He keeps me awake thinking about it
By Jonathan Monfiletto
Was the great Seneca chief Red Jacket born on the western shore of Cayuga Lake in the present-day hamlet of Canoga, or was this celebrated Native American orator born on the west branch of Keuka Lake in the present-day hamlet of Branchport? The correct answer is â well, it depends on who you ask.
And it probably doesnât help matters that there are monuments to Red Jacket in both places and that both communities purport to be the birthplace of Red Jacket, also known as Otetiana (âAlways Readyâ) and, when he became chief, as Sagoyewatha (âHe Keeps Them Awakeâ). But, it may be helpful to spell out the language of each of the monuments and then discuss the claims from there.
The Canoga monument, erected by the Waterloo Library & Historical Society in October 1891, reads: âRed Jacket. Sa-Go-Ya-Wat-Ha. (He Keeps Them Awake) The Orator of the Six Nations of Iroquois. A Chief of the Wolf Clan of the Senecas. Born Near This Spot 1750 [emphasis added] Died at Buffalo, N.Y. 1830â. The Branchport monument, established by the New York State Archaeological Association in October 1933 with ownership later transferred to the Yates County Genealogical and Historical Society, reads: âBeneath this monument lie the mortal remains of the mother of Sagoyewatha â Red Jacket, orator and leader of the Seneca Indians, whose domain once included the region about Keuka Lake. With his father and mother Red Jacket spent his boyhood near this spot [emphasis added] and here the family cabin stood, 1752. This, the actual site of the home of Red Jacketâs mother, by this monument is dedicated to her memory by the heirs of Dr. J.C. Wightman, to whom her burial place was disclosed by Asa Brown, a white man adopted by the Jacket family.â
If one considers only the language of the monument, then it might seem as if the issue of Red Jacketâs birthplace is pretty cut and dried. Clearly, or so it seems, Red Jacket was born in Canoga and then grew up in Branchport. Besides, the Branchport monument appears to pay tribute more to Red Jacketâs mother, Ahweyneyohn (âBlue Flowerâ or âDrooping Flowerâ), than to the chief himself and serves as her burial place rather than as his birthplace.
In fact, the birthplace-versus-hometown explanation is one put forth by Dr. Arthur C. Parker, director of the Rochester Museum and trustee of the State Historical Association, who delivered an address titled âThe Unknown Mother of Red Jacketâ during the unveiling of the Branchport monument on October 21, 1933. The Yates County History Center has a typed copy of this address in our subject files. Parker notes Red Jacketâs birthplace âhas been the subject of much debateâ but also notes âthe Seneca people themselves have seemed to agree that it was at Canoga on the shores of Cayuga Lake.â According to Parker, Red Jacketâs parents went on an autumnal hunt trip to the land of the Cayugas â some sources indicate Red Jacketâs father was Cayuga while his mother was Seneca, making their son Seneca in the matriarchal tradition â where Red Jacketâs father possibly had a cabin in which Red Jacketâs mother may have given birth to him.
âHome, however, was the motherâs home at the little settlement upon the gentle slope on the western shore of Keuka, at the sand bar near the mouth of Basswood Gully,â Parker said in his address, further describing the area of Red Jacketâs boyhood home. In his manhood, according to Parker, Red Jacket âleft the valley of Keuka to take up residence at Kanadesagaâ â modern-day Geneva â âand still later to find a home at Docioweh, (the site of Buffalo),â where Red Jacket is buried and where yet another monument to him stands.
Parkerâs explanation, and even the location and language of the monuments, makes complete sense to me, especially when I consider my own life. If I am ever important enough for someone to erect a monument in my honor, then they could place a monument in Potsdam, New York â the location of the hospital where I was born â and another monument in Morristown, New York â the location of the house in which I grew up. Still other monuments could be placed in Utica, Malone, Auburn, or Waterloo â locations where I have spent my adult years â or even in the sites where I conducted my military career. It makes sense to me, then, that one monument honors Red Jacketâs birthplace while another monument honors his boyhood home. So, canât we all just get along?No, apparently we cannot. I wasnât expecting any sort of controversy when I decided to research Red Jacketâs birthplace â though I did know about the two monuments and the seemingly competing claims â perhaps only a misunderstanding or a discrepancy. And I sit squarely on the fence in this debate; I previously worked at the Waterloo Library & History Society (where a co-worker and I produced a series of short videos on local history topics, including one about Red Jacket, which you can watch here - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7LK7tnXnjCQ - if you donât mind a little shameless plug), and now I work for the Yates County History Center (I would add a shameless plug for our Tumblr blog about local history topics, but since youâre reading this youâre already there).
