Indians of North America -- Government relations
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Indians of North America -- Government relations
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The concept Indians of North America -- Government relations represents the subject, aboutness, idea or notion of resources found in Union Presbyterian Seminary Libraries.
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- (In Senate of the United States.) 12th April, 1802. : Resolved, that the president of the United States be requested to give directions to the attorney general, to collect, digest, and report to Congress ... information relative to the lands claimed by the United States within the state of Tennessee ..
- 16th December, 1799. Read the first and second time, and committed to a committee of the whole House, on Wednesday next. : A bill for the preservation of peace with the Indian tribes
- A Basic call to consciousness : the Hau de no sau nee address to the Western World, Geneva, Switzerland, autumn 1977
- A Bill Concerning the Salt Springs on the Waters of the Wabash River
- A Bill Making Appropriations for the Purpose of Extinguishing Indian Claims
- A century of dishonor; : a sketch of the United States Government's dealings with some of the Indian tribes
- A convention between the United States and the chiefs and head men of the Indian tribe called the Creeks, : concluded at the city of Washington, on the 14th day of November, 1805. : Printed by order of the Senate
- A report to the Secretary of War of the United States, on Indian affairs : comprising a narrative of a tour performed in the summer of 1820 , under a commission from the President of the United States : for the purpose of ascertaining, for the use of the government, the actual state of the Indian tribes in our country ...
- American Indians
- American Indians in American history, 1870-2001 : a companion reader
- American Indians: facts and future; : toward economic development for native American communities. Joint Economic Committee, Congress of the United States
- American indians : social justice and public policy
- An act passed at the first session of the Fourth Congress of the United States of America: : begun and held at the city of Philadelphia, Monday the seventh of December, 1795, and of the independence of the U. States, the twentieth. : Published by authority
- An act to regulate trade and intercourse with the Indian tribes
- An ordinance, &c. Whereas the safety and tranquility of the frontiers of the United States, do in some measure depend on the maintaining a good correspondence between their citizens and the several nations of Indians in amity with them ... Be it ordained by the United States in Congress assembled, that from and after the passing of this ordinance, the Indian department be divided into these districts, viz. ...
- And still the waters run; : the betrayal of the Five Civilized Tribes
- Behind the trail of broken treaties : an Indian declaration of independence
- Brown's gazette extra. Symptoms of treason! : (In order to appease the anxiety of the citizens on the subject of the following important letter, we have taken the liberty of laying it before them at this untimely hour.)
- By the United States in Congress assembled. August 7, 1786. : An ordinance for the regulation of Indian affairs
- By the United States in Congress assembled. October 20, 1786. : The committee consisting of Mr. Pettit, Mr. Lee ... to whom was referred the letter from the War Office with the papers enclosed ... having reported: That the uniform tenor of the intelligence from the western country, plainly indicates the hostile disposition of a number of Indian nations, particularly the Shawanese [sic] ... Resolved, that the number of one thousand, three hundred and forty non-commissioned officers and privates, be raised for the term of three years ..
- By the United States in Congress assembled. October 20, 1786. : The committee consisting of Mr. Pettit, Mr. Lee, Mr. Pinckney, Mr. Henry and Mr. Smith, to whom was referred the letter from the War Office with the papers enclosed containing intelligence of the hostile intentions of the Indians in the western coun- [sic] having reported ..
- Congress of the United States, begun and held at the city of New-York, on Wednesday, the fourth of March, one thousand seven hundred and eighty-nine. : An act providing for the expences which may attend negotiations or treaties with the Indian tribes, and the appointment of commissioners for managing the same
- Congress of the United States: At the second session, begun and held at the city of New-York, on Monday, the fourth of January, one thousand seven hundred and ninety. : An act providing for holding a treaty or treaties to establish peace with certain Indian tribes
- Congress of the United States: At the second session, begun and held at the city of New-York, on Monday, the fourth of January, one thousand seven hundred and ninety. : An act providing for holding a treaty or treaties to establish peace with certain Indian tribes
- Congress of the United States: At the second session, begun and held at the city of New-York, on Monday, the fourth of January, one thousand seven hundred and ninety. : An act to regulate trade and intercourse with the Indian tribes
- Considerations towards a general plan of measures for the English provinces
- Documents relative to Indian affairs
- Fourth Congress of the United States: : at the first session, begun and held at the city of Philadelphia, in the state of Pennsylvania, on Monday, the seventh of December, one thousand seven hundred and ninety-five. : An act for establishing trading houses with the Indian tribes
- Fourth Congress of the United States: : at the first session, begun and held at the city of Philadelphia, in the state of Pennsylvania, on Monday, the seventh of December, one thousand seven hundred and ninety-five. : An act to regulate trade and intercourse with the Indian tribes, and to preserve peace on the frontiers
- George Washington, president of the United States of America to all to whom these presents shall come: greeting. : Whereas on the twenty-sixth day of June last, certain articles the the Cherokee Indians were stipulated ..
