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se-quo-yah.pdf
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About Us
The American Revolution
Indian Removal
Overview
Approaches
Lesson Plans
Resources
"To the Cherokee Tribe of Indians" from Jackson
A Brief History and Description of Mashpee, Massachusetts
A Description of the Mashpee Revolt by William Apess
Cherokee Phoenix
Cherokee and Creek Indians
Claims arising under the Cherokee treaty
Congressional bill to remove Indians
Indian Populations, 1830
Land lottery map of Cherokee territory in Georgia
Letter from Ross defending the Cherokees’ right to their land
Letter from missionary about Cherokee religion
Manner of Instructing the Indians
Memorial of a Delegation of the Cherokee Nation of Indians
Memorial of the Cherokee Nation, December 1829
Petition by ladies in Steubenville, OH, against Indian removal
Petition by ladies in Steubenville, OH, against Indian removal
Se-quo-yah
South-west View of the Indian Church in Marshpee
Success of the “civilizing” project among the Cherokee
The Barnstable Journal Reports on the Mashpee Revolt
The Boston Courier Reports on the Mashpee Revolt
The Boston Daily Advocate Reports on the Mashpee “Revolt”
The Cherokee Indians Speak to the U.S. Government
The Cherokees’ Appeal
The Mashpee Indians Defend William Apess
The Mashpee Indians Lawyer Defends Their Cause
William Apess
Isaiah Thomas - Patriot Printer
Life in Antebellum America
Temperance Reform in the Early 19th Century
The Dred Scott Decision
The Kansas-Nebraska Act and Bleeding Kansas
The Second Great Awakening and the Age of Reform
War of 1812 and the Hartford Convention
Westward Expansion
In Development
Nineteenth-Century Immigration
The Civil War
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