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Krupat, Arnold – American Indian Quarterly, 2011
Indian orators have been saying good-bye for more than three hundred years. John Eliot's "Dying Speeches of Several Indians" (1685), as David Murray notes, inaugurates a long textual history in which "Indians... are most useful dying," or, as in a number of speeches, bidding the world farewell as they embrace an undesired but…
Descriptors: United States History, American Indians, Leaders, Speeches
Bruce, Jeffrey L. – Planning for Higher Education, 2011
As American settlement spread to the Midwest, college and university campuses came to symbolize some of the greatest achievements of public policy and private philanthropy. However, the expansion westward often ignored the cultural precedents of Native Americans and the diversity of the varied native landscapes. Today, campus planners and historic…
Descriptors: United States History, Educational History, Educational Facilities Planning, Public Policy
Palmer, Mark H. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
The fragmentation of large nineteenth-century reservations resulted in the creation of American Indian allotment geographies in the United States. Federal Indian policy, namely the General Allotment Act of 1887, allowed the US government to break up large reservations, allot land to individual Indians, and sell the surplus to non-Indian settlers.…
Descriptors: American Indians, Tribes, United States History, American Indian History
Haake, Claudia B. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
This article seeks to explain the nature of the arguments the Iroquois presented to the US government in trying to prevent their removal. In the letters they wrote to the federal government from the 1830s to the 1850s they emphasized their own law as well as that of the United States. They drew on whatever perception of law they deemed was best…
Descriptors: American Indian History, Federal Government, Federal Indian Relationship, Treaties
Bogener, Stephen – Great Plains Quarterly, 2008
The Pecos River of the nineteenth century, unlike its faint twenty-first century shadow, was a formidable watercourse. The river stretches some 755 miles, from the Sangre de Cristo Mountains northeast of Santa Fe to its eventual merger with the Rio Grande. Control over the public domain of southeastern New Mexico came from controlling access to…
Descriptors: Land Acquisition, Water, United States History, Mexican Americans
Lerma, Michael – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
What is the relationship between Indigenous peoples and violent reactions to contemporary states? This research explores differing, culturally informed notions of attachment to land or place territory. Mechanistic ties and organic ties to land are linked to a key distinction between Indigenous peoples and non-Indigenous peoples. Utilizing the…
Descriptors: American Indian History, Land Use, American Indians, Attachment Behavior
Hulan, Richard H. – Indian Historian, 1975
Acquisition of Cherokee lands for that which is known as the Natchez Trace Parkway is presented via an historical perspective. (JC)
Descriptors: American Indians, Federal Government, History, Land Acquisition

Moynihan, Ruth Barnes – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 1977
Examining the theory used by the Puritans to justify their jurisdictional claims in America, this essay discusses Roger Williams' arguments for the validity and significance of the English patent in New England as applicable to the Narragansett Indians and to dissident Rhode Islanders. (JC)
Descriptors: American Indians, Essays, History, Land Acquisition
Lamb, Terrence J. – Indian Historian, 1977
Descriptors: American Indians, Conflict, Federal Government, Land Acquisition

Agnew, Brad – American Indian Quarterly, 1975
Detailing the struggle between American Indians (Cherokees) and white settlers over a piece of land, known as Lovely's Purchase, lying north of the Arkansas River and extending west to the Verdigris River, this article documents attempts made by various whites to treat the Cherokee equitably. (JC)
Descriptors: American History, American Indians, Conflict, Federal Government
American Indian Journal, 1978
An attempt to do what has rarely been done in the 19th century, this article examines the actual economic resources and values associated with United States Indian treaties and agreements in the Great Lakes region (land, trade, timber, maple sugar, fish and game, water resources, military posts and roads, and annuities). (JC)
Descriptors: American Indians, Economics, History, Land Acquisition
Meyer, Carol – American Indian Journal of the Institute for the Development of Indian Law, 1976
Descriptors: American History, American Indians, Civil Rights, Land Acquisition
Meredith, Howard L. – Indian Historian, 1977
Descriptors: American History, American Indians, Essays, History
Hendrix, Burke A. – American Indian Quarterly, 2005
This is an essay about Indian claims for the return of historically stolen lands, written from the perspective of a "Western" academic moral philosopher. I want to try to outline points of agreement and disagreement between Indian and Western moral conceptions and to seek common ground on which land claims can be more clearly evaluated…
Descriptors: American Indians, Federal Indian Relationship, Moral Issues, Debate
Holford, David M. – Indian Historian, 1975
Descriptors: American Indian Reservations, American Indians, Federal Legislation, History