- Georgia. By the Honourable Lyman Hall, Esquire ... a proclamation. : Whereas, in order to preserve peace, and maintain a friendly intercourse and a good understanding with the Indians of the Creek and Cherokee nations, it is necessary to avoid any encroachments upon the lands allotted to them for their hunting grounds ... Given under my hand ... at Augusta, this thirteenth day of June, in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and eighty-three ..
- Great American Indian speeches
- History of Indian-white relations
- In Senate of the United States. 14th December, 1804. : Ordered, that the message of the President of the United States, of the 12th instant, together with the treaty and documents accompanying it, be printed under an injunction of secrecy, for the use of the Senate. Attest, Samuel Otis, secretary
- Indians and the U.S. Constitution : a forgotten legacy
- Instructions to [blank] superintendant of Indian Affais [sic] for the [blank] Department
- Lawrie Tatum, Indian agent ; : Quaker values and hard choices
- Letter from the Secretary of War ... a statement of the capital employed in the Indian trade ... together with the number, names and salaries of Indian agents ....
- Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting statements ... referring to all the treaties held with the Indian tribes respectively : since the fourth of March 1789 &c
- Letter from the secretary of war, accompanying sundry statements & reports, : relative to, I. The present military force of the United States. II. Measures which have been pursued to obtain proper sites for arsenals. III. Measures which have been taken to replenish the magazines with military stores. IV. Measures which have been taken for opening a trade with the Indians. V. Progress made in providing materials for the frigates, and in building them. : Published by order of the House of Representatives
- Memorial of the United Illinois and Wabash Land Companies to the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States
- Message from the president of the United States, : accompanying a report to him from the secretary of state, and sundry documents relative to the affairs of the United States on the Mississippi; the intercourse with the Indian Nations, and the inexecution of the treaty between the United States and Spain. : 23d January, 1798, ordered to lie on the table. : Published by order of the House of Representatives
- Mr. King's motion
- Now that the buffalo's gone : a study of today's American Indians
- Red power; : the American Indians' fight for freedom
- Reimagining Indians : Native Americans through Anglo eyes, 1880-1940
- Report of the Committee on Public Lands on the memorial of the United Illinois and Wabash Land Companies
- Review of an article in the North American for January 1830 : on the present relations of the Indians
- Rights of the Indians
- Second Congress of the United States: : at the second session, begun and held at the city of Philadelphia, in the state of Pennsylvania, on Monday, the fifth of November, one thousand seven hundred and ninety-two. : An act to regulate trade and intercourse with the Indian tribes
- Sovereign acts : contesting colonialism across indigenous nations and Latinx America
- Speech of the President of the United States to both houses of Congress, Nov. 6, 1792
- Speech of the President of the United States, to both houses of Congress; Tuesday the 6th of November, 1792.
- Spirit and resistance : political theology and American Indian liberation
- Talk of the President of the United States, to his beloved men of the Cherokee nation. : ... Given at the city of Philadelphia, the twenty-ninth day of August, in the year one thousand seven hundred and ninety-six ..
- The American Indian in tragedy and triumph
- The Indian in American life,
- The Reservations
- The altar of peace, : being the substance of a discourse delivered in the Council House, at Greenville, July 5th, 1795, before the officers of the American Army, and Major General Wayne, commander in chief, and minister plenipotentiary from the United States to treat with the Indian tribes, north west of the Ohio,
- The committee consisting of Mr. Beresford, Mr. Jefferson, Mr. Chase, Mr. Spaight and Mr. Read, appointed to take into consideration the state of Indian affairs in the Southern Department, beg leave to report ...
