Catherine Montour

[2] Several places in western New York were later named in her honor, after most of the Iroquois had been forced to cede their lands and were driven out of the region.

After the village was destroyed by rebel continental forces during the 1779 Sullivan Expedition in the American Revolutionary War, Montour relocated with other Seneca to Niagara.

[4] When Schuyler County in western New York was settled by European Americans following the revolution and United States independence, they named several places after Catharine Montour.

In 1791, Catharine's sister Mary sought permission to live at the Moravian mission village of New Salem, near present Milan, Ohio.

Several places in New York were named after Montour in the period of European-American settlement following the American Revolution, all in Schuyler County.