Essays on the Present Crisis in the Condition of the American Indians: First Published in the National IntelligencerT. Kite, 1830 - 116 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 15
Seite 20
... living in communities , were not subject to the laws of the United States ; and that they had rights and interests distinct from the rights and interests of the people of the United States , and , in the fullest sense , public and ...
... living in communities , were not subject to the laws of the United States ; and that they had rights and interests distinct from the rights and interests of the people of the United States , and , in the fullest sense , public and ...
Seite 21
... living under its own laws . A nation may be a power of the first , second , third , or tenth rate . It may be very feeble , and totally incompetent to defend its own rights . But so long as it has distinct rights and interests , and ...
... living under its own laws . A nation may be a power of the first , second , third , or tenth rate . It may be very feeble , and totally incompetent to defend its own rights . But so long as it has distinct rights and interests , and ...
Seite 22
... living under its own laws , is of equal forcé with the word nation ; and in this sense it is to be taken , wherever it occurs , in the course of my remarks . But the Cherokee nation had been divided , from time imme- morial , into seven ...
... living under its own laws , is of equal forcé with the word nation ; and in this sense it is to be taken , wherever it occurs , in the course of my remarks . But the Cherokee nation had been divided , from time imme- morial , into seven ...
Seite 23
... living , " as they express it , " within the limits of a sovereign and independent State . " Thus , according to the present doctrine , General Washington and his advisers made a solemn compact , which they called a treaty , with cer ...
... living , " as they express it , " within the limits of a sovereign and independent State . " Thus , according to the present doctrine , General Washington and his advisers made a solemn compact , which they called a treaty , with cer ...
Seite 32
... living witnesses , and by public archives , to have tended invariably to this one point - that the Cherokees were to retain the unimpaired sovereignty of their country ; and that to enable them to do this permanently , and in the most ...
... living witnesses , and by public archives , to have tended invariably to this one point - that the Cherokees were to retain the unimpaired sovereignty of their country ; and that to enable them to do this permanently , and in the most ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acknowledged admitted agree binding bound boundary ceded cession character chartered limits Chero Cherokee chiefs Cherokee country Cherokee nation Chickasaws chiefs and warriors Choctaws citizens civilized claim colony commissioners compact of 1802 Congress consent constitution Court declared dians doctrine engagements European executed extinguished faith Georgia Governor granted guaranty independent Indian title individuals inhabitants jurisdiction justice kees king king of England lands law of nations legislature legislature of Georgia M'Intosh manner ment Mississippi nation of Indians negotiated never occupancy Oglethorpe parties peace and friendship peaceable possession preamble present principles proclamation protection punishment ratified by President regard relinquishment remain remove respect Secretary Secretary of War seisin settlements settlers six nations soil solemn South Carolina sovereignty stipulations Tennessee territory tion tract treaty of Holston treaty of Hopewell treaty of Tellico TREATY OF WASHINGTON treaty-making power tribes of Indians United Washington whites William Blount words