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The Eastern Cherokee by Blood series Volumes I - XIII is the most complete series in pure transcribed form (from National Archival film, M-1104) of the Cherokee abstracts available and beyond, nothing added, nothing taken away. From the first application to the last (45,857) representing approximately 90,000 individuals and then in Volume XIII The Exceptions Filed to Guion Miller's Report of May 28, 1909, and submitted on January 5, 1910. The complete record of application decisions gives both those accepted and rejected. There are thousands of names and families involved in this finished series. Let it be known that if there are rejections it may not mean the applicant is not Cherokee, only due to the fact that they may not have been related to an Emigrant Cherokee during the time of removal. Their ancestor could have been an Old Settler Cherokee, a Western born Cherokee, or possibly even a Texas born Cherokee that had family that left the east as early as 1818-1820. The Miller Application numbers are totally different than a regular roll number, which contains an index of names that may lead to a person's family tribal enrollment card through that number. The enrollment card also has vital information such as name, family relations, age, sex, blood quantum, etc. But the Miller Applications can lead you to generations of family information and history along with, in many cases, testimony not just from family but neighbors, tribal members and acquaintances. The books not only can lead you to Cherokee blood as a descendant of an Emigrant Cherokee but also to thousands of other Cherokee bloodlines as well as possibly relations to other tribes during testimony. So these materials are a researcher's dream come true.¿
The Eastern Cherokee by Blood series Volumes I - XIII is the most complete series in pure transcribed form (from National Archival film, M-1104) of the Cherokee abstracts available and beyond, nothing added, nothing taken away. From the first application to the last (45,857) representing approximately 90,000 individuals and then in Volume XIII The Exceptions Filed to Guion Miller's Report of May 28, 1909, and submitted on January 5, 1910. The complete record of application decisions gives both those accepted and rejected. There are thousands of names and families involved in this finished series. Let it be known that if there are rejections it may not mean the applicant is not Cherokee, only due to the fact that they may not have been related to an Emigrant Cherokee during the time of removal. Their ancestor could have belonged to a different tribe or have been an Old Settler Cherokee, a Western-born Cherokee, or possibly even a Texas-born Cherokee that had family that left the east as early as 1818-1820.The Miller Application numbers are totally different than a regular roll number, which contains an index of names that may lead to a person's family tribal enrollment card through that number. The enrollment card also has vital information such as name, family relations, age, sex, blood quantum, etc. But the Miller Applications can lead you to generations of family information and history along with, in many cases, testimony not just from family but neighbors, tribal members and acquaintances. The books not only can lead you to Cherokee blood as a descendant of an Emigrant Cherokee but also to thousands of other Cherokee bloodlines as well as possibly relations to other tribes during testimony. So these materials are a researcher's dream come true.
