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The Republic of Indian Stream was a small, self-declared republic in North America that existed from July 9, 1832 to 1835. Described as Indian Stream Territory so-called by the U.S. census taker in 1830, the area was named for Indian Stream, a small river, and had an organized government and constitution, which served about 300 citizens.
History
The area was first settled under a land grant not from the King of England, but rather from the St. Francis Algonquin chief, King Philip, who had led many a successful raid on New England settlements during the 1760s.
The establishment of Indian Stream as an independent nation was essentially the result of the ambigious boundary between the United States and Canada, because there were three possible options for the "the northwesternnmost head of the Connecticut River." As a result, the area (in and around the three tributaries that fed into the head of the Connecticut River) was not particularly under the jurisdiction of either the U.S. or Canada.
The Republic covered the northern reaches of what is now the state of New Hampshire, Lake Saint Francis and the four Connecticut Lakes. Where the British claimed the southeasternmost branch (the chain of Connecticut Lakes), the U.S. claimed the border as we know it today. Both sides sent in tax collectors and debt-collecting sheriffs. The double taxation in particular caused ire among the population, and the republic was formed to put an end to the issue until the U.S. and Britain could settle on the borderline.
The republic ceased to operate independently in 1835, when the New Hampshire militia occupied the area, following a vote to be annexed by the Indian Stream Congress. The vote arose from fears regarding a prior incident in which a group of "Streamers" invaded Canada to free a fellow citizen who had been arrested by a Canadian sheriff and judge over a matter of an unpaid hardware-store debt, as debtors prison laws were still in force at the time. The invading posse shot up the judge's home where their comrade was being held, causing something of an international incident. The British Ambassador to the U.S. was astonished at the idea of a war with the States over a matter of a hardware-store debt and quickly agreed to engage in negotiations to resolve the long simmering border disputes resulting from the poor wording of the Treaty of Paris.
Canada relinquished claim in January 1836, and U.S. jurisdiction was acknowledged around May 1836. Still described as Indian Stream at the time of the 1840 U.S. Census taken June 1, 1840, the local population totalled 315. The area was incorporated as Pittsburg in 1840. Pittsburg, in Coos County, is the largest township in the U.S., at 300,000 acres (1,200 km²), or 282.3 square miles (731 km²) of land area and 9.0 square miles (23 km²) of inland water area.
In 1842, the land dispute was definitively resolved by the Webster-Ashburton Treaty and the land was assigned to New Hampshire.
Further reading
- Doan, Daniel, Indian Stream Republic: Settling a New England Frontier, 1785-1842, Lebanon, NH: University Press of New England, 1997.
External link
See also
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