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Today, the Oneida Community Mansion House is a non-profit educational organization chartered by the State of New York. It welcomes visitors throughout the year with guided tours, programs, and exhibits. It preserves, collects, and interprets the intangible and material culture of the Oneida Community and related themes of the 19th and 20th ...
After nine years, though, the case and accusations that the church was a cult continue to draw interest. ... of the Oneida County District Attorney’s office, Oneida County District Attorney Todd ...
In June 1860 he joined the Oneida Community, the utopian religious sect in Oneida, New York, with which Guiteau's father already had a close affiliation. [5] According to Brian Resnick of The Atlantic , the younger Guiteau "worshiped" the group's founder, John Humphrey Noyes , with Guiteau once writing that he had "perfect, entire and absolute ...
The Oneida officially joined the rebel side and contributed in many ways to the war effort. Their warriors were often used to scout on offensive campaigns and to assess enemy operations around Fort Stanwix (also known as Fort Schuyler). The Oneida also provided an open line of communication between the rebels and their Iroquois foes.
Oneida Baptist Institute (OBI) will turn 125 in 2024. The school struggled financially at times and has gone through many changes in more than a century, but is on good financial footing today and ...
Oneida Indian Nation of New York State, 470 U.S. 226 (1985), was a landmark United States Supreme Court case concerning aboriginal title in the United States. The case, sometimes referred to as Oneida II , was "the first Indian land claim case won on the basis of the Nonintercourse Act ."
Among those is a free community event, “How to Paint a Turtle,” with Oneida artist Andrea Baird. The classes, scheduled for Nov. 21, Dec. 1 and 30, and Jan. 23, are about more than learning to ...
Spencer Klaw, Without Sin: The Life and Death of the Oneida Community. New York: Allen Lane, Penguin Press, 1993. Pierrepont B. Noyes, My Father's House: An Oneida Boyhood. New York: Farrar and Rinehart, 1937. John Allerton Parker, A Yankee Saint: John Humphrey Noyes and the Oneida Community. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1935.