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Deposition

 Subject
Subject Source: Gilcrease Object Names

Found in 27 Collections and/or Records:

Depositions of John Thompson, George Justice, and Squire Baldridge concerning money owed to Charles Benge, August 14, 1848

 Item — Folder 128: [Barcode: 61.128]
Identifier: 4026.1670
Description

Depositions of John Thompson, George Justice, and Squire Baldridge concerning $24 owed to Charles Benge for two of his steers sold by Soup Watts, deceased. Folder 128

Dates: August 14, 1848

Manuscript Collection: Charles F. Ashley

 Collection
Identifier: MC.1964.8
Collection Overview

Collection summary derived from "Guidebook to Manuscripts", 1969: Charles F. Ashley was an Indian Agent at the Colorado River Reservation and the Cheyenne and Arapaho Agency in the late 19th century. There are letters, correspondence, financial documents, and two ledgers that contain information about his work as an Indian Agent. Additionally, this collection contains personal letters regarding his personal finances, military service pensions, and estate.

Dates: 1877-1929

Manuscript Collection: John Charles Casey

 Collection
Identifier: MC.1964.34
Collection Overview Collection summary derived from "Guidebook to Manuscripts", 1969: John Charles Casey (1807-1856) was graduated from West Point in 1829 and later became a captain in the United States Army. He was a Special Agent to the Seminoles at the Agency on the Banks of the Caloosa-Halibee, and a good friend of the Seminole Chief, Ho-lah-ta (Billy Bowlegs). The collection consists of letters, both official and personal giving information on the removal of the Indians, the delegations from Arkansas, and...
Dates: 1825-1859

Manuscript Collection: Peter Pitchlynn

 Collection
Identifier: MC.1948.175
Collection Overview Collection summary derived from "Guidebook to Manuscripts", 1969: Peter Perkins Pitchlynn, Chief of the Choctaws, (1806-1881) was one of the persons selected by the Choctaws in 1828 to survey the southeast section of Indian Territory, the land they had chosen for their home when they were forced to leave Mississippi. Peter Pitchlynn's father was John Pitchlynn, a white man and interpreter for the United States Government, who had married a Choctaw woman of the famous Folsom family. Peter...
Dates: 1797 - 1929

Manuscript Collection: William McIntosh

 Collection
Identifier: MC.1970.140
Collection Overview Collection summary derived from "Guidebook to Manuscripts", 1969: General William McIntosh (1778?-1825) was a Creek Indian Chief who favored the removal of the Creeks out of the state of Georgia to lands in the West. In this matter there was a strong party in opposition. On April 30, 1825, a force of these Indians burned his home, then killed him and other members of his family. General McIntosh was a cousin of Governor George M. Troup of Georgia. The papers include a letter to Governor...
Dates: 1802-1906

Muscogee (Creek) Papers

 Collection — Box 1
Identifier: MC.1964.49
Guidebook to Manuscripts Collection summary derived from "Guidebook to Manuscripts", 1969: These are miscellaneous, mostly important, papers relating to Creek tribal affairs. In 1782 Governor Martin held a conference at Savannah with the Tallahassee King and the Headmen and Warriors of the Upper and Lower Creek Nations. In addition to three documents concerning this conference, there are "talks" by John Crutchfield, who could not attend the original "talk," sent to the governor by George Walton, saying that the...
Dates: 1782-1966