3 C. A. Weslager, The Delaware Indians (New Brunswick, 1972); idem, “The Delaware Indians as Women,” Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences 34 (1944), 381-88; Anthony F. C. Wallace, King of the Delawares: Teedyuskung, 1700-1763 (Philadelphia, 1949); Albert C. Myers, ed., William Penn, His Own Account of the Lenni Lenape or Delaware Indians (Moylan, 1937); Daniel G. Brinton, The Lenape and Their Legends (Philadelphia, 1885); Frank H. Stewart, The Indians of South Jersey (Woodbury, 1932).

4 Thomas, “An Historical and Geographical Account of Pensilvania and West-New-Jersey,” 340.

5 In 1768, a clergyman wrote of a colleague in southern Delaware, “from a ruddy robust young man, he looks like one just risen from the Dead; and prays, for God’s sake, that he may be moved up to his native hills in Pennsylvania. Sussex on Delaware is as it were the Fens of Essex.” John Duffy, Epidemics in Colonial America (Baton Rouge, 1953), 211.