If you read a dismissal of Oestreicher's work, you can't say you didn't know it existed. You should have looked for it.
Why? Consider how many translations of the Walam Olum were out there in 2000, and how many have come out since 1995, or even since 2000. Doug Weller was the first person to point out Oestreicher's work to me just last year, and I applied due diligence afterwards. No one else stepped forward any earlier.
Do you have any idea how many peoples lived east of the Mississippi River? How many linear feet of material I went through to extract climate and impact information? Do you have any idea of the concentration of 3He in our solar system? Or of sunspot numbers, solar activity, and climate? Or of the mechanics of asteroid and comet impacts? Or injection and accretion mechanisms?
I tried to let this set at "Reconstructing Rafinesque" so I could move on to other far more important work, but you will not let it set. You have your reasons for doing this, and they are not entirely academic, as is clear from your intensity.
While you keep on shouting "fraud", I prefer to speak quietly at a normal level, and agree with Educated Indian and the Lenape elders who hold that the Walam Olum contains a "portion". It's that portion that I am interested in. Unfortunately, I'll have to go through Oestreicher's work line by line to try and form a better estimate as to that portion and its source(s), and as I mentioned earlier, there is other work that is more important now.
Also, while I am taking no pleasure in this exchange, I did enjoy locating and reading Miami traditions last week. Perhaps if Oestreicher were to recover Lenape tradtions in a nice single volume, reading that work would be enjoyable as well. Or is he simply going to sit on his butt and try to spend the rest of his life living off his thesis?
You may not believe this, but perhaps Oestreicher will end up gifting me with a copy of his thesis, or perhaps he and I will end up trading copies of our works. As far as my own book goes, I'll simply use Heckewelder's and Sutton's accounts, which are indisputable, along with the undeniable archaeological evidence, should it make it to a second edition.
I have set out my objections to Oestreicher's work as it now sits. Those clear errors will have to be removed before I'll accept it.
Whatever Oestreicher's points about Rafinesque or the Lenape, his Shawnee history is miserable, as is his understanding of Ojibwe Midewiwin and other peoples' use of pictographs and wampum. In my opinion.
If its any consolation to you I have warned others that the Walam Olum is not reliable, and that they should stay clear of citing it in any way. I did that last year, by the way, well before our little exchange here.
I want others to work through this, and would like to see them do it for many years to come. So I would like to see this left in "Research Needed".
In closing, thank you for the census search. As far as Dr. Ward Cook and his brother go, they we're clearly too young to buy the land at Anderson when it was taken from the Lenape.
That still leaves their father as a candidate for Rafinesque's "Dr. Ward". Or perhaps he was another individual, but then one would have to track the Lenape Medewak to find him (if he existed), wouldn't one?
You may consider such an exercise grasping at straws if you like.