- The committee consisting of Mr. Duane, Mr. Peters, Mr. Carroll, Mr. Hawkins and Mr. A. Lee, to whom were referred a report on Indian affairs ... beg leave to subjoin the following additional instructions and propositions to their said former report ...
- The committee consisting of Mr. Hardy, Mr. Houston, Mr. Read, Mr. Williamson, and Mr. Holten, to whom was referred the report of a committee on the state of Southern Indian affairs, beg leave to submit the following report
- The committee consisting of Mr. Pinckney, Mr. Monroe, and Mr. King, appointed to form an ordinance for the compleat arrangement and government of the Indian department, --submit the following to the consideration of Congress.== : An ordinance for regulating the Indian department
- The committee to whom was referred that part of the president's speech, which relates to the improvement of harmony with the Indian nations, within the limits of the United States, by fixing and conducting of trading houses, report ...
- The committee to whom was referred the letter of the commissioners authorised to form treaties with the Indian tribes, having conferred with the said commissioners upon the subject of their letter, and the resolutions of 18th of March, directing a treaty to be held at Post St. Vincent, on the [blank] day of June next, report ...
- The committee, consisting of Mr. Duane, Mr. Peters, Mr. Carrol [i.e., Carroll], Mr. Hawkins and Mr. Lee, to whom were referred a report on Indian affairs, read in Congress on the 21st of April last; a letter from General Schuyler ... with messages to and from certain hostile Indians on the subject of peace ...
- The committee, consisting of Mr. Duane, Mr. Peters, Mr. Carrol, Mr. Ha[...], Mr. Lee, to whom were referred a [...] Indian affairs, read in Congress ...
- The harrowing of Eden : white attitudes toward native Americans
- The hatchets, to hew down the tree of sin, which bears the fruit of death. Or, The laws, by which the magistrates are to punish offences, among the Indians, as well as among the English. : Togkunkash, tummethamunate matcheseongane mehtug, ne meechumuoo nuppooonk. Asuh, Wunnaumatuongash, nish nashpe nananuacheeg kusnunt sasamatahamwog matcheseongash ut kenugke Indiansog netatuppe onk ut kenugke Englishmansog. (asuh chohkquog.)
- The heartbeat of Wounded Knee : native America from 1890 to the present
- The importance of gaining and preserving the friendship of the Indians to the British interest, considered
- The peyote religion : a study in Indian-white relations
- The red man in the new world drama; : a politico-legal study with a pageantry of American Indian history
- The right to be Indian
- The search for an American Indian identity; : modern Pan-Indian movements
- The state, removal and indigenous peoples in the United States and Mexico, 1620-2000
- The vanishing American : white attitudes and U.S. Indian policy
- Third Congress of the United States: At the second session, begun and held at the city of Philadelphia, in the state of Pennsylvania, on Monday, the third of November, one thousand seven hundred and ninety-four. : An act for the more general promulgation of the laws of the United States
- To his Excellency the Honourable George Clinton, Esq; captain general and governor in chief in and over the province of New-York, and the territories thereon depending in America, and vice-admiral of the same, and vice-admiral of the White Squadron of His Majesty's fleet, &c. : The humble address of His Majesty's Council for the province of New-York
- To the Honourable Cadwallader Colden, Esq; His Majesty's lieutenant governor and commander in chief of the province of New-York, and the territories depending thereon in America. : The humble address of the Council of the province of New-York
- To the Honourable Cadwallader Colden, Esq; His Majesty's lieutenant governor, and commander in chief of the province of New-York, and the territories depending thereon in America. : The humble address of the Council of the province of New-York
- To the Honourable James De Lancey, Esq; His Majesty's lieutenant governor and commander in chief in and over the province of New-York, and the territories depending thereon in America. : The humble address of His Majesty's Council of the province of New-York
- To the settlers within the Cherokee boundary, as established by the Treaty of Holston, on the second day of July, one thousand seven hundred and ninety-one
- United States. December 30th, 1794. : Gentlemen of the Senate and of the House of Representatives. I lay before you a report made to me by the secretary of war respecting the frontiers of the United States. ... Go. Washington
- War Office. September 12th, 1785. : The secretary of war reports, that it may be a subject worthy the attention of Congress, whether it would not be necessary to appoint some confidential person ... either resident with the Six Nations, or upon the frontiers nearest to them, to whom they might apply, as the intermediate person between them and Congress
- Winds of renewal
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