- Eries Public Schools Eries Public Schools | Erie Pennsylvania
Erie's Public Schools consists of 16 schools that serve approximately 10,000 students each day
- Erie people - Wikipedia
People from the Whittlesey culture and Fort Ancient culture of Ohio and Pennsylvania may have been ancestors of the Erie people
- Obituaries in Erie, PA | Erie Times-News - GoErie. com
Gertrude L “Trudy” Corey, age 80, of Erie, passed away Friday, December 5, 2025 She was born in Erie on February 6, 1945, daughter of the late Donald and Grace Pianta Crannell Trudy was a
- ERIE Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of ERIE is a member of an Indigenous people living south of Lake Erie in the 17th century
- DESTRUCTION OF THE ERIES – The Early History of Cleveland, Ohio
“The Eries were the most powerful and warlike of all the Indian tribes They resided at the foot of the Great Lake, (Erie,) where now stands the city of Buffalo, the Indian name for which was ‘ Tu-shu-way ’
- Erie | Native Americans, Iroquois, Great Lakes | Britannica
Erie, Iroquoian-speaking North American Indians who inhabited most of what is now northern Ohio, parts of northwestern Pennsylvania, and western New York; they were often referred to as the Cat Nation
- Erie Tribe – Access Genealogy
Erie Indians (Huron: yeñresh, meaning “it is long-tailed,” referring to the eastern puma or panther; Tuscarora: ken’räks, meaning “lion,” a modern usage, Gallicized into Eri and Ri From these come the locatives Eri’e and Riqué, which mean “at the place of the panther ”
- Eries - definition of Eries by The Free Dictionary
A member of a Native American people formerly inhabiting the southern shore of Lake Erie in northern Ohio, northwest Pennsylvania, and western New York The Erie ceased to exist as a people after being defeated by the Iroquois in the mid-1600s 2 The Iroquoian language of the Erie
|