Announcements
Spring Scholarships Now Open through February 15th, 2026 – Contact Katie Maynor kmaynor@delawaretribe.org | 918.338.6585
Announcements
Community Service programs are now accepting applications for 2026 – Emergency Assistance, Optical Assistance, Dental Assistance, Elder Prescription Assistance, Burial Assistance – Contact Katie Maynor kmaynor@delawaretribe.org | 918.338.6585
Announcements
Drivers Education & Extra Curricular Activities Education Program Assistance Applications Open. Contact Katie Maynor kmaynor@delawaretribe.org | 918.338.6585
get to know us
about Delaware tribe
The name DELAWARE was given to the people who lived along the Delaware River, and the river in turn was named after Lord de la Warr, the governor of the Jamestown colony. The name Delaware later came to be applied to almost all Lenape people. In our language, which belongs to the Algonquian language family, we call ourselves LENAPE (len-NAH-pay) which means something like “The People.” Our ancestors were among the first Indians to come in contact with the Europeans (Dutch, English, & Swedish) in the early 1600s. The Delaware were called the “Grandfather” tribe because we were respected by other tribes as peacemakers since we often served to settle disputes among rival tribes. We were also known for our fierceness and tenacity as warriors when we had to fight, however, we preferred to choose a path of peace with the Europeans and other tribes.
Many of the early treaties and land sales we signed with the Europeans were in our people’s minds more like leases. The early Delaware had no idea that land was something that could be sold. The land belonged to the Creator, and the Lenape people were only using it to shelter and feed their people. When the poor, bedraggled people got off their ships after the long voyage and needed a place to live we shared the land with them. They gave us a few token gifts for our people’s kindness, but in the mind of the Europeans these gifts were actually the purchase price for the land.
Our Delaware people signed the first Indian treaty with the newly formed United States Government on September 17, 1778….
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