No, apparently we cannot. I wasnât expecting any sort of controversy when I decided to research Red Jacketâs birthplace â though I did know about the two monuments and the seemingly competing claims â perhaps only a misunderstanding or a discrepancy. And I sit squarely on the fence in this debate; I previously worked at the Waterloo Library & History Society (where a co-worker and I produced a series of short videos on local history topics, including one about Red Jacket, which you can watch here - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7LK7tnXnjCQ - if you donât mind a little shameless plug), and now I work for the Yates County History Center (I would add a shameless plug for our Tumblr blog about local history topics, but since youâre reading this youâre already there).
Yet, controversy there seems to be. In fact, the two most prominent histories of Yates County â Stafford C. Clevelandâs 1873 âHistory and Directory of Yates Countyâ and Lewis Cass Aldrichâs 1892 âHistory of Yates County, N.Y.â â sling some mud in the direction of Canoga in asserting Branchport to be Red Jacketâs birthplace. Cleveland recounts an address Red Jacket supposedly gave in Geneva while journeying to Washington, D.C. with other Iroquois chiefs â around the time of President Andrew Jacksonâs first inauguration â in which the Seneca chief stated his birthplace to be near the west branch of Keuka Lake and that he lived there until he and his parents moved to Kanadesaga when he was 12. Cleveland calls Canogaâs claim to Red Jacketâs birthplace âa statement rendered improbable, not only by the facts already stated, but by the further fact that Canoga was on the territory of the Cayugas.â Cleveland posits that Keuka may have been mistranslated as Canoga and calls Red Jacket âan illustrious character, whose place of nativity we may well be proud to claim.â
Aldrich calls Red Jacket âthe celebrated son of Yates Countyâ and asserts the Branchport claim while debunking the Canoga claim: âThis [Canoga claim] was undoubtedly an error, for there can be produced satisfactory evidence to show that the famous chief was born in what is now the town of Jerusalem in this county, and not far from the hamlet called Branchport.â Aldrich references Red Jacketâs Geneva address and mentions the Canoga monument established the year before his book was published in further asserting the Seneca chiefâs birthplace. Stating âRed Jacket, the famous Seneca chief, first saw the light of day on the shores of Keuka Lake, at a point near the village of Branchport,â Aldrich seems almost miffed that the people of Seneca County would have the audacity to assert otherwise and erect their monument: âIt may be said, however, that the claims of Jerusalem to the places of birth of the chief were and are founded on the statements made by himself on the occasion of one of his speeches at Geneva.â
The History Center has a few books about Seneca County history in our research room, but none of them seems to discuss Red Jacket or his birthplace in any kind of depth. To investigate the Canoga claim, I turned to John E. Beckerâs 1949 âA History of the Village of Waterloo,â which discusses Red Jacketâs place in the founding of the county and the village (special thanks to WLHS Executive Director Cyndi Park-Sheils for letting me borrow the Becker book for this project!). According to Becker, Red Jacket visited Waterloo on several occasions and during one of these visits mentioned six big trees where Native American councils took place and the importance of the decisions reached during these meetings. One such visit to Waterloo may have happened around the time of Red Jacketâs Geneva address, as Becker describes it as âthe spring of 1829, soon after General Jackson became Presidentâ when Red Jacket spoke in Waterloo and pointed toward Canoga, saying âI was born over there by the big spring.â The Seneca chief subsequently pointed out the spot near Canoga where he was born at the request of a prominent Seneca Falls citizen who had a personal acquaintance with Red Jacket. Whether intentionally or unintentionally, Becker does not mention the claim of Branchport being Red Jacketâs birthplace.
Within the History Centerâs subject files, I found at least eight newspaper articles discussing Red Jacketâs birthplace. These are almost evenly divided between the two communities, giving a slight 5-3 edge toward Branchport. So, where is the real birthplace of Red Jacket? Well, as I like to say about historical figures, there is only one man who knows the truth and he has been dead nearly 200 years.







