37 ants, and the nephews and descendants of the late Captain White Eyes, Delaware chiefs. The Goshen Indians as they were now called, repaired to Detroit for the purpose of completing the contract. On the 8th of November they signed a treaty with Gov. Cass, in which they agreed to relinquish the twelve thousand acres in Tuscarawas county, for twenty four thousand acres in one of the territories, to be designated by the U. S. government, together with an annuity of §400. A provision went with this latter stipulation, which rendered its payment uncertain. The Indians never returned. Most of them took up their habitation at a Moravian mission station on the River Thames, Canada. By an act of congress passed in May 1824. their former inheritance at Schoenbrunn, Gnaden- hutten and Salem, was surveyed into farm lots and sold. Gnadenhutten Monument Society —On the 7th of October, 1843, eight or ten individuals of the town and vicinity, mostly farmers and mechanics, met and organized themselves into a society for the purpose of enclosing the area around the place where the bod
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