Albert Anthony
Albert Seqaqkind Anthony (born ca. 1839) was a Lenape missionary and scholar of the Six Nations of the Grand River in Ontario, Canada. He served as an interpreter between his native Munsee language and English, as well as Iroquoian languages, and assisted Oronhyatekha with a vocabulary of Munsee/Lenape in 1865. Anthony graduated as an Anglican priest from Huron University College in 1873, and worked as a missionary with the New England Company. He visited Buffalo, New York in the United States for the Forest Lawn Cemetery reinternment of Red Jacket in 1884.[1][2]
Anthony retired as a priest in 1886, afterward being employed as a farmer, and subsequently worked with Daniel Garrison Brinton on a dictionary of Munsee/Lenape, visiting Brinton in Philadelphia in 1886 and 1887 in his ancestral Delaware Valley, and Brinton also consulted with him on the Walam Olum, which he believed to be genuine. Anthony is the source of an etymology of Manhattan, that it was named after a stand of hickory trees used for bows in the south of the island.[1]
References[]
- ^ a b Goddard, Ives (2010). "The Origin and Meaning of the Name "Manhattan"". New York History. 91 (4): 277–293. ISSN 0146-437X – via Smithsonian Research Online.
- ^ History of the New England Company, from Its Incorporation, in the Seventeenth Century to the Present Time. Vol. 2. Taylor. 1874.
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- 1839 births
- 19th-century Anglican priests
- Alumni of Anglican seminaries and theological colleges
- Anglican missionaries in Canada
- Canadian Anglican priests
- Interpreters
- Linguists of Algic languages
- Lenape people
- Six Nations of the Grand River
- First Nations academics