[364] Ibid., pp. 144, 146. [↑]
[365] Thrall, Texas, pp. 116–168, 1876. [↑]
[366] Bonnell, op. cit., pp. 146–150; Thrall, op. cit., pp. 118–120. [↑]
[367] Author’s personal information from J. D. Wafford and other old western Cherokee, and recent Cherokee delegates; by some this is said to have been a Mexican patent, but it is probably the one given by Texas. See ante, p. 143. [↑]
[368] Thrall, Texas, p. 120, 1876. [↑]
[369] Author’s personal information from Mexican and Cherokee sources. [↑]
[370] W. A. Phillips, Sequoyah, in Harper’s Magazine, September, 1870; Foster, Sequoyah, 1885; Royce, Cherokee Nation, Fifth Ann. Rep. Bureau of Ethnology, p. 302, 1888; letter of William P. Ross, former editor of Cherokee Advocate, March 11, 1889, in archives of Bureau of American Ethnology; Cherokee Advocate, October 19, 1844, November 2, 1844, and March 6, 1845; author’s personal information. San Fernando seems to have been a small village in Chihuahua, but is not shown on the maps. [↑]
[371] For full discussion see Royce, op. cit., pp. 298–312. [↑]
[372] Pilling, Bibliography of the Iroquoian Languages (bulletin of the Bureau of Ethnology), p. 174, 1888. [↑]
[373] See treaties with Cherokee, October 7, 1861, and with other tribes, in Confederate States Statutes at Large, 1864; Royce, op. cit., pp. 324–328; Greeley, American Conflict, II, pp. 30–34, 1866; Reports of Indian Commissioner for 1860 to 1862. [↑]