACY 1650 COWLES ST FAIRBANKS AK 99701 9074585610 Y N N ALASKA FAMILY PHARMACY 1919 LATHROP ST FAIRBANKS AK 99701 9074521514 Y N N CRNA PHARMACY MILE 111 5 RICHARDSON HWY GLENNALLEN AK 99588 9078225241 N N Y SEARHC HAINES MEDICAL CLINIC PHARM 131 FIRST AVE S HAINES AK 99827 9077666300 N N Y SOUTH PENINSULA HOSP PHARMACY 4300 BARTLETT ST HOMER AK 99603 9072350257 Y N N SEARHC MEDICAL CTR 1200 SALMON CREEK LN JUNEAU AK 99801 9074634031 N N Y JUNEAU DRUG COMPANY 202 FRONT ST JUNEAU AK 99801 9075861233 Y N N GENOA HEALTHCARE 1944 ALLEN CT JUNEAU AK 99801 8776580304 Y N N KETCHIKAN INDIAN COMMUNITY TRIBAL 2960 TONGASS AVE KETCHIKAN AK 99901 9072289205 N N Y September, 2021 Y0066_161103_170538 Accepted 1 of 235 Long Home Indian PHARMACY ADDRESS CITY ST ZIP PHONE Term Care Infusion & Tribal Pharmacy Specialty Urban ALICIA ROBERTS MEDICAL CTR PHARMA 7300A KLAWOCK HOLLIS HWY KLAWOCK AK 99925 9077554800 N N Y KANA PHARMACY 3449 E REZANOF DR KODIAK AK 99615 9074869860 N N Y PROVIDENCE KODIAK ISLAND MEDICAL 1915 E REZANOF DR KODIAK AK 99615 9074869550 Y N N MANIILAQ HEALTH CTR PHARMACY 5TH ST AND GRIZZLEY KOTZEBUE AK 99752 9074427182 N N Y ANNETTE ISLAND SERVICE UNIT 563 BRENDIBLE ST METLAKATLA AK 99926 9078864748 N N Y NORTON SOUND REG HOSP 1000 GREG KRUSCHEK AVE NOME AK 99762 9074433377 N N Y NORTH STAR HEALTH CLINIC PHARMACY 201 3RD AVE SEWARD AK 99664 9072244907 N N Y SEARHC MT EDGECUMBE PHARMACY 222 TONGASS DR SITKA AK 99835 9079662411 N N Y WHITES PHARMACY 705 HALIBUT POINT RD SITKA AK 99835 9073136881 Y N N PROFESSIONAL HOME IV 182 S BIRCH ST SOLDOTNA AK 99669 9072628737 N Y N SOLDOTNA PROFESSIONAL PHARMACY 299 N BINKLEY ST SOLDOTNA AK 99669 9072623800 Y N N SOLDOTNA PROFESSIONAL PHARMACY 299 N BINKLEY ST SOLDOTNA AK 99669 9072626429 Y N N ANIKKAN INUIT ILUQUTAAT 189 AIRPORT RD UNALAKLEET AK 99684 9076245423 N N Y VALLEY NATIVE PRIMARY CARE CTR 1001 S KNIK GOOSE BAY RD WASILLA AK 99654 9076317660 N N Y GENEVA WOODS MAT-SU MEDSET PHARM 3674 E COUNTRY FIELD CR WASILLA AK 99654 9073768200 Y N N OUR DOCTOR'S PHARMACY 3190 E MERIDIAN PARK LOOP WASILLA AK 99654 9073765700 Y N N OUR DOCTOR'S PHARMACY 3190 E MERIDIAN PARK LOOP WASILLA AK 99654 9073765700 Y N N INTEGRACARE PHARMACY . 199 CORPORATE WOODS DR ALABASTER AL 35007 2054060093 Y N N JACKSON DRUGS 1974 CHEROKEE RD ALEXANDER CITY AL 35010 2562342538 Y N N GSI PHARMACY 1784 ELKAHATCHEE RD ALEXANDER CITY AL 35010 2563290868 Y N N CLAY COUNTY HOSP AND NURSING 83825 HWY 9 ASHLAND AL 36251 2563541160 Y N N ATHENS PHARMACY 705 W MARKET ST ATHENS AL 35611 2562322242 Y N N PHARMACY CARE ASSOCIATES 1754 TRIGREEN DR N ATHENS AL 35611 2562580380 Y N N POARCH CREEK INDIAN HEALTH DEPT 429 BUFORD L ROLIN DR ATMORE AL 36502 2513689136 N N Y GENOA HEALTHCARE 425 5TH AVE NW, ROOM 