[1454] The long contested case of the Cherokees v. Georgia brought out much material. Cf. Vol. VII. p. 322, and Poole’s Index, p. 225. There is a somewhat curious presentation of the Cherokee mind in the address of Dewi Brown in the Mass. Hist. Soc. Proc., xii. 30.
[1455] The histories of the Creek war give some material. See Vol. VII. and Harrison’s Life of John Howard Payne, ch. 4. Cf. Poole’s Index, p. 314.
[1456] Cf. Poole’s Index.
[1457] See Vol. VII.
[1458] Cf. Claiborne’s Mississippi, i.; Brinton in Hist. Mag., 2d ser., vol. i. p. 16; and E. L. Berthoud’s Natchez Indians (Golden, 1886), a pamphlet.
[1459] Vol. V. p. 68. Cf. also an abridged memoir of the missions in Louisiana by Father Francis Watrin, Jesuit, 1764-65, in Mag. West. Hist., Feb., 1885, p. 265; the Travels into Arkansa territory, 1819, by Thomas Nuttall (Philad., 1821), for other accounts of the aboriginal inhabitants of the banks of the Mississippi; the History of Kansas (Chicago, 1883), p. 58; and the Proceedings of the Kansas Hist. Society.
[1460] Cf. Vol. IV. p. 298; and C. W. Butterfield in the Mag. West. Hist., Feb., 1887; and on the Indian occupation of Ohio, Ibid., Nov., 1884. David Jones’ Two Visits, 1772-73, concerns the Ohio Indians. Our Vol. V. covers this region during the French wars. J. R. Dodge’s Red Man of the Ohio Valley, 1650-1795 (Springfield, O., 1860), is a popular book.
[1461] Hist. Mag., x. (Jan., 1866).
[1462] Mag. West. Hist., ii. 38.
[1463] Hist. Writings, 1887.