The total loss of life resulting from…
August 1766 CE
About four hundred British soldiers have been killed in action and perhaps fifty had been captured and tortured to death.
George Croghan estimates that two thousand settlers had been killed or captured, a figure sometimes repeated as two thousand settlers killed.
The violence had compelled approximately four thousand settlers from Pennsylvania and Virginia to flee their homes.
Native losses go mostly unrecorded.
People
Alexander McGillivray
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Benjamin Lincoln
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Blue Jacket
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George Croghan
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George III of Great Britain
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Guyasuta
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Henry Louis Bouquet
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John Bradstreet
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Joseph Brant
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Neolin
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Pontiac (Ottawa leader)
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Thomas Gage
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William Johnson, 1st Baronet
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Groups
Iroquois (Haudenosaunee, also known as the League of Peace and Power, Five Nations, or Six Nations)
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Wyandot, or Wendat, or Huron people (Amerind tribe)
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Miami (Amerind tribe)
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Lenape or Lenni-Lenape (later named Delaware Indians by Europeans)
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Ojibwa, or Ojibwe, aka or Chippewa (Amerind tribe)
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Odawa, or Ottawa, people (Amerind tribe)
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Seneca (Amerind tribe)
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Susquehannock (Amerind tribe)
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Mascouten (Amerind tribe)
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Kickapoo people (Amerind tribe)
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Potawatomi (Amerind tribe)
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Wea (Amerind tribe)
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Piankeshaw (Amerind tribe)
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Shawnees, or Shawanos (Amerind tribe)
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Ohio Country
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Thirteen Colonies, The
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Illinois Country
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Britain, Kingdom of Great
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Mingo (Seneca-Cayuga Tribe of Oklahoma)
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