| United States. President, James Daniel Richardson - United States - 1897 - 694 pages
...over the portion designated for its use. There they may be secured in the enjoyment of governments of their own choice, subject to no other control from...may be necessary to preserve peace on the frontier and between the several tribes. There the benevolent may endeavor to teach them the arts of civilization,... | |
| William MacDonald - United States - 1906 - 386 pages
...Mississippi for their permanent occupancy, where each tribe could have its own limits and its own government, "subject to no other control from the United States...may be necessary to preserve peace on the frontier and between the several tribes." Their emigration thither should be voluntary ; forcible removal would... | |
| Wilson Lumpkin - Cherokee Indians - 1907 - 712 pages
...over the portion designated for its use. There they may be secured in the enjoyments of Governments of their own choice, subject to no other control from...may be necessary to preserve peace on the frontier and between the several tribes. There the benevolent may endeavor to teach them the arts of civilization,... | |
| Marion Mills Miller - Civil rights - 1913 - 508 pages
...over the portion designated for its use. There they may be secured in the enjoyment of governments of their own choice, subject to no other control from...may be necessary to preserve peace on the frontier and between the several tribes. There the benevolent may endeavor to teach them the arts of civilization;... | |
| American Historical Association - Electronic journals - 1920 - 820 pages
...over the portion designated for its use. There they may be secured In the enjoyment of governments of their own choice, subject to no other control from...may be necessary to preserve peace on the frontier, and between the several tribes. There the benevolent may endeavor to teach them the arts of civilization;... | |
| Samuel Gordon Heiskell - Tennessee - 1920 - 798 pages
...over the portion designated for its use. There they may be secured in the enjoyment of governments of their own choice, subject to no other control from...may be necessary to preserve peace on the frontier and between the several tribes. There the benevolent may endeavor to teach them the arts of civilization,... | |
| Martin Van Buren - Presidents - 1920 - 828 pages
...secured in the enjoyment of governments of their own choice, subject to no other control from the t'nited States than such as may be necessary to preserve peace on the frontier, and between the several tribes. There the benevolent may endeavor to teach them the arts of civilization... | |
| Indians of North America - 1928 - 628 pages
...* * * There they may be secured in the enjoyments of governments of their own choice, subject to no control from the United States than such as may be necessary to preserve peace on the frontier and between the several tribes."' In compliance with this request and the urgent demands of citizens... | |
| George LaVerne Anderson, University of Kansas - History - 1971 - 328 pages
...the same way. In the West, he asserted, the Indians "may be secured in the enjoyment of governments of their own choice, subject to no other control from...may be necessary to preserve peace on the frontier and between the several tribes. There the benevolent may endeavor to teach them the arts of civilization,... | |
| Charles F. Wilkinson - History - 1987 - 244 pages
...tribal self-government in the new homelands. Thus he said that the Indians were to have "governments of their own choice, subject to no other control from...may be necessary to preserve peace on the frontier and between the several tribes."51 But whatever the motives and whenever the era, presidents, commissioners,... | |
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