The Iroquois Five Nations of New York…
1713 CE
The Iroquois Five Nations of New York had penetrated as far as the Tuscarora homeland in North Carolina by 1701, and nominally control the entire frontier territory lying in between.
Following their discovery of a linguistically related tribe living beyond Virginia, they are more than happy to accommodate their distant cousins within the Iroquois Constitution as the "Sixth Nation", and to resettle them in safer grounds to the north. (The Iroquois had driven tribes of rival natives out of Western New York to South Carolina during the Beaver Wars several decades earlier, not far from where the Tuscarora resided.)
Beginning about 1713 after the war, contingents of Tuscarora begin leaving North Carolina for the north.
They establish a main village at present-day Martinsburg, West Virginia, on what is still known as Tuscarora Creek.