92 ATTALLA AL 35954 2564134455 Y N N OAK PARK PHARMACY 1365 GATEWOOD DR AUBURN AL 36830 3345285835 Y N N GSI PHARMACY 300 FAULKNER DR BAY MINETTE AL 36507 2519379881 Y N N GENOA HEALTHCARE 2201 ARLINGTON AVE BESSEMER AL 35020 3348194500 Y N N FMS PHARMACY LTC 1817 13TH AVE N BESSEMER AL 35020 2054243194 Y N N CORAM CVS/SPECIALTY INFUSION 300 RIVERHILLS BUSINESS PRK BIRMINGHAM AL 35242 2059958117 N Y N September, 2021 2 of 235 Long Home Indian PHARMACY ADDRESS CITY ST ZIP PHONE Term Care Infusion & Tribal Pharmacy Specialty Urban UAB SPECIALTY PHARMACY 601 19TH ST SOUTH BIRMINGHAM AL 35249 2059342661 N Y N SOLUTIONS INFUSION THERAPY 2701 4TH AVE SOUTH BIRMINGHAM AL 35233 2052518676 N Y N CONTINUUMRX TWO PERIMETER PARK S BIRMINGHAM AL 35243 8006652850 N Y N OPTUM INFUSION SERVICES 660 UNIVERSITY BLVD BIRMINGHAM AL 35233 2053244566 N Y N ADVANCED INFUSIONCARE 120 OXMOOR BLVD BIRMINGHAM AL 35209 2056679193 N Y N PHARMERICA 509 MINERAL TRACE BIRMINGHAM AL 35244 2059877444 Y N N HARBIN HEALTH CARE 57 CHURCH ST BIRMINGHAM AL 35213 2058712196 Y N N GUARDIAN PHARMACY 1950 CRESTWOOD BLVD BIRMINGHAM AL 35210 2058795300 Y N N PROXYCARE ALABAMA 120 OXMOOR BLVD BIRMINGHAM AL 35209 2057699771 Y N N BIRMINGHAM VITAL CARE 300 AIRPORT COMMONS DR, CALERA AL 35040 2056057633 N Y N DEANS LTC PHARMACY 697 CEDAR BLUFF RD CENTRE AL 35960 2569275574 Y N N BIBB COUNTY MEDICAL CTR PHARMACY 208 PIERSON AVE CENTREVILLE AL 35042 2059263277 Y N N WOODLANDS PHARMACY 1824 MAIN AVE SW CULLMAN AL 35055 2567390095 Y N N HOSP DISCOUNT PHARMACY CENTR 209 4TH AVE NE CULLMAN AL 35055 2567346013 Y N N SPECIALTY PHARMACY LTC 2104 ALABAMA HWY 157 CULLMAN AL 35058 2567343146 Y N N PHARMERICA 9052 INDEPENDENCE AVE DAPHNE AL 36526 2516256270 Y N N SENIOR CARE PHARMACY 101B VILLA DR DAPHNE AL 36526 2512646110 Y N N PAY-LESS DRIVE-IN HM PHARMACY 1206 7TH ST SE DECATUR AL 35601 2563535011 Y N N WESTMEADE PHARMACY CARE SERVICES 2104 DANVILLE RD SW DECATUR AL 35601 2563558211 Y N N PAYLESS PHARMACY 1206 7TH ST SE DECATUR AL 35601 2563535011 Y N N KROGER SPECIALTY INFUSION 2511 ROSS CLARK CIRCLE DOTHAN AL 36301 3347941126 N Y N US BIOSERVICES 2811 HORACE SHEPARD DR DOTHAN AL 36303 8779007365 N Y N SCOTT PHARMACEUTICAL SERVICES 2021 ALEXANDER DR DOTHAN AL 36301 3347922717 Y N N GENOA HEALTHCARE 134 PREVATT RD DOTHAN AL 36301 3343567627 Y N N SUMMERFORD DRUGS 4087 HWY 31 SW FALKVILLE AL 35622 2567845275 Y N N QRC PHARMACY 14965 HWY 59 FOLEY AL 36535 2519476938 N Y N PHARMACY PARTNERS 1248 MAIN ST FYFFE AL 35971 2566386667 Y N N GRANT PHARMACY 5421 MAIN ST GRANT AL 35747 2567284217 Y N N JONES DRUGS 207 CEDAR ST GREENVILLE AL 36037 3343826574 Y N N TARA PHARMACY SE 211 SUMMIT PKWY HOMEWOOD AL 35209 2059162267 Y N N September, 2021 3 of 235 Long Home