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Choctaw exactIndians in subject [X]
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MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1747-1948
Abstract:  

A listing of miscellaneous manuscript maps that are not associated with any particular collections.
Call #:  
Misc.Maps
Extent:
100 item(s)



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1972-1973
Abstract:  

Mississippi Choctaw texts including anecdotes; descriptions of insects; descriptions of illustrations in children's books; etc.
Call #:  
Mss.Rec.97
Extent:
2 reel(s)



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1787-1862
Abstract:  

In this dissertation Berkhofer compares and contrasts the differing missionary activities of Quakers, Moravians, Congregationalists, Presbyterians, Baptists, and Methodists, to reactions among the Oneida, Seneca, Cherokee, Choctaw, Ojibwa, Sioux, Ottawa, and Nez Percé Indians.
Call #:  
Mss.Film.1157
Extent:
1 microfilm_reel(s)



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1817-1883
Abstract:  

These papers include letters, reports, accounts, and memoranda relating to the work of the American Board of Home Missions among the Abnaki, Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek, Dakota, Mackinaw, Maumee, Mayhaw, Ojibwa, Osage, Pawnee, Penobscot, Sioux, and Stockbridge Indians of Arkansas, New York, and Oregon.
Call #:  
Mss.Film.1223
Extent:
64 microfilm_reel(s)



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1769, 1772
Abstract:  

Between 1764 and 1781, the Scots surveyor George Gauld was assigned by the British Admirality to chart the waters of the Gulf Coast off British West Florida, an area that extended from New Orleans to the modern-day Florida. In 1773, Gauld submitted some of his findings to the APS, probably in hopes of having them published in the Transactions, and although these were not published, they became one of the first mansucripts entered into the Society's collections. Contains occasional brief references to Native peoples of the areas described. The Gauld manuscript also includes an extract of a letter from John Lorimer to Gauld, 1772, and a sketch of the Middle and Yellow Rivers of West Florida by Thomas Hutchins. When it was received at the APS, it was endorsed: "This long uninteresting Paper can hardly obtain a Place in the Transactions of a Philosophical Society. It should however be preserved in the Files for the Use of Historians or map makers."
Call #:  
Mss.917.59.G23
Extent:
1 volume(s)



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1949-1961
Abstract:  

This collection pertains principally to the Cherokees of North Carolina and Oklahoma and to their language, ethnography, folklore, archeology, history, music, etc. Includes Indian studies and correspondence by Gillespie, notes on Indian dances and linguistics, bibliographies, publications of the Archaeological Society of Brigham Young University, and newspaper clippings. Also comprised of materials on: Apache, Calusa, Chippewa, Choctaw, Delaware, Eskimo, Fox, Iroquois, Karankawa, Kuchin, Louchens, Mattaponi, Muskogee, Navajo, Onondaga, Pueblo, Sauk, Seminole, Seneca, Shawnee, Sioux, Slave, Timucua, Tuscarora, Tutelo, and Wyandot. Contains: Gillespie, "A grammar of western dialect of Cherokee language of the Iroquoian family," 1949-1954 (131 pages); "Miscellaneous material on the Cherokee Indians and language"; "Miscellaneous items pertaining to the American Indian."
Call #:  
Mss.497.3.G41
Extent:
1 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
Circa 1803
Abstract:  

This item is a detailed description of the geography, population, natural resources, and agriculture of the Ouachita River area of the Louisiana Territory. Describes mounds; mentions Cataoulou Indians; also gives figures as to numbers of white and Indian hunters. These pages are a record of travel on a road built between Choctaw and Chickasaw country, with comments on the condition of Indian-white relations, the increase in white population, and Wilson's stay, at Muscle Shoals, with Cherokee chiefs Doublehead and Skiowska. Wilson finds the Indians have good farms, furnishings, fences, and stock, and one Indian runs an inn.
Call #:  
Mss.917.6.Ex7
Extent:
1 volume(s)



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1796-1809
Abstract:  

Though less well known than their peers Lewis and Clark, William Dunbar and George Hunter played an important role in the early scientific exploration of the Louisiana Purchase. While the original goal of organizing a southern counterpart to the Corps of Discovery proved overly ambitious, Dunbar and Hunter provided important geographic information for future explorations and gave the first scientific description of the Hot Springs of Arkansas and Ouachita Mountains. The four surviving journals of George Hunter provide engaging accounts of travel in the Ohio and Mississippi Valley in 1796, 1802, and 1809, and include the most interesting record of the expedition to the Hot Springs of Arkansas in 1804-1805, complete with his detailed notes on natural history and meteorology. The volumes also contain various references to relations with the Delaware, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Cherokee, and Osage Indians. The APS owns a contemporary copy of Hunter's journal ("Journal up the Red and Washita Rivers with William Dunbar"; Mss.917.6.Ex7), from which extracts were printed in Thomas Jefferson, Message... Communicating Discoveries Made in Exploring the Missouri (New York, 1806), and which is described by Isaac J. Cox, "An Early Explorer of the Louisiana Purchase," APS Library Bulletin 1946: 73. The journals were edited by John F. McDermott and published in APS Transactions 53 (1963).
Call #:  
Mss.B.H912
Extent:
0.25 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1743-1990
Abstract:  

