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The Iroquois Confederacy leads the Seneca Indians
1920-1921: Akron Pros 1922: Milwaukee Badgers 1923: Hammond Pros 1925: Hammond Pros, Providence Steam Roller, Akron Pros 1926: Akron Indians (the Akron Pros changed their name to Indians in 1926)
No. The Cherokee were southern, the Mohawks were part of the Iroquis Confederacy.
The Seneca Indians are part of the Iroquois Confederacy. They are found in the western New York area on the Tonawanda Indian Reservation located about 35 miles east of Buffalo, New York.
The Akron Pros were one of the founding teams in the NFL. The Pros started out as a semi-professional football club in 1908. There were then known as the Akron Indians. They played from 1908-1919 as the Indians. The Akron Pros were based in Akron, Ohio The Akron Indians changed their name to the Akron Pros in 1920, when they joined the APFA, the American Professional Football Association. The APFA was later named the National Football League (NFL) in 1922. The Akron Pros were one of the fourteen teams that founded the league. They played as the Akron pros from 1920-1925. In 1926, their final year of existence, the Akron Pros went back to their original name, the Akron Indians. The Pros were the first Champions of the APFA. They went 8-0-3 in 1920, and won the championship on the strength of their undefeated season.
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In the South American Indians took in the Civil War. This was the 1st time in history.
The Iroquois confederacy was location in now-Upstate New York, near Canada.
The Iroquois Confederacy
Powhatan, who was the chief of the Powhatan Indians, was the leader of the Powhatan Confederacy of Virginia, which once included 30 different tribes totaling about 9,000 persons. The confederacy occupied much of what became the colony and state of Virginia.
The Creek Indians took in some Africans who had escaped from slavery. There was much intermarriage in the tribe. Some Black Creek fought in the Civil War against the Confederacy.
During the Civil War, some American Indians fought for the Union, others fought for the Confederacy, and others stayed out of it. The Cherokee in Oklahoma split with more fighting for the Confederacy than fighting for the Union. No one knows if the Sioux were fighting for the Confederacy or simply killing the other Indian tribes that had cooperated with Union forces before the war. They killed many Crow Indians. An Indian tribe assisted General Sherman as he made his way north from Savannah through the Carolinas toward Richmond, Virginia. So many Indians joined the war, and many were left alone.