Indian PHARMACY ADDRESS CITY ST ZIP PHONE Term Care Infusion & Tribal Pharmacy Specialty Urban HOMEWOOD PHARMACY 940 OXMOOR RD HOMEWOOD AL 35209 2058719000 Y N N ACCREDO HEALTH GROUP 2100 RIVERCHASE CTR HOOVER AL 35244 2059870778 N Y N OPTION CARE 2100 RIVERCHASE CTR HOOVER AL 35244 2059829401 N Y N MILLS SPECIALTY PHARMACY 2400 MOUNTAIN DR HOOVER AL 35226 2058719007 Y N N OPTUM INFUSION SERVICES 2650 LEEMAN FERRY RD SW HUNTSVILLE AL 35801 2565344663 N Y N KABAFUSION AL 4910 UNIVERSITY SQ HUNTSVILLE AL 35816 2568372464 N Y N CONTINUUMRX 605 DAVIS CIRCLE HUNTSVILLE AL 35801 8006652850 N Y N ROCKET CITY VITAL CARE 250 CHATEAU DR SW HUNTSVILLE AL 35801 2569701800 N Y N OMNICARE 6767 OLD MADISON PIKE NW HUNTSVILLE AL 35806 2569221777 Y N N GSI PHARMACY 2701 MERIDIAN ST HUNTSVILLE AL 35811 2568525170 Y N N SPARKMAN PHARMACY AT WELLSTONE 4040 MEMORIAL PKWY SW HUNTSVILLE AL 35802 2567056499 Y N N REMEDI SENIORCARE 4908 MOORES MILL RD, HUNTSVILLE AL 35811 8669541307 Y N N TURENNE PHARMEDCO. 4941 MONTEVALLO RD IRONDALE AL 35210 8667307626 Y N N SENIOR CARE PHARMACY 1424 MONTCLAIR RD IRONDALE AL 35210 2059513939 Y N N MEDICATION MANAGEMENT SOLUTIONS 2030 3RD AVE S JASPER AL 35501 2053877802 Y N N GUARDIAN PHARMACY 1100 7TH AVE JASPER AL 35501 2053974660 Y N N GREENHILL PHARMACY 357 HWY 64 KILLEN AL 35645 2567579800 Y N N LITTLE DRUG COMPANY 310 S MAIN ST LINDEN AL 36748 3342954270 Y N N LITTLE DRUG COMPANY 310 S MAIN ST LINDEN AL 36748 3342954270 Y N N COLLEGE CITY DRUG COMPANY 304 WASHINGTON ST MARION AL 36756 3346836166 Y N N JONES DRUGS 4117 HWY 14 MILLBROOK AL 36054 3345238921 Y N N OPTION CARE 820 S UNIVERSITY BLVD MOBILE AL 36609 2513444452 N Y N HPC SPECIALTY PHARMACY 3100 COTTAGE HILL RD MOBILE AL 36606 8007579192 N Y N OPTUM INFUSION SERVICES SOUTH MOBILE AL 36693 2514761866 N Y N PHARMACY SERVICES 6001 GRELOT RD MOBILE AL 36609 2513380519 Y N N MEDCHOICE PHARMACY SERVICES 1 SOUTHERN WAY MOBILE AL 36619 2515449500 Y N N GENOA HEALTHCARE 3456 HILLCREST RD MOBILE AL 36695 2516654521 Y N N INTEGRATED HEALTH CARE PHARMACY 2400 GORDON SMITH DR MOBILE AL 36617 2514501400 Y N N SPRINGHILL PHARMACY SERVICES 3715 DAUPHIN ST MOBILE AL 36608 2514103910 Y N N AHS PEDIATRIC PHARMACY 2419 GORDON SMITH DR MOBILE AL 36617 2512778733 Y N N September, 2021 4 of 235 Long Home Indian PHARMACY
Recommended publications
  • The Principal Indian Towns of Western Pennsylvania C