Founded in 1743 by Benjamin Franklin, the American Philosophical Society was the first learned society in the United States. For over 250 years, the Society has played an important role in American cultural and intellectual life. Until the mid-nineteenth century, the Society fulfilled the role of a national academy of science, national library and museum, and even patent office. Early members of the Society included Thomas Jefferson, David Rittenhouse, Benjamin Rush, Stephen Peter Du Ponceau, George Washington, and many other figures prominent in American history. The Archives of the American Philosophical Society consists of 192.25 linear feet of material, organized into thirteen record groups dating back to 1743. The Society's archives extensively documents not only the organization's historical development but also its role in American history and the history of science and technology.
Call #:  
APS.Archives
Extent:
192.25 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1783-1817
Abstract:  

A physician, natural historian, and professor at the University of Pennsylvania, Benjamin Smith Barton (1766-1815) was one of the central figures in Philadelphia's early national scientific establishment. Having received his medical training in European universities, Barton was appointed Professor at the University of Pennsylvania in 1789, lecturing on botany, materia medica, natural history. A prolific author, he established his reputation as one of the nation's preeminent botanists through his botanical text book The Elements of Botany (1803), but his contribtions to zoology, ethnology, and medicine were equally noteworthy. Barton's monograph on the "fascinating faculty" of the rattlesnake and his efforts in historical linguistics (New Views of the Origin of the Tribes and Nations of America, 1798) were widely read, and his Philadelphia Medical and Physical Journal (1804-1809) was one of the nation's first medical journals and an important outlet for natural historical research. The Barton Papers offer a comprehensive view of the professional work of Benjamin Smith Barton from the time of his return to the United States in 1789 until his death. The collection is divided into five series: Correspondence, Subject Files, Bound Volumes, Graphic Materials, and Printing Plates. The collection includes a particularly valuable series of botanical, medical, and natural historical drawings collected by Barton for research, reference, and publication. Among the many artists represented are William Bartram, Frederick Pursh, Pierre Turpin, and Benjamin Henry Latrobe.
Call #:  
Mss.B.B284d
Extent:
10 Linear feet
Subjects:  

Art | Barton, Benjamin Smith, 1766-1815 | Bartram's Garden (Philadelphia, Pa.) | Bartram, John, 1699-1777 | Blanchard, Jean-Pierre, 1753-1809 | Botanists | Botany -- Study and teaching -- 19th century | Botany -- Virginia | Buffalo (N.Y.) -- Description and travel | Business and Skilled Trades | Chemistry -- 18th century | Cherokee Indians | Cherokee language | Choctaw Indians | Diaries. | Drawings. | Dysentery. | Education | Electricity -- 18th century | Engravings. | Ethnobotany | Family Correspondence | General Correspondence | Geology -- 18th century | Gout | Harden, Jane LeConte | Hopkins, John Henry, 1792-1868 -- pictorial works | Hudson River (N.Y.) -- Description and travel -- 18th century | Indians of North America | Indians of North America -- Agriculture | Indians of North America -- Languages | Kaigana Indians | Kaskaskia Indians | Language Material | Language and Linguistics | Literature, Arts, and Culture | Mammals -- Classification | Mandan Indians | Mastodons | Materia medica | Medicine | Medicine -- Practice -- 18th century | Medicine -- Study and teaching -- 18th century | Meteorology -- United States -- 18th century | Meteors | Mineralogy | Native America | Natural history | Natural history -- 18th century | Natural history -- 19th century | New Jersey -- Description and travel -- 18th century | New York (State) -- Description and travel -- 18th century | Niagara Falls (N.Y. and Ont.) -- Description and travel | Notebooks | Osage language | Pennsylvania -- Description and travel -- 18th century | Physicians -- Pennsylvania -- Philadelphia | Physics | Political Correspondence | Printing and Publishing | Printing plates | Rittenhouse, David, 1732-1796 | Science and technology | Seminole Indians | Seneca | Sketchbooks | Sketches. | Tlaxcala (Mexico) | Travel | Travel Narratives and Journals | Turpin, P. J. F. (Pierre Jean François), 1775-1840 | Tuscarora Indians | University of Pennsylvania -- Faculty | Venereal disease | Virginia -- Description and travel -- 18th century | Watercolors | Yellow fever | Yellow fever -- Pennsylvania -- Philadelphia -- 1793 | Zoology -- 18th century



