Oneida
For technical reasons, "Oneida #1 Tunnel" redirects here. For the mine tunnel in Pennsylvania, see Oneida Number One Tunnel.
Oneida may refer to:
Native American/First Nations
- Oneida people, a Native American/First Nations people and one of the five founding nations of the Iroquois Confederacy
- Oneida language
- Oneida Indian Nation, based in New York
- Oneida Nation of the Thames, also known as "Onyota'a:ka First Nation"
- Oneida Nation of Wisconsin
Places
In Canada:
- Oneida 41, Ontario, also known as the "Oneida Settlement"
- Oneida Township, Ontario, a historic township of Haldimand County
In the United States:
- Oneida, former name of Martell, California
- Oneida, Illinois
- Oneida, Kansas
- Oneida, Kentucky
- Oneida, New York
- Oneida, Pennsylvania
- Oneida Falls, one of 24 named waterfalls in Ricketts Glen State Park in Pennsylvania
- Oneida, Tennessee
- Oneida (town), Wisconsin in Outagamie County
- Oneida, Wisconsin, unincorporated community in both Outagamie and Brown Counties
- Oneida Castle, New York, a village
- Oneida Corners, New York, hamlet of the town of Queensbury in Warren County
- Oneida, a former name of Amarillo, Texas
- Oneida Creek, in central New York State
- Oneida Lake, in central New York State
- Oneida River, in central New York State
Sport
- Oneida Football Club, historical Boston football club (founded in 1862)
- Oneida FC, a Cambridge, Massachusetts rugby league club
Other uses
- Oneida Carry, a portage for native and colonial Americans in Central New York
- Oneida Limited, the international tableware company
- Oneida Community, a religious intentional community in Oneida, New York
- Oneida (band), a five-piece rock band from Brooklyn, New York
- Oneida (moth), a genus of moths
- USS Oneida, any of five ships in the U.S. Navy
- Oneida, a civilian American steam yacht not acquired by the U.S. Navy as USS Oneida (SP-432), notably owned by Elias Cornelius Benedict and William Randolph Hearst
- Whitestown Seminary, a Presbyterian educational institution based in Whitestown, New York, and founded in 1827, previously known as Oneida Academy and Oneida Institute