    The Principal Indian Towns of Western Pennsylvania C. Hale Sipe One cannot travel far in Western Pennsylvania with- out passing the sites of Indian towns, Delaware, Shawnee and Seneca mostly, or being reminded of the Pennsylvania Indians by the beautiful names they gave to the mountains, streams and valleys where they roamed. In a future paper the writer will set forth the meaning of the names which the Indians gave to the mountains, valleys and streams of Western Pennsylvania; but the present paper is con- fined to a brief description of the principal Indian towns in the western part of the state. The writer has arranged these Indian towns in alphabetical order, as follows: Allaquippa's Town* This town, named for the Seneca, Queen Allaquippa, stood at the mouth of Chartier's Creek, where McKees Rocks now stands. In the Pennsylvania, Colonial Records, this stream is sometimes called "Allaquippa's River". The name "Allaquippa" means, as nearly as can be determined, "a hat", being likely a corruption of "alloquepi". This In- dian "Queen", who was visited by such noted characters as Conrad Weiser, Celoron and George Washington, had var- ious residences in the vicinity of the "Forks of the Ohio". In fact, there is good reason for thinking that at one time she lived right at the "Forks". When Washington met her while returning from his mission to the French, she was living where McKeesport now stands, having moved up from the Ohio to get farther away from the French. After Washington's surrender at Fort Necessity, July 4th, 1754, she and the other Indian inhabitants of the Ohio Val- ley friendly to the English, were taken to Aughwick, now Shirleysburg, where they were fed by the Colonial Author- ities of Pennsylvania.
    [Show full text]
  • A-Brief-History-Of-The-Mohican-Nation
    wig d r r ksc i i caln sr v a ar ; ny s' k , a u A Evict t:k A Mitfsorgo 4 oiwcan V 5to cLk rid;Mc-u n,5 3 ss l Y gew y » w a. 3 k lz x OWE u, 9g z ca , Z 1 9 A J i NEI x i c x Rat 44MMA Y t6 manY 1 YryS y Y s 4 INK S W6 a r sue`+ r1i 3 My personal thanks gc'lo thc, f'al ca ° iaag, t(")mcilal a r of the Stockbridge-IMtarasee historical C;orrunittee for their comments and suggestions to iatataraare tlac=laistcatic: aal aac c aracy of this brief' history of our people ta°a Raa la€' t "din as for her c<arefaal editing of this text to Jeff vcic.'of, the rlohican ?'yews, otar nation s newspaper 0 to Chad Miller c d tlac" Land Resource aM anaagenient Office for preparing the map Dorothy Davids, Chair Stockbridge -Munsee Historical Committee Tke Muk-con-oLke-ne- rfie People of the Waters that Are Never Still have a rich and illustrious history which has been retrained through oral tradition and the written word, Our many moves frorn the East to Wisconsin left Many Trails to retrace in search of our history. Maanv'rrails is air original design created and designed by Edwin Martin, a Mohican Indian, symbol- izing endurance, strength and hope. From a long suffering proud and deternuned people. e' aw rtaftv f h s is an aatathCutic basket painting by Stockbridge Mohican/ basket weavers.
