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Tappan people

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Map c.1635 Tappans lived primarily on the west side of the Hudson River in what has become Bergen County, New Jersey and Rockland County, New York

The Tappan were a Lenape people who inhabited the region radiating from Hudson Palisades and New York – New Jersey Highlands in at the time of European colonialization in the 17th century.[1][2]

Etymology

The exonym Tappan is likely a derivation of a word or phrase from the Algonquian language Lenape as used by settlers to New Netherland, who spelled it as Tappaen.[3] It is not certain what the Tappan called themselves, but there are a variety of interpretations for the word. One suggestion is that it possibly comes from tuphanne meaning cold water.[4] It related to contemporary petapan meaning dawn or petapaniui meaning at the break of dawn,[5] and relates to their kin across the river, the Wappinger, whose name is derived from the Algonquian people of the east or easterners. (Contemporary: Wapaneu meaning easterly and Wapanke meaning tomorrow.)

Vriessendael, one of the first "bouweries", or homesteads, built in the territory was sometimes called Tappan. The Tappan are recalled throughout their former territory: Lake Tappan is a reservoir on the Hackensack River; the Tappan Zee, widening of the Hudson River and the bridge crossing it; Old Tappan in Bergen County; Tappan in Rockland County.

History

The Tappan migrated seasonally and engaged in companion planting, hunting, fishing, and trapping. Like the other natives who circulated in the region and whose territory overlapped, the Hackensack, Acquackanonk and Rumachenanck (later called the Haverstraw).[6] The Tappan were of the Turtle Clan and spoke the Unami dialect of Lenape. The Tappan and the Hackensack actually were but one tribe and members of it were called either by one name or another according to their dwelling place.[7] They, as well as the Raritan, Wappinger, Manhattan (also known as "Manhattoe"), were collectively known as the River Indians. Those groups living in the adjoining highlands to the west and north have become known as the Munsee.[8]

The Palisades, part of Tappan territory

Contact with the European settlers was at first as trading partners. It is from them that David de Vries purchased the land (1640) to build the homestead at Vriessendael (Edgewater) and, who living among them, became an advocate of learning more about indigenous culture. It was an early Director of New Netherland, William Kieft, who attempted to exact tribute from them (but was ignored), and later allowed a number of them to be slaughtered after they had sought safety at Pavonia (1643), beginning a Kieft's War.

Some descendants of the Tappan may have become part of the Ramapough Mountain Indians.[9]

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.ramapoughlenapenation.org/wp-docs/Timeline2013.pdf
  2. ^ Cooper, Susan Fenimore (June 1880). "The Hudson River and its Early Names". The Magazine of American History Volume IV. pp. 401–418. Retrieved 2015-03-01.
  3. ^ "Tappan: A Walk Through History". www.tappantown.org.
  4. ^ Old Tappan is the name given to the region and its inhabitants by New Netherlanders from the 1687 patent: "…a Cartaine trackt of Landt named ould tappan as ye same is bounded by trees marked by ye indians." Tappan, from the Lenni Lenape word Tuphanne (reputed to mean cold water)
  5. ^ "gilwell.com: the Lenape / English Dictionary". www.gilwell.com.
  6. ^ Wright, Kevin W. "THE INDIGENOUS POPULATION OF BERGEN COUNTY". Bergen County Historical Society. Retrieved 2008-08-13.
  7. ^ Indian Deeds 1630 - 1748; Budke, George H.; Library Association of Rockland County, 1975, pg 18
  8. ^ Indian Tribes of Hudson's River; Ruttenber, E.M.; Hope Farm Press, 3rd ed, 2001, ISBN 0-910746-98-2
  9. ^ McGrath, Ben (March 1, 2010), "Strangers on the Mountain", New Yorker: 50