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...
Indian chief and Presbyterian minister. Session minutes (1886-1900) of the Tali Hekia Presbyterian Church, Blue County, Indian Territory; Sunday school attendance records (1925-1926) of the Presbyterian church, Wapanucka, Oklahoma; typescripts of...
Diary 1842-1857 1 item Missionary. A typescript of a diary (1842-1857) kept by the wife of John B. Lilley, a Presbyterian missionary to the Seminole Nation. The diary describes the Lilley' arrival among the Seminoles, the hardships of living in...
Collector. Typescripts of correspondence (1816-1870), mostly regarding missionary work among the Choctaw and Cherokee Indians; diaries (1914) recounting travel in the eastern United States and in the Galena, Kansas, area; a students notebook (n.d.)...
Bill No. 31. A memorial to the Congress of the U.S. in regard to the Goodland Presbyterian Missionary. Passed Senate and House November 23, 1905. Approved November 24, 1905.
A typescript of Ramsay's autobiography (ca. 1890) in which he relates his education and experiences as a Presbyterian missionary among the Seminoles, hardships during the Civil War, and accounts of medical treatment.
A typescript of a diary (1842-1857) kept by the wife of John B. Lilley, a Presbyterian missionary to the Seminole Nation. The diary describes the Lilleys' arrival among the Seminoles, the hardships of living in Indian Territory, problems with...
A resolution requesting the U.S. Government provide funds for a missionary school, 1858.</br></br>An act defining the crime and punishment of libel and slander, 1858.</br></br>An act defining the crime and punishment of...
A proposed act to permit Rev. Samuel P. Keam to be a Missionary in the Choctaw Nation. Passed House November 11, 1889. Passed Senate and approved November 12, 1889.
A proposed act of October 14, 1889, to allow Rev. A.B. Johnson to live and labor within the limits of the Choctaw Nation Missionary. Passed House October 16, 1889. Passed Senate and approved October 17, 1889.