    [Show full text]
  • THE INDIANS of LENAPEHOKING (The Lenape Or Delaware Indians)
    THE INDIANS OF LENAPEHOKING (The Lenape or Delaware Indians) By HERBERT C.KRAFT NCE JOHN T. KRAFT < fi Seventeenth Century Indian Bands in Lenapehoking tN SCALE: 0 2 5 W A P P I N Q E R • ' miles CONNECTICUT •"A. MINISS ININK fy -N " \ PROTO-MUNP R O T 0 - M U S E*fevj| ANDS; Kraft, Herbert rrcrcr The Tndians nf PENNSYLVANIA KRA hoking OKEHOCKING >l ^J? / / DELAWARE DEMCO NO . 32 •234 \ RINGVyOOP PUBLIC LIBRARY, NJ N7 3 6047 09045385 2 THE INDIANS OF LENAPEHOKING by HERBERT C. KRAFT and JOHN T. KRAFT ILLUSTRATIONS BY JOHN T. KRAFT 1985 Seton Hall University Museum South Orange, New Jersey 07079 145 SKYLAND3 ROAD RINGWOOD, NEW JERSEY 07456 THE INDIANS OF LENAPEHOKING: Copyright(c)1985 by Herbert C. Kraft and John T. Kraft, Archaeological Research Center, Seton Hall University Museum, South Orange, Mew Jersey. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. No part of this book--neither text, maps, nor illustrations--may be reproduced in any way, including but not limited to photocopy, photograph, or other record without the prior agreement and written permission of the authors and publishers, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. For information address Dr. Herbert C. Kraft, Archaeological Research Center, Seton Hall University Museum, South Orange, Mew Jersey, 07079 Library of Congress Catalog Number: 85-072237 ISBN: 0-935137-00-9 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The research, text, illustrations, and printing of this book were made possible by a generous Humanities Grant received from the New Jersey Department of Higher Education in 1984.
    [Show full text]
  • LENAPE VILLAGES of DELAWARE COUNTY By: Chris Flook
    LENAPE VILLAGES OF DELAWARE COUNTY By: Chris Flook After the signing of the Treaty of Greenville in 1795, many bands of Lenape (Delaware) Native Americans found themselves without a place to live. During the previous 200 years, the Lenape had been pushed west from their ancestral homelands in what we now call the Hudson and Delaware river valleys ­ first into the Pennsylvania Colony in the mid­1700s and then into the Ohio Country around the time of the American Revolution. After the Revolution, many Natives living in what the new American government quickly carved out to be the Northwest Territory, were alarmed of the growing encroachment from white settlers. In response, numerous Native groups across the territory formed the pan­tribal Western Confederacy in an attempt to block white settlement and to retain Native territory. The Western Confederacy consisted of warriors from approximately forty different tribes, although in many cases, an entire tribe wasn’t involved, demonstrating the complexity and decentralized nature of Native American political alliances at this time. Several war chiefs led the Western Confederacy’s military efforts including the Miami chief Mihšihkinaahkwa (Little Turtle), the Shawnee chief Weyapiersenwah (Blue Jacket), the Ottawa chief Egushawa, and the Lenape chief Buckongahelas. The Western Confederacy delivered a series of stunning victories over American forces in 1790 and 1791 including the defeat of Colonel Hardin’s forces at the Battle of Heller’s Corner on October 19, 1790; Hartshorn’s Defeat on the following day; and the Battle of Pumpkin Fields on October 21. On November 4 1791, the forces of the territorial governor General Arthur St.
