Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs1849 |
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常見字詞
acres agency amount annual report annuity arrived attended bands boys buildings Caddoes camp charge Cherokee Chickasaws Chippewas Choctaws church citizens civilization claim Colonel Comanches commenced condition corn council Council Bluffs Creeks crops Delawares Department depredations dollars duties emigration farm female Fort Coffee friendly frontier furnished heretofore honor horses hundred hunt improvement Indian Agent Indian country induce instructions interest Iowa Kanzas Kickapoos killed land Lipans located manual labor schools MEDILL Menomonies ment miles mission missionary Mississippi Missouri nation obedient servant Osage river Osages Ottowas party past Pawnees payment persons Piankeshaws portion Pottawatomies prairie present progress pupils Quapaws reason received removal respectfully river Sacs and Foxes scholars scrip seminary September September 28 settled settlements Shawnees Sioux soon station sub-agent Superintendent Indian Affairs taught teachers tion trade treaty tribes U. S. loan whiskey whole number Winnebagoes Wyandots
熱門章節
第 75 頁 - An act to regulate trade and intercourse with the Indian tribes, and to preserve peace on the frontiers...
第 75 頁 - And no trade with the said tribes shall be carried on within their boundary, except at certain suitable and convenient places, to be designated from time to time by the superintendents, agents, and sub-agents, and to be inserted in the license. And it shall be the duty of the persons granting or revoking such licenses, forthwith to report the same to the commissioner of Indian affairs, for his approval or disapproval.
第 133 頁 - I have the honor to submit for your consideration the following report of the condition and affairs of the Cherokee tribe of Indians.
第 75 頁 - That no person shall be permitted to trade with any of the Indians (in the Indian country) without a license therefor from a superintendent of Indian affairs, or Indian agent or sub-agent, which license shall be issued for a term not exceeding two years for the tribes east of the Mississippi, and not exceeding three years for the tribes west of that river.
第 6 頁 - If this great end is to be accomplished, however, material changes will soon have to be made in the position of some of the smaller tribes on the frontier, so as to leave an ample outlet for our white population to spread and to pass towards and beyond the Rocky Mountains : else, not only will they be run over and extinguished, but, all may be materially injured.
第 188 頁 - Territory," performed by order of the Domestic Committee of the Board of Missions of the Protestant Episcopal Church, in the spring of 1844, by their Secretary and General Agent.
第 191 頁 - ... out. There are many other applications in, but I shall not have time to attend to them, nor have the parties asked for a survey. I think these applications are simply intended to hold the ground until the future of this region is forecasted ; it certainly looks promising now. I would respectfully call the attention of the department to the fact that the services of a surveyor are urgently needed in here, and will be for some years to come, and I would suggest that one be appointed to look after...
第 22 頁 - ... of disbursing officers. — Under this section it is the duty of disbursing officers, with whom funds have been placed for disbursement, when the time arrives at which unexpended balances of the appropriations from which such funds were' drawn lapse, to repay the funds remaining in their hands, in order that they may be carried to the surplus fund and covered into the Treasury. (1877) 15 Op. Atty. Gen. 358. Where previous to that time, these officers have issued certificates by which claims upon...
第 90 頁 - I know not, other than to the Indians having, in '46 and '47, secured so much booty by their daring outrages upon travellers, are now, and have been the past summer, luxuriating in and enjoying the spoils.
第 163 頁 - ... employed as assistant teacher ; the others accompany the children during the hours of agricultural instruction, or such other employments as are calculated to instil into their minds industry and perseverance. As to the progress in learning made by these pupils, a considerable number can read well ; they acquire a knowledge of penmanship more readily than, the generality of white children ; in the study of arithmetic, they exhibit a great deal of emulation. Sometimes the half-breeds, at other...