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Indians of North America -- Government relations.

 Subject
Subject Source: Library of Congress Subject Headings

Found in 15 Collections and/or Records:

Rush Springs

 File
Identifier: 2006.012.14
Scope and Contents From the File: An artificial collection that consists of materials pertaining to Oklahoma and Oklahomans in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and is not part of any other collection.The Oklahoma Collection subsumes the old Oklahoma Ephemera, Oklahoma Historical Photos and Docs and Oklahoma Maps collections. Ephemera was a remnant of the McFarlin Reference Department's vertical files, the larger portion having been sent to the Tulsa City-County Library, which was kept during the late 1940s...
Dates: 1864 - 1991

Treaties between the United States of America and American Indian Nations

 Collection
Identifier: 1976-029-1-2
Content Description

Official, printed treaty documents.



Scope and Contents
Dates: Publication: 1785 - 1902

U.S. Statute, 31 P221, 1901-06-30

 Item — Box 1: [Barcode: 000023240308], Folder: 4
Identifier: 1975.006.1.Cherokee.078
Scope and Contents

Printed abstract of U.S. Statute, 31 P221: An Act making appropriations for the current and contingent expenses of the Indian Department and for fulfilling treaty stipulations with various Indian tribes, for the fiscal year ending 30 Jun 1901, and for other purposes.

Dates: 1901-06-30

Washakie manuscript, 1930

 Collection
Identifier: 1500-001-19
Scope and Contents

Washakie: An Account of Indian Resistance of the Covered Wagon and Union Pacific Railroad Invasions of Their Territory: Unbound typescript with autograph revisions, corrections, and editor's marks, and additional text pasted on. Included are specimen copies of the frontispiece; title page; preliminary pages; table of contents; list of illustrations; illustrations; and bibliography; with further autograph revisions and corrections.

Dates: 1930

Zachary Taylor Letters, 1836-1848

 Collection
Identifier: MC-1964-203
Scope and Contents These papers are all letters dealing chiefly with Indian affairs. In a letter written from Fort Crawford, Prairie du Chien, July 19, 1836, and addressed to Capt. William M. Boyce, U.S. Army, he remarks about the deplorable condition of the Indians, calling them ". . . miserable naked and half-starved Indians who have been driven to desperation by the most villainous acts of the greatest set of harpies that ever existed, and who have been countenanced by the govt in cheating, swindling...
Dates: 1836 - 1848