    [Show full text]
  • Ramapough/Ford the Impact and Survival of an Indigenous
    Antioch University AURA - Antioch University Repository and Archive Student & Alumni Scholarship, including Dissertations & Theses Dissertations & Theses 2015 Ramapough/Ford The mpI act and Survival of an Indigenous Community in the Shadow of Ford Motor Company’s Toxic Legacy Chuck Stead Antioch University - New England Follow this and additional works at: http://aura.antioch.edu/etds Part of the American Studies Commons, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Commons, Environmental Health Commons, Environmental Studies Commons, Ethics and Political Philosophy Commons, Indigenous Studies Commons, Toxicology Commons, United States History Commons, and the Zoology Commons Recommended Citation Stead, Chuck, "Ramapough/Ford The mpI act and Survival of an Indigenous Community in the Shadow of Ford Motor Company’s Toxic Legacy" (2015). Dissertations & Theses. 200. http://aura.antioch.edu/etds/200 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Student & Alumni Scholarship, including Dissertations & Theses at AURA - Antioch University Repository and Archive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations & Theses by an authorized administrator of AURA - Antioch University Repository and Archive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. Department of Environmental Studies DISSERTATION COMMITTEE PAGE The undersigned have examined the dissertation entitled: Ramapough/Ford: The Impact and Survival of an Indigenous Community in the Shadow of Ford Motor Company’s Toxic Legacy presented by Chuck
    [Show full text]
  • Early Images of Lenape People
    EARLY IMAGES OF LENAPE PEOPLE Note: We will be adding additional images and information in the future. Lenape unloading a canoe at a village. The Indians who lived here call themselves Lenape. The land formerly occupied by all of these native people is now New Jersey Eastern New York State Western Long Island eastern Pennsylvania and northern Delaware. It is also known as Lenapehòking - the land of the Lenape. Drawing by Herbert and John Kraft This drawing shows Lenape people when one of the first Europeans along the East Coast saw the Indians in 1524. Their clothing was simple - the men were breechcloth and moccasins, with a robe to cover themselves in cold weather. Women had knee length skirts and wore fur robes in winter, or a beautiful mantel made out from turkey feathers. Ornaments are bone, shell and wampum, and were sometimes worn on necklaces, or and wrists and ankles. Giovanni da Verrazano wrote, “These people are the most beautiful and have the most civil customs that we have found on this voyage. They Drawing by Herbert and John Kraft are taller than we are, they are a bronze color, some tending more towards whiteness, others a tawny color; the face is clean cut, the hair is long, and their manner is sweet and gentle, very much like that of the ancients. They have all the proportions belonging to any well-built men. Their women are just as shapely and beautiful; very gracious, of attractive manner and pleasant appearance.” This illustration shows the Dutch, Swedish, and English explorers, settlers and traders who changed the lives the Indians in many ways.
    [Show full text]
  • Historic American Indian Tribes of Ohio 1654-1843
    Historic American Indian Tribes of Ohio 1654-1843 Ohio Historical Society www.ohiohistory.org $4.00 TABLE OF CONTENTS Historical Background 03 Trails and Settlements 03 Shelters and Dwellings 04 Clothing and Dress 07 Arts and Crafts 08 Religions 09 Medicine 10 Agriculture, Hunting, and Fishing 11 The Fur Trade 12 Five Major Tribes of Ohio 13 Adapting Each Other’s Ways 16 Removal of the American Indian 18 Ohio Historical Society Indian Sites 20 Ohio Historical Marker Sites 20 Timeline 32 Glossary 36 The Ohio Historical Society 1982 Velma Avenue Columbus, OH 43211 2 Ohio Historical Society www.ohiohistory.org Historic American Indian Tribes of Ohio HISTORICAL BACKGROUND In Ohio, the last of the prehistoric Indians, the Erie and the Fort Ancient people, were destroyed or driven away by the Iroquois about 1655. Some ethnologists believe the Shawnee descended from the Fort Ancient people. The Shawnees were wanderers, who lived in many places in the south. They became associated closely with the Delaware in Ohio and Pennsylvania. Able fighters, the Shawnees stubbornly resisted white pressures until the Treaty of Greene Ville in 1795. At the time of the arrival of the European explorers on the shores of the North American continent, the American Indians were living in a network of highly developed cultures. Each group lived in similar housing, wore similar clothing, ate similar food, and enjoyed similar tribal life. In the geographical northeastern part of North America, the principal American Indian tribes were: Abittibi, Abenaki, Algonquin, Beothuk, Cayuga, Chippewa, Delaware, Eastern Cree, Erie, Forest Potawatomi, Huron, Iroquois, Illinois, Kickapoo, Mohicans, Maliseet, Massachusetts, Menominee, Miami, Micmac, Mississauga, Mohawk, Montagnais, Munsee, Muskekowug, Nanticoke, Narragansett, Naskapi, Neutral, Nipissing, Ojibwa, Oneida, Onondaga, Ottawa, Passamaquoddy, Penobscot, Peoria, Pequot, Piankashaw, Prairie Potawatomi, Sauk-Fox, Seneca, Susquehanna, Swamp-Cree, Tuscarora, Winnebago, and Wyandot.
