Netawatwees or King Newcomer (c. 1686–1776, Lenape) was Sachem (principal Chief) and spiritual leader of the Lenape. His name, meaning "skilled advisor" or "first in council," is spelled in a variety of ways including Netaut Twelement, Na-taut-whale-mund, Neattawatways, Netahutquemaled, and Netodwehement.
During the French and Indian War, he escaped some of the hostilities by migrating to the confluence of the Tuscarawas River and Muskingum River rivers, where he was chief of Gekelukpechink village. Later he moved to the village of Coshocton, a center of Lenape settlement on the Tuscarawas. Both these villages were in present-day Ohio. He was among the signatories of the Fort Pitt treaty with Continental/United States forces. He allied with the rebels in the hope of gaining an all-Native American state in the new nation.
Netawatwees moved to Ohio with other migrant Delaware during the French and Indian War (1754–63). He favored alliances with the English in that conflict, which was part of the Seven Years' War between England and France in Europe. He established a village near present-day Cuyahoga Falls.
From there, he moved to the Tuscarawas River, a tributary of the Muskingum River, where he became a chief of the Delaware town called Gekelukpechink, meaning "still water." This town, which became known as Newcomer's Town, was on the north bank of the Tuscarawas. Present-day Newcomerstown developed west of here.A member of this community was Mary Harris, an assimilated European woman who had been about 10 years old when taken captive by Abenaki in the Raid on Deerfield in 1704 in western Massachusetts. She may have been traded among tribes and later married a Delaware. In 1751 she was recorded as living in Gekelukpechink, aka Newcomer's Town, in present-day Tuscarawas County, Ohio. See Christopher Gist Journal, January 14, 1751 Gist Journal, p.41 in 1756 she was reported living near a Mohawk mission village near Montreal, Canada .pp.114-115. Mary Harris was said to have been involved in the naming of Newcomerstown because another white captive woman had killed Harris's Indian husband. See [3] but see Gist's own Journal entries .p.39 and pp.114-115
Although Netawatwees never converted to Christianity, he was influenced by the Moravian Church missionaries. Infirm in his old age, he was succeeded by White Eyes in 1776. In his dying words on October 31, 1776, Netawatwees was said to plead with the Delaware to follow the teachings of the Moravian pastors.
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