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93 From John B. Luce (Moores Rocks, Arkansas). To Peter P. Pitchlynn. Dated May 31, 1857. Re: sentencing of Leonidas and Lycurgus to three years in prison and his attempts to get the $5,000 bail. 94 From Lycurgus Pitchlynn. To Peter P. Pitchlynn. Dated June 1857. Re: his need for bail money to avoid prison and the betrayal by Walker and John B. Luce. 95 From Loring S.W. Folsom (Lukfata, C.N.). To Peter P. Pitchlynn. Dated June 2, 1857. Re: his attempts to raise money for Pitchlynn's sons and list of candidates and their nominators for governor. 96 From Lycurgus Pitchlynn (Van Buren, Arkansas). To Peter P. Pitchlynn. Dated June 17, 1857. Re: description of the jail and his disappointment that his father is not putting up the money toward their release. 97 From Lycurgus Pitchlynn. To Peter P. Pitchlynn. Dated June 19, 1857. Re: his fear of prison and his request that his father put up their bail money and/or come to Van Buren to work for their pardon. 98 From Thompson McKenney. To Peter P. Pitchlynn. Dated June 24, 1857. Re: his attempts to get a petition for the pardon of Lycurgus and Leonidas Pitchlynn. 99 From Sampson Folsom and James Gamble (Washington, D.C.). To James Buchanan. Dated June 29, 1857. Copy. Re: petition of pardon the Pitchlynn brothers; gives a description of the assault. 100 From Lycurgus Pitchlynn. To Peter P. Pitchlynn. Dated July 7, 1857. Re: urging him to get him out of jail by September in order to prepare for the General Council meeting.
Object Description
Collection | Pitchlynn, Peter Perkins (1806-1881) |
Tribe | Choctaw |
Description | Indian chief. Correspondence (1824-1881) of Pitchlynn with prominent citizens and family members in the Choctaw Nation regarding events and troubles within the nation; Pitchlynn's personal journals (1815); Pitchlynn's diary (1828-1832); official reports (1825-1841) of the Choctaw Academy and Missionary Station in Kentucky; and Pitchlynn family records (1806-1867). The collection also includes a signed copy of the articles of surrender and peace negotiated between the Choctaw Nation and the United States at the close of the Civil War, and extensive correspondence reflecting the state of the Choctaw Nation just prior to, and during the Civil War years, with special regard to slavery. |
Date | 1815-1888 |
Is Part of | Native American Manuscripts Collection |
Special Collection | Western History Collections |
Rights | University of Oklahoma Libraries Western History Collections |
Language | English |
Type | Text |
Format |
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