    [Show full text]
  • Munsee (Alternate Munsie, Minsi, Delaware, Or Ontario Munsee) (Reference 12) Language: Munsee Language Family: Algic
    1. Description 1.1 Name of society, language, and language family: Society: Delaware Munsee (alternate Munsie, Minsi, Delaware, or Ontario Munsee) (reference 12) Language: Munsee Language Family: Algic 1.2 ISO code (3 letter code from ethnologue.com): 639-2 1.3 Location (latitude/longitude): 40/-75 1.4 Brief history: Timeline of Munsee according to Grumet. 11,500 ya – First people arrive in northeast North America 10,000 ya – Begin hunting small deer but focus switches to more intensive gathering because warming temperatures gave more opportunities in forest. 3,000 ya – Pottery developed 1,000 ya – Bows and arrows become present in archaeological sites. 500 ya – Europeans sail to North American shores 1524 AD – Giovanni da Verrazano writes from known account to mention Indians in this area. 1607 AD – Indian population in Munsee as large as 15,000 1616 AD – Large scale disease breaks out among Munsee 1634 AD – Indian population in Munsee declines to somewhere around 6,000 1658 AD – Malaria is reported 1661 AD – Smallpox strike 1664 AD – Number of Munsee reduced to less than 3,000 1701 AD – Population low at 1,000 1714 AD – Munsee seel last of their major landholdings east of the Delaware River 1727 AD – The name Munsee first begins to be used to refer to this people group 1801 AD – Munsees at Edgepillock agree to sell their Brotherton Reservation and move north to Oneidas 1.5 Influence of missionaries/schools/governments/powerful neighbors: The presence of the Mohawk people made the Munsee less territorial. They often lived in peace with these neighbors mostly because they had no other choice.
    [Show full text]
  • Federal Register/Vol. 83, No. 153/Wednesday, August 8, 2018
    39118 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 153 / Wednesday, August 8, 2018 / Notices objects should submit a written request interviewed, the human remains came the request to Nina M. Versaggi, Public with information in support of the from an area that is near (or overlaps) Archaeology Facility, Binghamton request to the Binghamton University at the previously recorded Bates site, a University, P.O. Box 6000, Binghamton, the address in this notice by September Late Woodland settlement. The Greene NY 13902–6000, telephone (607) 777– 7, 2018. Middle School gave the human remains 4786, email [email protected], ADDRESSES: Nina M. Versaggi, Public to Binghamton University. No known by September 7, 2018. After that date, if Archaeology Facility, Binghamton individuals were identified. There are no additional requestors have come University, P.O. Box 6000, Binghamton, no associated funerary objects. forward, transfer of control of the NY 13902–6000, telephone (607) 777– A bioarchaeologist and archaeologist human remains and associated funerary 4786, email [email protected]. from Binghamton University objects to Oneida Nation (previously determined that the human remains listed as the Oneida Tribe of Indians of SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Notice is were Native American. Archeological Wisconsin); Oneida Indian Nation here given in accordance with the information from the Bates site includes (previously listed as the Oneida Nation Native American Graves Protection and Canandaigua Phase (Sackett Corded) of New York); Onondaga Nation; and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), 25 U.S.C. pottery and radiocarbon dates that Tuscarora Nation may proceed. 3003, of the completion of an inventory cluster around A.D. 1190. The Binghamton University is of human remains and associated Haudenosaunee oral tradition states responsible for notifying the Cayuga funerary objects under the control of the that, as The People of the Long House, Nation; Delaware Nation, Oklahoma; Binghamton University, Binghamton, they are affiliated culturally, spiritually, Delaware Tribe of Indians; Oneida NY.