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1862-1942
Abstract:  

This is part of the large inventory for the Franz Boas Papers (Mss B B61). For complete information concerning this collection, please view the Collection Description .
Call #:  
Mss.B.B61.inventory12
Extent:
1 section
Subjects:  

Acoma | Alabama Indians | Algonquian languages | Archaeology | Atakapa language | Athabaskan languages | Athapascan Indians | Athapascan languages | Avoyel Indians | Bannock Indians | Bella Coola Indians | Boas, Franz, 1858-1942 | Caddoan languages | Cahuilla Indians | Catawba Indians | Chickasaw Indians | Chinook jargon | Chinookan languages | Chitimacha language | Choctaw Indians | Chukchi | Clatsop Indians | Coahuiltecan Indians | Comanche Indians | Comecrudo language | Cotoname language | Creek Indians | Crow Indians | Dakota Indians | Delaware Indians | Dhegiha language | Fox Indians | Galice language | Gitksan Indians | Great Basin Indians | Haida Indians | Haida language | Hitchiti language | Hokan-Coahuiltecan languages | Hupa Indians | Hupa language | Indians of North America -- California | Inuit | Isleta Indians | Kalapuya language | Karankawa Indians | Karok language | Karuk language | Kathlamet language | Kitsai language | Klamath Indians | Koasati Indians | Koasati language | Kwakiutl Indians | Kwakwaka'wakw | Kwalhioqua-Clatskanie language | Lakota Indians | Lakota language | Lillooet language | Lipan Apache language | Mandan Indians | Meskwaki language | Mikasuki Indians | Mohegan language | Muskogean languages | Natchez Indians | Natchez language | Navajo Indians | Niska Indians | Nootka Indians | Northern Paiute Indians -- Folklore | Nuu-chah-nulth | Ofo language | Ojibwa Indians | Ojibwe people | Omaha Indians | Osage Indians | Paiute language | Pakawan languages | Pascagoula Indians | Pawnee Indians | Penutian languages | Peyotism | Pomo language | Ponca Indians | Quapaw language | Quiché language | Quileute Indians | Quinault Indians | Salish Indians | Salishan languages | Serrano Indians | Shahaptian languages | Shasta language | Siouan languages | Sound recordings | Taensa Indians | Takelma language | Timucua Indians | Tlakluit language | Tlingit Indians | Tonkawa Indians | Tonkawa language | Tsimshian Indians | Tunica Indians | Tunica language | Tutelo language | Ute Indians | Wakashan language | Wasco language | Wichita language | Winnebago Indians | Wishram language | Yakama language | Yana language | Yaqui Indians | Yavapai Indians | Yuchi Indians | Yuchi language



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
Circa 1910-1996
Abstract:  

The Mary Rosamond Haas papers are extensive, including correspondence, research notes, field notes, texts, lexical slip files, audio recordings, photographs, reprints and more, covering more than 100 languages of North America and Southeast Asia. Of particular value are notes and audio recordings from fieldwork from the 1930s on Ditidaht, Tunica, Natchez and Muscogee, work toward pedagogical materials for Thai, and groundbreaking comparative studies of several language families of North America.
Call #:  
Mss.Ms.Coll.94
Extent:
95 Linear feet
Subjects:  

