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INDEX MUSKOGEE HISTORY VOLUME I

 

Abolition of slavery by Cherokees  203
Act of Emancipation (Cherokee) 204
Act of June ,   398
Act of Union between Eastern and Western Cherokees    522
Adair County  543
Adair, James   543
Adair William  173
Address of Chief Pleasant Porter   67
Address of Chief Wm  Ross at Muskogee Fair, in     239
Address of Chief Wm  Ross on treaty of    239
Afton   685
Agriculture, Mayes County   564
Alabama protests against U  S  interference 31
Allotment of Indian lands   161
Alluwe   655
An Indian agent’s report   121
Another agent’s statement   123
Anti-Treaty faction (party)   96
Are Indians increasing or decreasing in numbers ?   222
Areas-see various counties  
Articles of Agreement, Cherokees-Delaware 97
Articles of Incorporation, Keetoowah Society   211
Athletic park grandstand seats    422
Attitude toward dissolution of tribal governments   156
B  
‘Beware of the Mott suits”    168
“Babes in Toyland” opens Hinton Baby Clinic, The  Opera House   414
Bacone University   462
Bank deposits, Muskogee banks   455
Banks 425-429
Banks of Washington County    613
Banks organized   429
Bartlesville Smelters    629
Bartlesville, County Seat  614
Bedouin Temple Mystic Shrine  435
Bennett Dr  Leo E     379
Bennett Joe H    201
Bernice    561
Bixby appointed permanent chairman    160
Bixby Tams    297
Blind School State    465
Boarding Schools    275
Bonnell Dr  A  E   365
Boundaries-see various counties  
Boyce’s history of the Cherokees   205
Boynton      485
Braggs     486
Brewer Dr  Theo  F   347
Buffington Thomas M     288
Bureau of Mines Petroleum Station    626
Bushyhead Dennis W      197, 202, 237
Bushyhead Jesse     287
Byrne Patrick J    352
C  
Callahan Dr  J     357
Catholic Schools   457
Cause of bitter feeling and litigation   328
Cement, Portland   255
Central State Bank   426
Chamber of Commerce Muskogee   438
Charges of bribery against signers   16
Checotah   501
Chelsea   606
Cherokee Advocate, The   201
Cherokee Baptism   11
Cherokee Chiefs,   - 526
Cherokee Constitution   42
Cherokee County   519
Cherokee High School for Negroes   271
Cherokee History, A sketch of   191
Cherokee Orphan Asylum   586
Cherokee Treaties   45
Cherokees abolish slavery   203
Cherokees divided politically   528
Cherokees in South Carolina   28
Cherokees most advanced   267
Cherokees will adopt customs of old tribal days   312
Chief John Ross   191
Chief John Ross Message   57
Chiefs of Cherokee Nation portraits   193
Cholera was raging at New Orleans   89
Churches of Haskell   484
Churches of Pryor   581
Churches see under towns  
City of Nowata   636
City Schools, Bartlesville   622
City Schools, Claremore   598
Civic League of Women Voters   442
Civitan Club, The   442
Claremore   497
Claremore’s radium wells   601
Claremore Churches   601
Claremore Mound   590
Claremore Progress, The   597
Clay and Shale   251
Clay to Secretary of War  34
Climate, The   234
Clubs, lodges, etc, see under towns  
Coffin scores the military   138
Collamore’s report   129
Commerce, Pryor   381
Commercial Bank of Muskogee   425
Commercial Club, Pryor   582
Commercial Clubs, see under towns  
Commercial National Bank, The   425
Commission to five civilized tribes   141
Compact between Cherokee, Creek and Osage tribes   212
Conceives idea of Cherokee alphabet     198
Conclusion   656
Condition without parallel   398
Congress abolishes tribal courts  186
Constitution of Muskogee or Creek Nation   185
Cost of Emigration to Indian Territory  87
Cost of various school buildings   450
Council following death of John Boss    67
Country Club at Bartlesville   621
Coweta   515
Coweta Mission   275
Craig County   657
Creek  Manifesto vs Dawes Commission  314
Creek constitution and laws   185
Creek fish fry     177
Creek nation of   Indians   71
Creek Schools   271
Creek treaties and history   71
Creeks as Federal Agents   91
Curfew at Bartlesville   617
Curtis Act, The   401
D  
D  A  R, Muskogee Indian Chapter  445
Daily Phoenix on County Court’s work  429
Davis Jefferson