Coreorgonel was a Native American village in what is now Tompkins County, New York. The name has been translated as "Where we keep the pipe of peace." In the early 1700s a group of Tutelo, a Siouan-speaking people, migrated north from their homelands in Virginia to seek the protection of their former enemies, the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois). The Cayuga adopted the Tutelo and a related tribe, the Saponi, in 1753. The Tutelo built the village of Coreorgonel, about 25–30 homes, near the present-day junction of state routes 13 and 13A along the Cayuga Inlet, just south of Ithaca.
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