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11 From Jacob Folsom. To Peter P. Pitchlynn. Dated Jan. 19, 1858. Re: disagreement with an editorial stating that the Choctaws are advancing in education and self-government, and the reasons for disagreeing. 12 From Lycurgus P. Pitchlynn. To Peter P. Pitchlynn. Dated Jan. 22, 1858. Re: murders of various people. 13 From Lycurgus P. Pitchlynn. To Peter P. Pitchlynn. Dated Feb. 2, 1858. Re: their intense poverty, and a plea for a coat. 14 From Peter P. Pitchlynn (Washington, D.C.). To Israel Folsom. Dated Feb. 15, 1858. Re: Choctaw delegates in Washington. 15 From George Hudson (Eagle County, C.N.). To Peter P. Pitchlynn. Dated Feb. 23, 1858. Re: total lawlessness in the Nation, the resignation of the Governor, and the root cause of the killing being disagreement on the new Constitution. 16 From Joseph Dukes. To Peter P. Pitchlynn. Dated March 5, 1858. Re: the meeting of Towson County to try and restore peace and order, the decision there to abide by the Constitution of 1850 until further legal action occurred; revival of the three-chief system; majority opposition to the new constitution. 17 From Sampson Folsom (Doaksville, C.N.). To Peter P. Pitchlynn. Dated March 15, 1858. Re: Chickasaw affairs. 18 From Lycurgus P. Pitchlynn. To Peter P. Pitchlynn. Dated March 22, 1858. Re: tornado which struck; the impending constitutional convention, and the support of the people for it; the distrust of “half-breeds by full-breeds,” the rumor that the missionaries are at the head of the opposition to the new constitution.
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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