Abenaki language | Achumawi language | Alabama language | Algonquian languages | Anthropological linguistics -- America. | Anthropology | Apalachee language | Arapaho language | Atakapa language | Atayal language | Athapascan languages | Atikamekw language | Aymara language | Baptists -- Oklahoma | Beothuk language | Berkeley (Calif.) | Biloxi language | Blackfoot language | Brighton Reservation (Fla.) | Burmese language | Cahuilla language | California | Catawba language | Central Yupik language | Chehalis language | Cherokee Indians | Cherokee language | Chevak Cup'ik language | Cheyenne language | Chickasaw Indians | Chickasaw language | Chief Peter | Chimariko language | Chipewyan language | Chitimacha language | Choctaw Indians | Choctaw language | Cocopa language | Comanche language | Comecrudo language | Correspondence. | Cree language | Creek Indians | Creek Indians -- Oklahoma -- Religion | Creek language | Crow language | Dakota language | Dane-zaa language | Deg Xitan language | Del Norte County (Calif.) | Delaware language | Dictionaries. | Ditidaht Indians | Ditidaht language | Ethnographic texts | Ethnography | Ethnomusicology | Eyak language | Fiddle tunes | Gelatin silver prints | Gore (Okla.) | Gwich'in language | Haas, Mary R. (Mary Rosamond), 1910-1996 | Halkomelem language | Harjo, Alice | Harrington, John Peabody | Hidatsa language | Highland Chontal language | Hill, James | Hitchiti language | Hollywood Indian Reservation (Fla.) | Hoopa (Calif.) | Huave language | Hunting songs | Hupa Indians -- Folklore | Hupa Indians -- Medicine | Hupa Indians -- Music | Hupa Indians -- Religion | Hupa Indians -- Social life and customs | Hupa language | Hymns | Illinois language | Incas. | Indians of North America -- British Columbia | Indians of North America -- Oklahoma | Indians of North America -- Oklahoma -- Languages | Kalapuya language | Karankawa language | Karok language | Karuk language | Kickapoo language | Kiliwa language | Kiowa Apache language | Klamath language | Koasati Indians | Koasati language | Konawa (Okla.) | Kumeyaay language | Kuna language | Kutenai language | Kwakiutl Indians | Lakota language | Language and languages | Latin language | Lectures. | Linguistic texts | Linguistics. | Love songs | Luiseno language | Lullabies | Lushootseed | Maidu language | Makah language | Maps. | Maya Indians | Menominee language | Miami language (Ind. and Okla.) | Michif language | Micmac language | Mikasuki language | Miwok language | Mobilian trade language | Molala language | Munsee language | Muskogean languages | Muskogee Indians -- Folklore | Muskogee language | Natchez Indians | Natchez Indians -- Folklore | Natchez Indians -- Music | Natchez Indians -- Rites and ceremonies | Natchez language | Navajo language | Nitinat language | Nootka Indians | Nootka language | Northern Paiute language | Northwest Coast Indians | Nuu-chah-nulth | Nuu-chah-nulth language | Ofo language | Ojibwa language | Oklahoma | Oneida language | Orleans (Calif.) | Osage language | Paiute language | Patwin language | Pawnee language | Penobscot language | Photographs | Photographs. | Photomechanical prints | Plains Indians | Pomo language | Potawatomi language | Pueblo Indians | Quapaw language | Quechua language | Quileute language | Research notes. | Rumsen language | S'gaw Karen language | Salinan language | Salishan languages | Sarsi language | Seminole Indians | Seminole Indians -- History | Seminole Indians -- Music | Seminole Indians -- Oklahoma -- Religion | Seminole Indians -- Politics and government | Seminole Indians -- Social life and customs | Seminole language | Shasta language | Shawnee language | Siouan languages | Siouan languages -- Mutual intelligibility | Slavic languages | Sound recordings | Spanish language | Sulphur, Alex | Sulphur, Fannie | Takelma language | Tanana language | Taos language | Thai language | Timucua language | Tlingit language | Tol language | Tonkawa language | Tunica Indians | Tunica language | Tutelo language | United States. Congress. Senate. Select Committee on Presidential Campaign Activities. | Upper Tanana language -- Glossaries, vocabularies, etc. | Uto-Aztecan languages | Vietnamese language | Wappo language | Watergate Affair, 1972-1974 | Western Apache language | Winnebago language | Wintu language | Wintun languages | Wiyot language | Wiyot-Yorok | Yana language | Yokuts language | Youchigant, Sesostrie | Yuchi language | Yuki language | Yurok Indians -- Folklore | Yurok Indians -- Music | Yurok language | Zuni language



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1605-2022
Abstract:  

The Phillips Fund Collection consists of materials submitted to the APS by recipients of grants from its Phillips Fund for Native American Research. The materials vary in scope, ranging from linguistics to ethnography, musicology, religion, ethnobotany, and ethnohistory, and including studies of Indigenous peoples of Canada, the United States, and Mexico. Materials in this collection include brief project reports, dissertations, published and unpublished manuscripts, dictionaries and vocabularies, field notes, and audiovisual materials.
Call #:  
Mss.497.3.Am4
Extent:
27.5 Linear feet
Subjects:  

