Northeast Woodlands Tribes
Indigenous peoples of the Northeastern Woodlands include Native American tribes and First Nation bands residing in or originating from a cultural area encompassing the northeastern and Midwest United States and southeastern Canada. It is part of a broader grouping known as the Eastern Woodlands. The Northeastern Woodlands is divided into three major areas: the Coastal, Saint Lawrence Lowlands, and Great Lakes-Riverine zones.
The Coastal area includes the Atlantic Provinces in Canada, the Atlantic seaboard of the United States, south until North Carolina. The Saint Lawrence Lowlands area includes parts of Southern Ontario, upstate New York, much of the Saint Lawrence River area, and Susquehanna Valley. The Great Lakes-Riverine area includes the remaining inland areas of the northeast, home to Central Algonquian and Siouan speakers.
The Great Lakes region are sometimes considered a distinct cultural region, due to the large concentration of tribes in the area. The Northeastern Woodlands region is bound by the Subarctic to the north, the Great Plains to the west, and the Southeastern Woodlands to the south.
Northeast Woodland Tribes
- Abenaki
- Eastern Abenaki: Quebec, Maine, and New Hampshire[2]
- Western Abenaki: Quebec, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont[2]
- Accohannock see Nanticoke
- Algonquian lower Saint Lawrence River
- Anishinaabe (Anishinape, Anicinape, Neshnabé, Nishnaabe) (see also Subarctic, Plains)
- Assateague, Maryland[3]
- Beothuk, Newfoundland[2]
- Choptank Indian Tribe, Maryland[3]
- Conoy, Virginia[3]
- Erie, Pennsylvania, New York[2]
- Etchemin Quebec (Maliseet)
- Fox, Michigan,[2] later Iowa, Oklahoma
- Hatteras
- Ho-Chunk, Wisconsin, later Nebraska
- Honniasont, Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia
- Hopewell Ohio and Black River region
- Huron/Wyandot Ontario south of Georgian Bay, now Oklahoma and Wendake, Quebec
- Illinois, Illinois, Iowa, and Missouri[2]
- Iroquois, Ontario, Quebec, and New York[2]
- Kickapoo, Michigan,[2] Illinois, Missouri, later Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Mexico
- Laurentian/St. Lawrence Iroquoians
- Lenni-Lenape Pennsylvania, Delaware, New Jersey, now Ontario and Oklahoma
- Maliseet, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Quebec, and Maine[2]
- Mascouten, Michigan[2]
- Massachusett, Massachusetts
- Mattaponi, Virginia[4]
- Menominee, Michigan and Wisconsin[2]
- Mingo, Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia
- Mahican Confederacy, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New York, and Vermont[2]
- Housatonic, Massachusetts, New York[5]
- Mahican, Massachusetts, New York, and Vermont[2][6]
- Wappani (Wappinger), New York[5]
- Wyachtonok, Connecticut, New York[5]
- Massachusett, Massachusetts[7]
- Mi'kmaq (Micmac), New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Quebec[2]
- Mohegan, Connecticut
- Montauk, New York
- Nanticoke, Delaware and Maryland[2]
- Narragansett, Rhode Island
- Neutral, Ontario[2]
- Niantic, coastal Connecticut[7]
- Nipmuck, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island[7]
- Ocaneechee, Virginia[8]
- Pamlico
- Pasquotank
- Passamaquoddy, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Quebec, and Maine[2]
- Patuxent, Maryland[3]
- Penobscot, Maine
- Pequot
- Petun, Ontario[2]
- Piscataway Indian Nation, Maryland[3]
- Pocumtuc, western Massachusetts[7]
- Pokanoket (Pokanoket Tribe of the Wampanoag Nation), Rhode Island and Massachusetts[7]
- Poospatuck, New York
- Potawatomi, Michigan
- Powhatan, Virginia[3]
- Quinnipiac Connecticut, eastern New York, northern New Jersey, Long Island
- Hammonasset
- Mattabesec
- Mattatuck
- Menunkatuck
- Meriden (tribe)
- Mioonkhtuck
- Naugatuck, New York[7]
- Nehantic
- Paugusset, New York[7]
- Podunk, New York[7]
- Potatuck, New York[7]
- Totoket
- Tunxis, New York[7]
- Wangunk, New York[7]
- Wepawaug, New York[7]
- Ramapough Mountain Indians, New Jersey
- Rappahannock, Virginia[4]
- Sauk, Michigan,[2] later Iowa, Oklahoma
- Schaghticoke, western Connecticut
- Secotan
- Shawnee Ohio,[2] West Virginia, Pennsylvania, later Oklahoma
- Shinnecock, Long Island, New York[7]
- Sissipahaw
- Souriquoian
- Susquehannock, Maryland and Pennsylvania[2]
- Tarrantine (Tarranteen), see Abenaki, Micmac
- Tauxenent, Virginia[4]
- Unquachog, Long Island, New York[7]
- Wampanoag, Massachusetts
- Wawenoc
- Wenro, New York[2]
- Wenrohronon, Pennsylvania and New York
- Wyandot, Huron, Ontario south of Georgian Bay, now Oklahoma and Wendake, Quebec
Return to the: North American Tribal Regions Map