The Winning of the West, Volume 4 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 354 pages of information about The Winning of the West, Volume 4.

The Winning of the West, Volume 4 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 354 pages of information about The Winning of the West, Volume 4.
    warfare with;
    the chief fact in early Tennessee history;
    typical character of these Tennessee wars;
    treachery of the Southern Indians;
    their peculiar warfare necessitates offensive returns;
    the divided state of the Creeks and Cherokees only increases the
      trouble of the settlers;
    extraordinary names among;
    Chickamaugas and Lower Cherokees as hostile as the Creeks;
    mixed war party beaten back from Buchanan’s Station;
    outrages,
    conflicts with militia,
    Creeks and Georgians;
    Indians and frontiersmen;
    mutual outrages;
    Chickasaws assail Creeks;
    are helped by frontiersmen;
    Creeks and Cherokees forced to make peace;
    outrages cease;
    Chickasaws and Spaniards;
    their war with Creeks;
    division among them;
    play into the hands of Spaniards;
    the Indians of the Far West. 
  Innes, Judge,
    lukewarm towards Federal Government;
    bad conduct of;
    honorable attitude towards slavery;
    assailed by Daveiss. 
  Irwin, Thomas, the packhorse-man. 
  Jackson, Andrew,
    wars on criminals;
    goes to Congress;
    relations with Burr. 
  Jay, John,
    wrath of Westerners at his treaty;
    its good effects;
    its effects on Pinckney’s treaty. 
  Jefferson,
    his intrigues against Washington;
    secretly aids the French;
    governmental inaptitude;
    his timidity;
    tries to buy Louisiana;
    tries to impress Napoleon;
    his vacillation;
    abandons his former theories;
    his ingratitude;
    Louisiana thrust upon him;
    his great services to science. 
  Jeffersonian Democracy,
    folly of;
    but the champion of the West. 
  Judicial officers, ride circuits. 
  Kenton, fight with Indians. 
  Kentucky,
    anger over Jay’s treaty;
    statehood;
    gentry of;
    handsome houses of gentry;
    they are lawyers, manufacturers;
    but more than all, large landowners;
    compared with Virginians;
    habits of life.
  Kentucky Gazette
  Knox, misunderstands Indian question. 
  Knoxville,
    founded;
    taverns at.
  Knoxville Gazette,
    Federalist and anti-Jacobin;
    no sympathy with Genet;
    pathetic advertisements in;
    Indian outrages;
    public address on wrongs of Tennesseeans. 
  La Chaise, French agent. 
  Lake Ports,
    centres for fur trade and Indian intrigue;
    British cling to;
    taken possession of by Americans. 
  Land companies,
    their connection with British and Spanish intrigues,
  Land sales, unwise system of. 
  Lasselle, Antoine, the Canadian. 
  Laussat, French Prefect. 
  Lewis, Meriwether,
    See William Clark. 
  Little Otter, Indian chief,
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The Winning of the West, Volume 4 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.