Aaniiih (language) | Acjachemen Nation | Acoma dialect | Acoma language | African Americans | Akimel O'odham language | Alabama Indians | Alabama Indians -- History | Alaska -- History | Aleut language | Aleuts | Aleuts -- History | Algonquian Indians | Algonquian Indians -- Social life and customs | Algonquian languages | Algonquin language | Anishinaabe | Anthropology -- History | Anthropology -- United States -- History. | Apache Indians | Apache Indians -- Music | Arapaho | Arapaho Indians -- Music | Arapaho Indians -- Wyoming | Arapaho dance | Arapaho language | Arapaho language -- Verbs | Archaeology -- Greenland | Archaeology -- Pennsylvania | Arikara Indians | Assiniboine Indians | Assiniboine Indians -- Folklore | Assiniboine Indians -- History | Assiniboine Indians -- Religion | Assiniboine Indians -- Social life and customs | Assiniboine dialect | Athapascan Indians | Athapascan languages | Aymara language | Bibliography | Blackfoot Indians | Blackfoot language | Boas, Franz, 1858-1942 | Caddo Indians | Caddo Indians -- Religion | Caddo language | Cahuilla Indians | Cahuilla language | Carrier language | Catholic Church -- History | Cauqui language | Cayuga Indians | Cayuga Indians -- Politics | Cayuga Indians -- Rites and ceremonies | Cayuga language | Central Yupik language | Cherokee (N.C.) | Cherokee Indians | Cherokee Indians -- Education | Cherokee Indians -- Games | Cherokee Indians -- Government relations | Cherokee Indians -- History | Cherokee Indians -- Land tenure | Cherokee Indians -- Medicine | Cherokee Indians -- Music | Cherokee Indians -- Religion | Cherokee Indians -- Social life and customs | Cherokee language | Cherokee language -- Alphabet | Cherokee language -- Phonology | Cherokee language -- Syntax | Cheslatta Carrier Nation Cheslatta T'En | Chevak Cup'ik language | Cheyenne Indians | Cheyenne Indians -- Folklore | Cheyenne Indians -- History | Cheyenne Indians -- Religion | Cheyenne Indians -- Social life and customs | Cheyenne dance | Cheyenne language | Chiapas (Mexico) | Chiapas (Mexico) -- History | Chiapas (Mexico) History Tzeltal Revolt, 1712 | Chickasaw Indians | Chickasaw language | Chicomuceltec language | Chilcotin language | Chinookan languages | Chippewa Indians | Chippewa Indians -- History | Chiwere language | Choctaw Indians | Choctaw Indians -- History | Choctaw Indians -- Mississippi | Choctaw Indians -- Politics and government | Choctaw Indians -- Social life and customs | Choctaw language | Chontal Indians | Chontal Indians -- Folklore | Chontal language | Chontal language -- Texts | Christianity | Cochiti dialect | Coeur d'Alene language | Colorado River Numic language | Columbia-Wenatchi language | Colville Indian Reservation (Wash.) | Colville Indians | Colville Lake (N.W.T.) | Colville dialect | Comanche Indians | Comanche dance | Comox Indians | Comox language | Contact sheets | Coquille Indians | Cora language | Coyote -- Folklore | Cree Indians | Cree Indians -- History | Cree language | Creek Indians | Creek Indians -- Education | Creek Indians -- Government relations | Creek Indians -- History | Creek Indians -- Oklahoma -- Religion | Creek Indians -- Politics and government | Creek language | Crow Indians | Cup'ig dialect | Curaçao | Curaçao -- Social life and customs | Dakota Indians | Dakota Indians -- History | Dakota Indians -- Music | Dakota language | Dance -- Anthropological aspects -- United States | Dance -- Societies, etc. | Dane-zaa language | Deg Hit'an Indians | Delaware Indians | Delaware Indians -- History | Delaware Indians -- Music | Delaware Indians -- Religion | Delaware dance | Delaware language | Diabetes | Diegueño language | Diseases | Ditidaht Indians | Dogrib Indians | Eskimos -- Greenland -- Social life and customs | Ethnobotany | Ethnozoology | Field notes. | Fort Good Hope (N.W.T.) | Fox Indians | Fox language | Fur trade | Fur trade -- United States. | Gelatin silver prints | Gender | Ghost dance | Gielow, Donald L. | Gitksan language | Golden Hill Paugussett Indian Nation | Great Britain -- Colonies | Great Britain -- Colonies -- Administration. | Great Britain -- Colonies -- America | Greenland -- Description and travel. | Greenland -- Languages | Gros Ventre Indians | Gwenhoot Indians | Gwich'in Indians | Gwich'in Indians -- History | Haida Indians | Haida Indians -- Biography | Haida language | Haisla Indians | Haisla language | Halkomelem language | Han language | Hare Indians | Haudenosaunee | Havasupai Indians -- Music | Havasupai–Hualapai language | Hawaiians | Hawaiians -- Dance | Health. | Heiltsuk Indians | Heiltsuk Indians -- History | Heiltsuk language | Hiaki language | Hidatsa Indians | Hidatsa Indians -- History | Hidatsa language | Highland Chontal language | Hopi Indians | Hopi Indians -- Domestic life | Hopi Indians -- Ethnoanatomy | Hopi Indians -- Folklore | Hopi Indians -- Food | Hopi Indians -- History | Hopi Indians -- Material culture | Hopi Indians -- Music | Hopi Indians -- Religion | Hopi Indians -- Rites and ceremonies | Hopi Indians -- Social life and customs | Hopi dance | Hopi language | Hopi pottery | Hualapai language | Hualapai language -- Study and teaching | Huichol language | Hupa language | Hymns, Nez Percé | Indian Shaker Church | Indian art -- North America | Indian art -- United States | Indian dance -- Michigan | Indians of Mexico | Indians of Mexico -- Chiapas | Indians of Mexico -- Mexico -- Chiapas | Indians of Mexico -- Mexico -- Chiapas -- Religion | Indians of Mexico -- Oaxaca | Indians of Mexico -- Religion | Indians of North America | Indians of North America -- Alaska | Indians of North America -- Arizona | Indians of North America -- Arkansas | Indians of North America -- California | Indians of North America -- California -- History | Indians of North America -- Canada | Indians of North America -- Canada, Northern -- Social life and customs | Indians of North America -- Canada. | Indians of North America -- Clothing & dress | Indians of North America -- Connecticut | Indians of North America -- Dance | Indians of North America -- Education | Indians of North America -- Government relations | Indians of North America -- Great Lakes (North America) | Indians of North America -- Legal status, laws, etc. | Indians of North America -- Manitoba -- Languages | Indians of North America -- Massachusetts | Indians of North America -- Michigan | Indians of North America -- Migrations | Indians of North America -- Minnesota | Indians of North America -- Missions | Indians of North America -- Montana | Indians of North America -- Music | Indians of North America -- New England | Indians of North America -- New York (State) | Indians of North America -- Northwest Coast | Indians of North America -- Northwest Territories -- Languages | Indians of North America -- Nunavut -- Languages | Indians of North America -- Oklahoma | Indians of North America -- Oklahoma -- Dance | Indians of North America -- Oklahoma -- Music | Indians of North America -- Pennsylvania | Indians of North America -- Photographs | Indians of North America -- Photographs. | Indians of North America -- Religion | Indians of North America -- Saskatchewan | Indians of North America -- South Carolina | Indians of North America -- South Dakota | Indians of North America -- Southeastern States | Indians of North America -- Wars -- 1750-1815 | Indians of North America -- Wisconsin | Indians of South America -- Andes Region | Indians of the West Indies -- Antilles, Lesser | Indigenous peoples -- British Columbia. | Influenza | Inuit | Inuit -- Greenland | Inuit languages | Inuktitut language | Inupiaq language | Inupiat -- Alaska -- Social life and customs | Iowa Indians | Iowa language | Iroquoian Indians | Iroquoian Indians -- Religion | Iroquoian languages | Iroquois Indians | Iroquois Indians -- History | Iroquois Indians -- History -- 17th century | Iroquois Indians -- History -- 18th century | Iroquois Indians -- Politics and government | Iroquois Indians -- Religion | Iroquois Indians -- Rites and ceremonies | Iroquois Indians -- Social life and customs | Iroquois Indians -- Virginia | Jaqaru language | Jefferson, Thomas, 1743-1826 -- Manuscripts | Jemez language | Jicarilla language | Karok language | Karuk language | Kawchottine Indians | Kawchottine Indians -- Fishing | Kawchottine Indians -- Hunting | Kawchottine Indians -- Social life and customs | Kawchottine language | Kawki language | Keres language | Kickapoo Indians | Kickapoo language | Kiowa Apache Indians -- Social life and customs | Kiowa Apache dance | Kiowa Indians | Kiowa Indians -- Religion | Kiowa Indians -- Rites and ceremonies | Kiowa Indians -- Social life and customs | Kiowa dance | Kiskht language | Klamath Indians | Koasati Indians | Koasati Indians -- History | Koasati language | Kootenai language | Koyukon people | Kumeyaay Indians | Kumeyaay language | Kumiai Indians -- Social life and customs | Kumiai language | Kutenai language | Kwakiutl Indians | Kwakiutl language | Kwakwaka'wakw | Lacandon Indians | Laguna dialect | Lakota Indians | Lakota Indians -- Ethnic identity | Lakota Indians -- Government relations | Lakota Indians -- History | Lakota Indians -- Music | Lakota Indians -- Politics and government | Lakota dialect | Lakota language | Lillooet language | Little Bog Horn, Battle of, 1876 | Luiseño -- Medicine | Luiseño people | Mackenzie River Delta (N.W.T.) | Mahican Indians | Maidu Indians | Makah Indians | Malecite language | Maliseet–Passamaquoddy language | Mam language | Mandan Indians | Mandan Indians -- History | Mandan language | Massachusett language | Massachusetts | Matlatzinca language | Mattina, Nancy | Maya Indians | Mayan languages | Mayan languages -- Writing | Mayas -- Guatemala | Mazatec language | Menominee Indians | Menominee language | Mescalero language | Meskwaki language | Mexico -- Description and travel | Mexico -- Languages | Miami Indians | Miami art | Michif language | Micmac Indians | Micmac Indians -- Ceremonies | Micmac language | Migration, Internal -- United States -- History -- 18th century | Migration, Internal -- United States -- History -- 19th century | Mikasuki Indians | Mikasuki language | Mission Indian Federation | Missionaries -- North America. | Missouri Indians | Miwok language | Mixtec Indians | Mixtec language | Mobilian trade language | Mohawk Indians | Mohawk Indians -- Economy | Mohawk Indians -- History | Mohawk Indians -- Politics and government | Mohawk Indians -- Religion | Mohawk Indians -- Social life and customs | Mohawk language | Mohawk language -- Texts | Mohegan Indians | Mohegan Indians -- History | Mohegan language | Mono Indians | Moravian Indians | Moravians -- Missions | Moravians -- Pennsylvania -- History | Moravians. | Mormons | Mountain Indians | Munsee Indians | Munsee Indians -- History | Munsee language | Music -- Curaçao | Métis | Nahuas | Nahuas -- Folklore | Nahuas -- Religion | Nahuas -- Social life and customs | Nahuatl language | Names, Geographical -- Alaska | Narragansett Indians | Narragansett Indians -- History | Narragansett language | Native American Church of North America | Navajo Indians | Navajo Indians -- Education | Navajo Indians -- Ethnoanatomy | Navajo Indians -- History | Navajo Indians -- Kinship | Navajo Indians -- Material culture | Navajo Indians -- Poetry | Navajo Indians -- Politics and government | Navajo Indians -- Religion | Navajo Indians -- Social life and customs | Navajo Mountain (Utah and Ariz.) | Navajo art | Navajo language | Navajo language -- Semantics | New York (State) -- History -- Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775. | Nez Percé women | Nez Percé Indians | Nez Percé Indians -- History | Nez Percé Indians -- Music | Nez Percé Indians -- Religion | Nez Percé Indians -- Social life and customs | Nez Percé language | Nicollet, J. N. (Joseph Nicolas), 1786-1843 | Niimiipuutímt language | Nisga'a language | Niska Indians | Niska language | Nitinat language | Nlaka'pamuctsin language | Nooksack Indians | Nootka Indians | Nootka language | Northern Paiute Indians -- Folklore | Northern Paiute language | Ntlakyapamuk Indians | Ntlakyapamuk language | Nuu-chah-nulth | Nuu-chah-nulth language | Occom, Samson, 1723-1792 | Odawa people | Ojibwa Indians | Ojibwa Indians -- Canada | Ojibwa Indians -- History | Ojibwa Indians -- Kinship | Ojibwa Indians -- Michigan | Ojibwa Indians -- Social life and customs | Ojibwa dance | Ojibwa language | Ojibwe | Ojibwe -- Economy | Ojibwe -- Ethnobotany | Ojibwe people | Okanagan Indians | Okanagan Indians -- Folklore | Okanagan language | Omaha Indians | Oneida Indians | Oneida Indians -- Religion | Oneida language | Onondaga language | Ooweekeeno language | Oowekeeno Indians | Oregon -- History | Osage Indians | Osage Indians -- Music | Osage dance | Oto indians | Otomi Indians -- Folklore | Otomi language | Ottawa Indians | Ottawa Indians -- History | Painting. | Paiute Indians | Paiute Indians -- History | Paiute language | Panamint language | Papamiento language | Papiamento | Parsons, Elsie Worthington Clews, 1875-1941 | Passamaquoddy Indians | Passamaquoddy language | Passamaquoddy language -- Syntax | Passamaquoddy language -- Texts | Pawnee Indians | Pawnee Indians -- Religion | Pawnee language | Peale's Museum (Philadelphia, Pa.) | Peale, Charles Willson, 1741-1827 -- Art collections. | Penobscot Indians | Penobscot Indians -- History | Penobscot language | Pequot Indians | Peyote | Peyote songs | Photographs | Photomechanical prints | Picuris language | Pima Bajo language | Pima Indians | Pima language | Piman languages | Pit River Tribe | Plains Indians | Plains Miwok language | Plains Sign Talk | Plant names | Pokomam language | Political issues -- Environment | Polynesians -- Dance | Pomo Indians | Pomo language | Ponca Indians | Ponca Indians -- Music | Ponca dance | Poqomam language | Potawatomi Indians | Potawatomi Indians -- History | Potawatomi language | Powhatan Indians | Powhatan language | Powhattan Indians -- History | Powwows | Psychology | Pueblo Indians | Puyallup Indians | Quakers -- Missions. | Quapaw Indians | Quechan Indians | Quechua Indians | Quechua Indians -- History | Quileute Indians | Quileute language | Quiripi language | Sahaptin language | Saint Regis Mohawk Indian Reservation (N.Y.) | Salish Indians | Salishan languages | San Carlos Apache language | San Felipe dialect | Sandia Pueblo (N.M.) | Sandia dialect | Santa Ana dialect | Santo Domingo dialect | Sarsi Indians | Sarsi language | Sauk Indians | Schitsu'umsh | Seminole Indians | Seminole Indians -- History | Seminole Indians -- Politics and government | Seminole language | Seneca | Seneca Indians -- History | Seneca Indians -- Music | Seneca Indians -- New York (State) | Seneca Indians -- Politics and government | Seneca Indians -- Religion | Seneca Indians -- Rites and ceremonies | Seneca art | Seneca dance | Seneca language | Seneca masks | Serrano language | Shawnee Indians | Shawnee Indians -- Folklore | Shawnee Indians -- Music | Shawnee Indians -- Rites and ceremonies | Shawnee Indians -- Social life and customs | Shawnee dance | Shawnee language | Shoshoni Indians | Shoshoni Indians -- History | Shoshoni Indians -- Religion | Shoshoni language | Siksika Indians | Siouan languages | Sioux Nation | Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate of the Lake Traverse Reservation, South Dakota | Skagit Indians | Sketches. | Slave Indians | Slavey language | Slides. | Smallpox | Smallpox -- United States -- History | Songs, Papiamento | Sound recordings | Southwest Indians | Spanish language | Spokane language | Stockbridge Indians -- History | Stoney language | Stó:lō Indians | Sub-Arctic Indians | Suquamish Indians | Tahltan language | Taino Indians | Taos Indians | Taos language | Teton Indians | Teton Indians -- History | Tewa Indians | Tewa Indians -- Folklore | Tewa Indians -- Music | Tewa art | Tewa dance | Tewa language | Tewa pottery | Tiwa language | Tla'amin First Nation | Tlakluit language | Tlaxcalan Indians | Tlinchon language | Tlingit Indians | Tlingit Indians -- Religion | Tlingit language | Tohono O'odham Indians | Tohono O'odham Indians -- Music | Tohono O'odham dialect | Tojolabal Indians -- Religion | Tolowa Indians | Tolowa language | Trade | Tsimshian Indians | Tsimshian language | Tsuut'ina language | Tuscarora Indians | Tuscarora Indians -- History | Tuscarora Indians -- Politics and government | Tuscarora Indians -- Religion | Tuscarora Indians -- Social life and customs | Tuscarora language | Tuscarora language -- Study and teaching | Tzeltal Indians | Tzeltal Indians -- Religion | Tzotzil Indians | Umatilla language | United States - History - Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775 | United States -- History -- Revolution, 1775-1783 -- American forces | United States -- History -- Revolution, 1776-1783 | United States -- History -- Revolutionary War, 1775-1783 | United States -- Politics and government -- 1815-1861. | United States -- Politics and government -- 19th century. | United States -- Politics and government. | Upernavik (Greenland) | Upper Kuskokwim Athabaskans | Upper Kuskokwim language | Ute Indians | Ute language | Uto-Aztecan languages | Virginia -- History -- Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775. | Virginia -- History. | Virginia -- Politics and government. | Wailaki people | Wakashan language | Walla Walla language | Walpole Island (Ont.) | Wampanoag language | Wappo language | Wasco language | Washo language | Wenatchee language | Wenatchi Indians | West Greenlandic language | Western Apache language | White Clay People | Wichita Indians | Wichita language | Winnebago Indians | World War I | World War, 1914-1918 | World War, 1914-1918 -- Participation, Indian | Xinca language | Yahi language | Yakama language | Yamasee War, 1715 | Yana language | Yaqui language | Yavapai Indians | Yavapai Indians -- History | Yavapai Indians -- Religion | Yavapai language | Yoeme language | Yuchi Indians | Yuchi Indians -- History | Yuchi Indians -- Politics and government | Yuchi Indians -- Religion | Yuchi Indians -- Rites and ceremonies | Yuchi Indians -- Social life and customs | Yuchi dance | Yuchi language | Yuki people | Yuma language | Yuman languages | Yuman–Cochimí languages | Yupik Eskimos | Yupik Eskimos -- Alaska -- Nunivak Island | Yupik Eskimos -- History | Yupik Eskimos -- Religion | Yupik Eskimos -- Social life and customs | Yupik languages | Yurok Indians -- Fishing | Yurok baskets | Yurok language | Zapotec language | Zia dialect | Zuni Indians | Zuni Indians -- Folklore | Zuni Indians -- History | Zuni Indians -- Religion | Zuni Indians -- Rites and ceremonies | Zuni Indians -- Social life and customs | Zuni Pueblo (N.M.) | Zuni language