Sir William Johnson, superintendent of northern Indians (b at Smithstown, County Meath, Ire c 1715; d at Johnson Hall, near Johnstown, NY 11 July 1774). As a landowner and militia officer Johnson amassed a fortune in the Mohawk Valley, NY, and cultivated close relations with the Six Nations Indians. Superintendent of Indian affairs, he solved a number of problems of Indian-white relations and led Indians and irregulars in several actions in the
SEVEN YEARS' WAR, including at Lake George (1755), Fort Niagara (1759) and Montréal (1760). Johnson's devoted companion was Mary
BRANT, sister of Joseph
BRANT.
Author
CARL A. CHRISTIE