<--- Back to Details
First PageDocument Content
Cherokee / Samuel Worcester / Elias Boudinot / New Echota / John Ross / Sequoyah / Tahlequah /  Oklahoma / Cherokee freedmen controversy / Stand Watie / Cherokee Nation / Southern United States / Oklahoma
Date: 2007-01-10 13:51:25
Cherokee
Samuel Worcester
Elias Boudinot
New Echota
John Ross
Sequoyah
Tahlequah
Oklahoma
Cherokee freedmen controversy
Stand Watie
Cherokee Nation
Southern United States
Oklahoma

Add to Reading List

Source URL: www.ubs-translations.org

Download Document from Source Website

File Size: 174,67 KB

Share Document on Facebook

Similar Documents

Cherokee Nation / Major Ridge / Elias Boudinot / Indigenous peoples of the Americas

Merry Christmas from Paul and Dottie RidenourIt has been three years since my last Christmas letter. It you are unfamiliar with past letters, please visit my webpage – _www.paulridenour.com_. A lot has happened

DocID: 1qitw - View Document

National Register of Historic Places in Orange County /  New York / Bull Stone House / Elias Boudinot / Wawayanda / Bull / Sacred bull

Tales from the Blue Book Vol. 4 William Bull and Sarah Wells Stone House Association, Inc.

DocID: 1pmwz - View Document

Ross Family Farm This 18th century farmhouse on 61 acres was built by Elias Boudinot, a leading attorney for the Colonies. In 1782, Boudinot was elected President of the

DocID: 1cQUr - View Document

Cherokee / Native Americans in the United States / Choctaw / Cherokee history / Elias Boudinot / Cherokee Nation / Southern United States / History of North America

The “Miseducation” of American Indians To view this PDF as a projectable presentation, save the file, click “View” in the top menu bar of the file, and select “Full Screen Mode”; upon completion of presentati

DocID: 1a7Nq - View Document

Oklahoma / Elias Boudinot / Cherokee / Harriet R. Gold Boudinot / Cherokee Nation / Southern United States / History of North America

Cherokee Phoenix editorial policy Statement of Purpose In an address to the First Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia, the founding editor of the Cherokee Phoenix called for the first free press in Indian Country. He sa

DocID: 1a56i - View Document