Creek
Found in 62 Collections and/or Records:
A New Map of Georgia with Part of Carolina, Florida, and Louisiana, 1764
Affidavit of Susan McIntosh, July 25, 1856
Affidavit states that the grandmother of Mary the widow of J. M. Reese, was a servant of Nobble Kenard of the Creek Nation. Nobble Kenard was he father of Jane Kenard. Folder 221
Blue Eagle painting, 1850 - 1900
Folder 7
C. T. Wells’ account of a trip from Mulberry, Arkansas to Arkansas City, Kansas, November 7 - 22, 1878 and June 1879
C. T. Wells' account of a 15-day, 375-mile trip from Mulberry, Franklin County, Arkansas to Arkansas City, Kansas, which lasted from November 7 to 22, 1878. It also contains his comments on Sun City, Kansas from June 1879. It is addressed to "[t]o [his] friend Sallie." Folder 1
Cherokee-Creek Treaty, December 11, 1821
Certified Copy of the Cherokee-Creek Treaty regarding boundary. Top left corner folded. Single folded sheet of paper with handwritten text in ink on four pages. Folder 12
Inscription(s)
Inscribed in ink, "Copy of the Creek + Cherokee Treaty"
Copy of Instructions from Chief John Ross to Delegation Attending Intertribal Counsel, November 12, 1841
Copy of instructions from Chief John Ross and Andrew M. Vann to delegation attending council of Choctaw, Creek, and Cherokee Nations (Moulton) Single folded sheet of paper with handwritten text in ink on four pages. Folder 786
Inscription(s)
Inscribed in ink, "ink"
Copy of letter from D. N. McIntosh to Gen. Pike concerning imminent attack on his regiment, October 30, 1861
D. N. McIntosh, Colonel C. CR from Camp Pleasant wrote to General Pike reporting that 6,000 men of the opposition party plan to attach his regiment. The attack was five days away and McIntosh suggested that General Pike send the Cherokee and Choctaw forces to his aid. Folder 283
Copy of letter from Secretary of War J. H. Eaton to Colonel Ward, August 2, 1830
Copy of letter from Secretary of War J. H. Eaton to Colonel Ward transmitting a copy of his July 29th letter to Colonel Montgomery, Cherokee Agent, setting forth the President's views on Indian removal. Five folded sheets of paper with handwritten text in ink on 19 pages. Folder 40
Inscription(s)
Inscribed in ink on recto, "Copy"