The history of the Shawnee is fascinating. Naturally the most famous Shawnee known would be Tecumseh, born circa 1768. But this series contains the descendants of Tecumseh and many famous chiefs and warriors along with their families. It starts with some fascinating materials covering not just the Shawnee but the Sac and Fox Nations. The first volumes concern the estates of these tribal members along with a mixture of other tribes within the Sac and Fox Agencies jurisdiction: Tribes such as the Absentee Shawnee, the Potawatomie, Winnebago, Mexican Kickapoo, Iowa, Otoe, and Pawnee, to name a few. You will find long sought after questions answered through Births, Deaths, Adoptions, and Guardianships. There will also be other records with Wills, Cemetery Records, Vital Statistics, Marriage, and Divorces later within this series. These materials are carefully transcribed from original documents that were rescued from a loft with a leaky roof. They were close to being lost forever from water damage. These logbooks and documents were boxed and stored in an attic where they kept vegetables in a building owned by the Sac and Fox Indian Agency. These books cover a range of time from 1885-1924. This series won't be your average genealogical census or typed payroll records with miscellaneous tribal expenditures. The majority of this volume, Volume XIII, consists of the transcriptions of guardianships, with a few adoptions, for the years 1902, 1903, 1904, 1906, 1907, 1908, 1909, 1910, and other vital records, and which contain various documents and documentation memorializing the specific event. There are approximately 836 individuals documented. Sources will be found providing locations, values, fees, divisions of property, and, often, expenses associated with the event. Anyone examining these documents will find numerous family names, ages, relationship, sometimes death dates, along with any number of circumstances surrounding the event. In addition to the Sac & Fox and Shawnee Tribes, other tribes mentioned in this Volume are the Absentee Shawnee, Cherokee, Iowa, Cheyenne, Creek Freedman, Iowa, Mexican Kickapoo, Kickapoo, Mexican, Munsee, Oneida, Otoe, Ottawa, Pawnee, Pottawatomie, and Sioux. These volumes were transcribed from Oklahoma Historical Society film rolls SFSA-50 to 53. ¿
The history of the Shawnee is fascinating. Naturally the most famous Shawnee known would be Tecumseh, born circa 1768. But this series contains the descendants of Tecumseh and many famous chiefs and warriors along with their families. It starts with some fascinating materials covering not just the Shawnee but the Sac and Fox Nations. The first volumes concern the estates of these tribal members along with a mixture of other tribes within the Sac and Fox Agencies jurisdiction: Tribes such as the Absentee Shawnee, the Potawatomie, Winnebago, Mexican Kickapoo, Iowa, Otoe, and Pawnee, to name a few. You will find long sought after questions answered through Births, Deaths, Adoptions, and Guardianships. There will also be other records with Wills, Cemetery Records, Vital Statistics, Marriage, and Divorces later within this series. These materials are carefully transcribed from original documents that were rescued from a loft with a leaky roof. They were close to being lost forever from water damage. These logbooks and documents were boxed and stored in an attic where they kept vegetables in a building owned by the Sac and Fox Indian Agency. These books cover a range of time from 1885-1924. This series won't be your average genealogical census or typed payroll records with miscellaneous tribal expenditures. The majority of this volume, Volume XII, consists of the transcriptions of guardianships, with a few adoptions, for the years 1892, 1894, 1895, 1896, 1897, 1898, 1899, 1900, 1901, 1902, 1903, 1904, 1905, 1906, 1907, 1908, 1909, and other vital records, and which contain various documents and documentation memorializing the specific event. There are approximately 1,012 individuals documented. Sources will be found providing locations, values, fees, divisions of property, and, often, expenses associated with the event. Anyone examining these documents will find numerous family names, ages, relationship, sometimes death dates, along with any number of circumstances surrounding the event. These volumes were transcribed from Oklahoma Historical Society film rolls SFSA-50 to 53.¿
How many hours did Dr. Starr, the student spend inside the Barnes Medical College, St. Louis? Working from dusk to dawn refining the art of healing for a people he loved, only to realize later he was primed and ready to gather his people's history and lineages that unknowingly to him would be sought after for decades after he left this mortal coil. From first addition copies of both books, this is a compilation of the History of the Cherokee Indians and Their Legends and Folklore (1921) and Early History of the Cherokees Embracing Aboriginal Customs, Religion, Laws, Folk Lore, and Civilization (1917). It has been fully scanned or transcribed when needed with an added combined full name index (127 pages) all in one volume. This work of two-century-old books contains detailed family histories, hundreds of Cherokee relations with important lineages, tribal offices, Cherokee culture and history with pictures; plus a RARE copy of Emmet Starr's signature confirmed by an Oklahoma archivist who had seen several of his signatures in years past. These two extremely popular books by the famous Cherokee genealogist, Emmet Starr, have NEVER BEFORE been published together. For the first time this Compilation is now available for purchase at most online booksellers. While offering a way for thousands to find their heritage, Starr tells the Cherokees' story so curious descendants can relate to that history and the resilience of the very people they are searching for. Their fight to stay in Texas, to adapt to and build a life in Oklahoma after being driven from their homes in the east and told they weren't civilized. The Cherokee already had courts, churches, a government and led productive lives. The author stakes his reputation on showing the world that the Cherokee are a spiritual and culturally mature people. Not only showing who they were but what they were made of and why those searching for them today are just like their forebears. Starr's intense history helps the reader understand who truly the civilized ones were.
