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Albany Congress



         


Iroquois Confederation attended the conference, with Chief Hendrick of the Mohawk as their main spokesman. They did conclude a treaty to ensure peaceful relations, but the results were mixed. During the French and Indian War the Iroquois were split. The Mohawks sided with the British while the Onondaga took the French side. Besides the general treaty the Indians also sold land in the Wyoming Valley to John Lydius of Connecticut and to Conrad Weiser of Pennsylvania. This began the confusion of land titles that ultimately resulted in the Pennamite Wars.

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Plan of Union

Benjamin Franklin proposed a plan for uniting the colonies that greatly exceeded the scope of the congress. However after considerable debate, and modifications proposed by Thomas Hutchinson who would later become Governor of Massachusetts, it was passed unanimously. The plan was submitted as a recommendation but was rejected by both King George II and the legislatures of the individual colonies since it took away some of their existing powers.

The Union would include the North American colonies, except Delaware and Georgia. The plan called for a single executive (President-General) to be appointed by the King, who would be responsible for Indian relations, military preparedness, and execution of laws regulating various trade and financial activities. It called for a Grand Council to be selected by the colonial legislatures where the number of delegates would be based on the taxes paid by each colony. Even though rejected, some features of this plan were later adopted in the Articles of Confederation and the Constitution.

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Participants

In addition to the Iroquois, twenty-one representatives of New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut, and New Hampshire attended the Congress. William DeLancey, acting Governor of New York, as host governor, was the Chairman. Connecticut: William Pitkin, Roger Wolcott, Elisha Williams, John Lydius





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