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- catalog abstract ""This book is the account of the removal of the southern Indians. In the North weaker and more primitive tribes yielded with comparatively small resistance to the power and chicane of the white man. A different situation in the southern states called into requisition different methods and resulted in a more complicated story. At least four of the tribes of southern Indians had so far advanced in learning and culture as to establish themselves permanently on the soil, build homes and farms, cultivate the land, raise herds and varied crops, including cotton which they carded, spun, and wove into cloth with which they clothed themselves. They laid out roads, built mills, engaged in commerce, and sent their children to schools conducted by the missionaries ... Naturally, a people of such achievements, aware of their rights under prior possession and treaty guarantees with the national government, stubbornly resisted the aggressions of the whites. The forcible uprooting and expulsion of sixty thousand such people over a period of more than a decade, developed a story without parallel in the history of this country and resulted in a vast accumulation of manuscript material from which this account is mainly written"--Pref.".
- catalog contributor b6580905.
- catalog created "1932.".
- catalog date "1932".
- catalog date "1932.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1932.".
- catalog description ""This book is the account of the removal of the southern Indians. In the North weaker and more primitive tribes yielded with comparatively small resistance to the power and chicane of the white man. A different situation in the southern states called into requisition different methods and resulted in a more complicated story. At least four of the tribes of southern Indians had so far advanced in learning and culture as to establish themselves permanently on the soil, build homes and farms, cultivate the land, raise herds and varied crops, including cotton which they carded, spun, and wove into cloth with which they clothed themselves. They laid out roads, built mills, engaged in commerce, and sent their children to schools conducted by the missionaries ... Naturally, a people of such achievements, aware of their rights under prior possession and treaty guarantees with the national government, stubbornly resisted the aggressions of the whites. The forcible uprooting and expulsion of sixty thousand such people over a period of more than a decade, developed a story without parallel in the history of this country and resulted in a vast accumulation of manuscript material from which this account is mainly written"--Pref.".
- catalog description "Bibliography: p. 389-394.".
- catalog description "Choctaw removal. The treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek -- Indians explore the Western country -- Choctaw emigration begins -- Suffering of the emigrants -- Emigration resumed in 1832 -- Experiences on the march -- Condition of the immigrants -- Creek removal. Efforts to remove Creek Indians from Alabama -- An emigrating party in 1834 -- Frauds on the Creek Indians -- The Creek "War" of 1836 -- Wholesale removal of the Creeks by force -- A journal of events -- Creek suffering : removal completed -- Chickasaw removal. The Chickasaw Treaty of Pontotoc -- Migration of the Chickasaw Indians -- Chickasaw settlements in the West -- Cherokee removal. Oppression of the Cherokee Indians -- Cherokee Indians defend their tribal existence -- A tragic migration -- The Schermerhorn "Treaty" : last stand of the Cherokee -- March of the broken spirited -- A captive nation -- The trail of tears -- Seminole removal. The Seminole Indians -- The Second Seminole War -- The fate of Holahte Emathla -- Hunting the Seminole Indians out of the swamps -- The Capture of Osceola -- Seminole captives deported -- The surrender of Pascofa.".
- catalog extent "415 p. :".
- catalog isPartOf "Civilization of the American Indian series ; [v. 2]".
- catalog isPartOf "Harvard anthropology preservation microfilm project ; 00381. mmf".
- catalog isPartOf "The civilization of the American Indian ; [2]".
- catalog issued "1932".
- catalog issued "1932.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Norman : University of Oklahoma Press,".
- catalog spatial "Oklahoma.".
- catalog subject "970.5".
- catalog subject "Cherokee Indians Government relations.".
- catalog subject "Chickasaw Indians Government relations.".
- catalog subject "Choctaw Indians Government relations.".
- catalog subject "Creek Indians Government relations.".
- catalog subject "E78.I5 F8".
- catalog subject "Five Civilized Tribes Government relations.".
- catalog subject "Five Civilized Tribes Land tenure.".
- catalog subject "Indian Removal, 1813-1903.".
- catalog subject "Indian land transfers.".
- catalog subject "Indians of North America Oklahoma.".
- catalog subject "Seminole Indians Government relations.".
- catalog subject "United States. Act to Provide for an Exchange of Lands with the Indians Residing in Any of the States or Territories, and for Their Removal West of the River Mississippi.".
- catalog subject "United States. Indian Removal Act of 1830.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Choctaw removal. The treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek -- Indians explore the Western country -- Choctaw emigration begins -- Suffering of the emigrants -- Emigration resumed in 1832 -- Experiences on the march -- Condition of the immigrants -- Creek removal. Efforts to remove Creek Indians from Alabama -- An emigrating party in 1834 -- Frauds on the Creek Indians -- The Creek "War" of 1836 -- Wholesale removal of the Creeks by force -- A journal of events -- Creek suffering : removal completed -- Chickasaw removal. The Chickasaw Treaty of Pontotoc -- Migration of the Chickasaw Indians -- Chickasaw settlements in the West -- Cherokee removal. Oppression of the Cherokee Indians -- Cherokee Indians defend their tribal existence -- A tragic migration -- The Schermerhorn "Treaty" : last stand of the Cherokee -- March of the broken spirited -- A captive nation -- The trail of tears -- Seminole removal. The Seminole Indians -- The Second Seminole War -- The fate of Holahte Emathla -- Hunting the Seminole Indians out of the swamps -- The Capture of Osceola -- Seminole captives deported -- The surrender of Pascofa.".
- catalog title "Indian removal : the emigration of the Five civilized tribes of Indians / Grant Foreman.".
- catalog type "text".