How many hours did Dr. Starr, the student spend inside the Barnes Medical College, St. Louis? Working from dusk to dawn refining the art of healing for a people he loved, only to realize later he was primed and ready to gather his people's history and lineages that unknowingly to him would be sought after for decades after he left this mortal coil. From first addition copies of both books, this is a compilation of the History of the Cherokee Indians and Their Legends and Folklore (1921) and Early History of the Cherokees Embracing Aboriginal Customs, Religion, Laws, Folk Lore, and Civilization (1917). It has been fully scanned or transcribed when needed with an added combined full name index (127 pages) all in one volume. This work of two-century-old books contains detailed family histories, hundreds of Cherokee relations with important lineages, tribal offices, Cherokee culture and history with pictures; plus a RARE copy of Emmet Starr's signature confirmed by an Oklahoma archivist who had seen several of his signatures in years past. While offering a way for thousands to find their heritage, Starr tells the Cherokees' story so curious descendants can relate to that history and the resilience of the very people they are searching for. Their fight to stay in Texas, to adapt to and build a life in Oklahoma after being driven from their homes in the east and told they weren't civilized. The Cherokee already had courts, churches, a government and led productive lives. The author stakes his reputation on showing the world that the Cherokee are a spiritual and culturally mature people. Not only showing who they were but what they were made of and why those searching for them today are just like their forebears. Starr's intense history helps the reader understand who truly the civilized ones were.¿¿Hard and Soft Cover.
The history of the Shawnee is fascinating. Naturally the most famous Shawnee known would be Tecumseh, born circa 1768. But this series contains the descendants of Tecumseh and many famous chiefs and warriors along with their families. It starts with some fascinating materials covering not just the Shawnee but the Sac and Fox Nations. The first volumes concern the estates of these tribal members along with a mixture of other tribes within the Sac and Fox Agencies jurisdiction: Tribes such as the Absentee Shawnee, the Potawatomie, Winnebago, Mexican Kickapoo, Iowa, Otoe, and Pawnee, to name a few. You will find long sought after questions answered through Births, Deaths, Adoptions, and Guardianships. There will also be other records with Wills, Cemetery Records, Vital Statistics, Marriage, and Divorces later within this series. These materials are carefully transcribed from original documents that were rescued from a loft with a leaky roof. They were close to being lost forever from water damage. These logbooks and documents were boxed and stored in an attic where they kept vegetables in a building owned by the Sac and Fox Indian Agency. These books cover a range of time from 1885-1924. This series won't be your average genealogical census or typed payroll records with miscellaneous tribal expenditures. The majority of Volume IX in this series consists of the transcriptions of estates and Wills containing family members involved, their legal representatives, and ancillary parties, covering the period 1889-1924. There are approximately 1,025 individuals documented. Sources will be found giving estate locations, property values, fees, divisions of property, (land, structures, furniture, personal belongings, monies, etc.). Anyone examining these documents will find numerous family names, ages, relationship, sometimes death dates, along with any number of circumstances surrounding the estate. In addition to the Sac & Fox and Shawnee Tribes, additional tribes mentioned in this Volume are the Absentee Shawnee, Creek, Iowa, Kickapoo, Ottawa, Pottawatomie, Sac & Fox, Seminole, Shawnee, and Sioux (Yankton) tribes. These volumes were transcribed from Oklahoma Historical Society film rolls SFSA-50 to 53.¿