    [Show full text]
  • Delaware Tribe of Indians (Oklahoma Social Studies Standards, OSDE)
    OKLAHOMA INDIAN TRIBE EDUCATION GUIDE Delaware Tribe of Indians (Oklahoma Social Studies Standards, OSDE) Tribe: Delaware Tribe of Indians Tribal website(s): http//www.delawaretribe.org 1. Migration/movement/forced removal Oklahoma History C3 Standard 2.3 “Integrate visual and textual evidence to explain the reasons for and trace the migrations of Native American peoples including the Five Tribes into present-day Oklahoma, the Indian Removal Act of 1830, and tribal resistance to the forced relocations.” Oklahoma History C3 Standard 2.7 “Compare and contrast multiple points of view to evaluate the impact of the Dawes Act which resulted in the loss of tribal communal lands and the redistribution of lands by various means including land runs as typified by the Unassigned Lands and the Cherokee Outlet, lotteries, and tribal allotments.” Original Homeland – present day states of New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York, and Delaware Location In Oklahoma – Bartlesville, Oklahoma The Delaware Tribe is one of many contemporary tribes that descend from the Unami- and Munsee-speaking peoples of the Delaware and Hudson River valleys. The Unami and Munsee aboriginal homeland is situated within what are today the states of New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York, and Delaware. The name collectively attributed to the descendants of such Unami and Munsee people is Delaware, yet the word Delaware is not of indigenous origin, nor did the Munsee and Unami speakers conceive of themselves as a united political organization until the eighteenth century. The term Delaware actually derives from the title given to Sir Thomas West or Lord de la Warr III, who was appointed the English governor of Virginia in 1610.
    [Show full text]
  • Tribal Identity in the Moravian Missions on the Susquehanna Amy C
    Tribal Identity in the Moravian Missions on the Susquehanna Amy C. Schutt Colgate University A few days before Easter in 1765 a large party of Christian Indians with two Moravian missionaries left the Delaware River Valley and headed for the North Branch of the Susquehanna River, where they planned to establish a mission at the Indian village Wyalusing. The Moravians were German-speak- ing pietists who had operated missions among northeastern Algonquian groups beginning in the early 1740s. Sending missionaries from their North Ameri- can headquarters at Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, the Moravians attracted sizable numbers of Indians to their missions in New York, Connecticut, and Pennsyl- vania. But shortly before the move to Wyalusing, Pontiac's War (1763-64) had badly disrupted the Moravian mission effort, forcing the converts to move from place to place in search of a safe haven from hostile whites. Placed in Philadelphia barracks by colonial officials as a protective measure, many of the Christian Indians found death rather than security as disease ravaged their cramped quarters. At the end of this dreadful period, the missionaries were hoping to rebuild and expand on the work they had begun over two decades earlier among the Delawares, Mahicans, and other groups being pushed out of their homelands. As they did so, they turned to the Susquehanna Valley, which by the mid-eighteenth century was a multiethnic area with Indian in- habitants speaking many different languages and holding onto many different cultural traditions.' The story of the Moravians' Susquehanna mission reveals how Indians from varying tribal backgrounds, primarily Mahicans and Delawares, responded to each other within the mission setting.
    [Show full text]
  • Becoming a “Nation of Statesmen”: the Mohicans' Incorporation Into the Iroquois League, 1671–1675
    ✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦ Becoming a “Nation of Statesmen”: The Mohicans’ Incorporation into the Iroquois League, 1671–1675 evan haefeli HE 1670s were a pivotal period for the Indigenous his- T tory of New England and the eastern woodlands more generally. Most important was the war called King Philip’s or Metacomet’s that devastated the Indigenous communities of southern New England between 1675 and 1676 and contin- ued in Maine until the spring of 1678. The English victory owed more than a little to the intervention of the Mohawks of the Iroquois League, who struck an alliance with the New Englanders, prevented Metacomet’s people from resupplying themselves at Albany, and then forced them back to their na- tive country, weakened and lacking gunpowder. The Covenant Chain alliance that followed in 1677, mediated by the governor of New York, has dominated accounts of colonial Indian rela- tions as it reinforced the bond between the English colonists and the Iroquois League and guaranteed the subordination of the peoples who had fought with Metacomet. Having secured peace on their eastern border, the League could quickly van- quish the Susquehannocks and then proceed to attack Indige- nous nations further south. By 1680 the diplomatic landscape For their helpful comments on earlier versions of this article, I would like to thank my colleagues in Texas A&M University’s Caribbean and Atlantic Studies work- ing group, especially Ray Batchelor, Cynthia Bouton, and April Hatfield, as well as Side Emre, an anonymous reviewer, and Jonathan Chu. I would also like to thank the Texas A&M Arts and Humanities Fellowship, which made the archival research pos- sible, and the National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship that gave me the time to write.
    [Show full text]