What an amazing find! The first publication ever made about the Iroquois Wars, written in two parts twenty years apart directly from the records of the Indian Affairs of the colony of New York. Composed 30 years after the events narrated, back in the weird old days when all our disputes were addressed and ultimately fixed between London and the court at Versailles. The Iroquois Confederacy, manipulated into war by Albany managed by sheer will-power (they were forever unassisted and fought with insufficient supplies) to hinder the development of the French colony for over 50 years. The immediacy of the struggle is well-captured, all the thwarted ambitions, the fragility of the commercial links with Huronia and the resulting miserable conditions under which the settlers of Canada had to live while New York prospered. All in all, a fantastic tale with walks through frozen wastelands, cruelty and barbarism (mostly on our part, id est, the French) and a hint of what was to come for many of the actors, mainly their ultimate destruction.
The text stops short of the General Peace signed in 1702 at Montréal between the French Crown and most of the Indian nations of our side of the continent, the treaty that finally allowed Canada to exist and to prosper as a colony.
For those who care, I include the bit that concerns my hometown, the one and only time it figures in world history. "The Five Nations continued their Incursions all Winter on Canada. Forty of the Mohawks fell upon Fort Verchères, and carried off twenty of the Inhabitants; but the Alarm reaching Montréal, Mr. de Crizaei, with one hundred Men of the regular Troops, was sent in pursuit of them, who recovered most of the Prisoners.' p.119