The history of the Shawnee is fascinating. Naturally the most famous Shawnee known would be Tecumseh, born circa 1768. But this series contains the descendants of Tecumseh and many famous chiefs and warriors along with their families. It starts with some fascinating materials covering not just the Shawnee but the Sac and Fox Nations. The first volumes concern the estates of these tribal members along with a mixture of other tribes within the Sac and Fox Agencies jurisdiction: Tribes such as the Absentee Shawnee, the Potawatomie, Winnebago, Mexican Kickapoo, Iowa, Otoe, and Pawnee, to name a few. You will find long sought after questions answered through Births, Deaths, Adoptions, and Guardianships. There will also be other records with Wills, Cemetery Records, Vital Statistics, Marriage, and Divorces later within this series. These materials are carefully transcribed from original documents that were rescued from a loft with a leaky roof. They were close to being lost forever from water damage. These logbooks and documents were boxed and stored in an attic where they kept vegetables in a building owned by the Sac and Fox Indian Agency. These books cover a range of time from 1885-1924. This series won't be your average genealogical census or typed payroll records with miscellaneous tribal expenditures. The majority of Volume VI in this series consists of the transcriptions of estates containing family members involved, their legal representatives, and ancillary parties, covering the period 1911-1918. There are approximately 1,176 individuals documented. Sources will be found giving estate locations, property values, fees, divisions of property, (land, structures, furniture, personal belongings, monies, etc.). Anyone examining these documents will find numerous family names, ages, relationship, sometimes death dates, along with any number of circumstances surrounding the estate. In addition to the Sac & Fox and Shawnee Tribes, additional tribes mentioned in this Volume are the Iowa, Kickapoo, Mexican Pottawatomie, Otoe, Pawnee, Pottawatomie and Santee (Sioux) Tribes. Also provided is a list of deceased Sac & Fox and Iowa Indians and their heirs. These volumes were transcribed from Oklahoma Historical Society film rolls SFSA-50 to 53.¿
The history of the Shawnee is fascinating. Naturally the most famous Shawnee known would be Tecumseh, born circa 1768. But this series contains the descendants of Tecumseh and many famous chiefs and warriors along with their families. It starts with some fascinating materials covering not just the Shawnee but the Sac and Fox Nations. The first volumes concern the estates of these tribal members along with a mixture of other tribes within the Sac and Fox Agencies jurisdiction: Tribes such as the Absentee Shawnee, the Potawatomie, Winnebago, Mexican Kickapoo, Iowa, Otoe, and Pawnee, to name a few. You will find long sought after questions answered through Births, Deaths, Adoptions, and Guardianships. There will also be other records with Wills, Cemetery Records, Vital Statistics, Marriage, and Divorces later within this series. These materials are carefully transcribed from original documents that were rescued from a loft with a leaky roof. They were close to being lost forever from water damage. These logbooks and documents were boxed and stored in an attic where they kept vegetables in a building owned by the Sac and Fox Indian Agency. These books cover a range of time from 1885-1924. This series won't be your average genealogical census or typed payroll records with miscellaneous tribal expenditures. The majority of Volume VII in this series consists of the transcriptions of estates containing family members involved, their legal representatives, and ancillary parties, covering the period 1911-1919. There are approximately 1,092 individuals documented. Sources will be found giving estate locations, property values, fees, divisions of property, (land, structures, furniture, personal belongings, monies, etc.). Anyone examining these documents will find numerous family names, ages, relationship, sometimes death dates, along with any number of circumstances surrounding the estate. In addition to the Sac & Fox and Shawnee Tribes, additional tribes mentioned in this Volume are the Absentee Shawnee, Arapaho, Caddo, Chippewa, Iowa, Mexican Kickapoo, Otoe, Pottawatomie, Sac & Fox, and Wichita Tribes. Also provided is a list of deceased Sac & Fox and Iowa Indians and their heirs. These volumes were transcribed from Oklahoma Historical Society film rolls SFSA-50 to 53.
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Ved å abonnere godtar du vår personvernerklæring.