Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Treaty of Tuscaloosa was signed in October 1818, and ratified by congress in January 1819. endorsed by President James Monroe. It was one of a series of treaties made between the Chickasaw Indians and the United States that year. The Treaty of Tuscaloosa was represented by Senator Andrew Jackson and ex-governor Isaac Shelby to the
The entire Choctaw Nation divided up by treaty in relation to the U.S. state of Mississippi. List of Choctaw Treaties is a comprehensive chronological list of historic agreements that directly or indirectly affected the Choctaw people, a Native American tribe, with other nations.
The Chickasaw, dwelling in northern Mississippi and western Tennessee, lay across the French path. Much to the eventual advantage of the British and the later United States, the Chickasaw successfully held their ground. The wars came to an end only with the French cession of New France to the British in 1763 according to terms of the Treaty of ...
1805 July 23 Treaty of Chickasaw County: Treaty with the Chickasaw 7 Stat. 89: 55 Chickasaw: 1805 August 21 Treaty of Grouseland: Treaty with the Delawares, etc. 7 Stat. 91: 56 Lenape, Potawatomi, Miami, Eel River, Wea: 1805 September 23 Pike's Purchase: Treaty with the Sioux Sioux: 1805 October 25 Treaty of Tellico: Treaty with the Cherokee 7 ...
Treaty with the Chickasaw [40] 1801: United States: Chickasaw Nation: Right to make wagon road through the Chickasaw Nation, Acknowledge the protection provided by the U.S. (Not Available yet) Treaty with the Chickasaw [41] 1805: United States: Chickasaw Nation: Eliminate debt to U.S. merchants and traders (Not Available yet) Treaty with the ...
On October 19, 1818, the two sides agreed to the transfer by signing the Treaty of Tuscaloosa. [2] The United States agreed to pay the Chickasaw people $300,000, at the rate of $20,000 annually for 15 years, in return for the right to all Chickasaw land east of the Mississippi River and north of the new state of Mississippi border. [2] [3]
Anderson was the district surveyor "who had been one of those instrumental in effecting" the Chickasaw treaty of 1805, [7] and was part of an extended network of speculators, bankers, surveyors, and public officials that included John Brahan, James Jackson, John Coffee, John Drake, John Strother, Edward Ward, and Thomas Freeman. [8]
The father, T. A. Claiborne, served as secretary to the 1805 Treaty of the Chickasaw Nation. [12] After Thomas and Sarah Claiborne died, Jackson became W. F. Claiborne's guardian. Claiborne died in the early 1830s.