The American Indian as Participant in the Civil War eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 459 pages of information about The American Indian as Participant in the Civil War.

The American Indian as Participant in the Civil War eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 459 pages of information about The American Indian as Participant in the Civil War.

Chicago Tribune:  75, footnote

Chickasaw Battalion:  152, 155; Tonkawas to furnish guides for, 184, footnote

Chickasaw Home Guards:  184, footnote

Chickasaw Legislature:  306, footnote, 329, footnote

Chickasaw Nation:  Pike arrested at Tishomingo, 200; funds drawn upon for support of John Ross and others, 215, footnote; Phillips communicates with governor, 323, footnote

Chickasaws:  discord within ranks, 29; attitude towards secession, 63, footnote; delegation of, and Creeks, and Kininola, 65, footnote; plundered by Osages and Comanches, 207, footnote; refugee, given temporary home, 213; dissatisfied with Cooper, 265, footnote; disperse, 323

Chiekies:  66, footnote

Chillicothe Band of Shawnees:  236, footnote

Chilton, W.P:  173, footnote

Chipman, N.P:  207, footnote

Chippewas:  212

Choctaw and Chickasaw Battalion:  25, 32

Choctaw Battalion:  152, 155

Choctaw Council:  considers Blunt’s proposals, 302; disposition towards neutrality, 306, footnote; Phillips sends communication to, 323, footnote

Choctaw Militia:  311-312, 312, footnote

Choctaw Nation:  Pike withdraws into, 110; Robert M. Jones, delegate from, in Congress, 299, footnote; proposed conscription within, 328

Choctaws:  discord bred by unscrupulous merchants, 29; attitude

towards secession, 63, footnote; refugee, given temporary home, 213; waver in allegiance to South, 220; sounded by Phillips, 254; little recruiting possible while Fort Smith is in Confederate hands, 258-259; Steele entrusts recruiting to Tandy Walker, 265; no tribe so completely secessionist as, 290; protest against failure to supply with arms and ammunition, 301; proposals from Blunt known to have reached, 302; cotton, 308-309, footnote; bestir themselves as in first days of war, 311; principal chief opposes projects of Armstrong Academy council, 321; want confederacy separate and distinct from Southern, 321, footnote; do excellent service in Camden campaign, 326

Choo-Loo-Foe-Lop-Hah Choe:  talk, 68, footnote; signature, 69, footnote

Chouteau’s Trading House:  329, footnote

Christie:  305, footnote

Chustenahlah (Okla.):  79

Cincinnati (Ark.):  28, 35

Cincinnati Gazette:  58, footnote, 88, footnote

Clarimore:  238, footnote

Clark, Charles T:  82, footnote

Clark, George W:  158 and footnote

Clark, Sidney:  104, footnote

Clarke, G.W:  22

Clarkson, J.J:  assigned to supreme command in northern part of Indian Territory, 129-130; applies for permission to intercept trains on Santa Fe road, 129, footnote; at Locust Grove, 131; surprised in camp, 131, footnote; made prisoner, 132; Pike’s reference to, 158; placed in Cherokee country, 159, footnote

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The American Indian as Participant in the Civil War from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.