Articles of a treaty, concluded at Hopewell, on the Keowee, near Seneca Old Town, between Benjamin Hawkins, Andrew Pickens, and Joseph Martin, Commissioners Plenipotentiary of the United
States of America, of the one Part; and Piomingo, Head Warrior and First Minister of the Chickasaw Nation; Mingatushka, one of the leading Chiefs; and; Latopoia, first beloved Man of the said
Nation, Commissioners Plenipotentiary of all the Chickasaws, of the other Part.
Articles of arrangement made and concluded in the Chickasaw
country, between James Robertson and Silas Dinsmoor,
commissioners of the United States of the one part, and the
Mingo chiefs and warriors of the Chickasaw nation of Indians on
the other part.
To settle all territorial controversies, and to perpetuate that
peace and harmony which has long happily subsisted between the
United States and Chickasaw nation, the president of the United
States of America, by major general Andrew Jackson, general
David Meriwether, and Jesse Franklin, esq. on the one part, and
the whole Chickasaw nation, in council assembled, on the other,
have agreed on the following articles, which when ratified by
the president, with the advice and consent of the senate of the
United States, shall be binding on all parties:
Treaty with the Chickasaws, to settle all territorial
controversies, and to remove all ground of complaint or
dissatisfaction, that might arise to interrupt the peace and
harmony which have so long and so happily existed between the
United States of America and the Chickesaw nation of Indians,
James Monroe, President of the said United States, by Isaac
Shelby and Andrew Jackson, of the one part, and the whole
Chickesaw nation, by their chiefs, head men, and warriors, in
full council assembled, of the other part, have agreed on the
following articles; which, when ratified by the President and
Senate of the United States of America, shall form a treaty
binding on all parties.
Articles of a treaty, entered into at Franklin, Tennessee, this
31st day of August, 1830, by John H. Eaton, Secretary of War,
and General John Coffee, commissioners appointed by the
President, on the part of the United States, and the chiefs and
head men of the Chickasaw Nation of Indians, duly authorized, by
the whole nation, to conclude a treaty.
Articles of a treaty made and entered into between Genl. John
Coffee, being duly authorized thereto, by the President of the
United States, and the whole Chickasaw Nation, in General
Council assembled, at the council House, on Pontitock Creek on
the twentieth day of October, 1832.
Articles supplementary to, and explanatory of, a treaty which
was entered into on the 20th instant, between General John
Coffee on the part of the United States, and the whole Chickasaw
nation in General Council assembled.
Articles of convention and agreement proposed by the
Commissioners on the part of the United States, in pursuance of
the request made, by the Delegation representing the Chickasaw
nation of Indians, and which have been agreed to.
Articles of convention and agreement made on the seventeenth day
of January, 1837, between the undersigned chiefs and
commissioners duly appointed and empowered by the Choctaw tribe
of red people, and John McLish, Pitman Colbert, James Brown, and
James Perry, delegates of the Chickasaw tribe of Indians, duly
authorized by the chiefs and head-men of said people for that
purpose, at Doaksville, near Fort Towson, in the Choctaw
country.
Articles of a treaty concluded at Washington, on the 22nd day of
June, 1852, between Kenton Harper, commissioner on the part of
the United States, and Colonel Edmund Pickens, Benjamin S. Love,
and Sampson Folsom, commissioners duly appointed for that
purpose, by the Chickasaw tribe of Indians.
Whereas a convention and agreement was made and entered into by
the Choctaw and Chickasaw Indians, at Doaksville, near Fort
Towson, in the Choctaw country, on the seventeenth day of
January, A. D. one thousand eight hundred and thirty-seven; and,
whereas, difficulties have arisen between said tribes in regard
to the line of boundary, between the Chickasaw district and
other districts of the Choctaw nation, described in article
second of said convention and agreement; ....
Articles of agreement and convention between the United States
and the Choctaw and Chickasaw tribes of Indians, made and
concluded at the city of Washington, the twenty-second day of
June, A. D. one thousand eight hundred and fifty-five, by George
W. Manypenny, commissioner on the part of the United States,
Peter P. Pitchlynn, Israel Folsom, Samuel Garland, and Dixon W.
Lewis, commissioners on the part of the Choctaws; and Edmund
Pickens and Sampson Folsom, commissioners on the part of the
Chickasaws:
Articles of agreement entered into this thirteenth day of
September, 1865, between the commissioners designated by the
President of the United States and the persons here present
representing or connected with the following named nations and
tribes of Indians located within the Indian country, viz:
Cherokees, Creeks, Choctaws, Chickasaws, Osages, Seminoles,
Senecas and Shawnees, and Quapaws.
Articles of agreement and convention between the United States
and the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations of Indians, made and
concluded at the City of Washington the twenty-eighth day of
April, in the year eighteen hundred and sixty-six, by Dennis N.
Cooley, Elijah Sells, and E. S. Parker, special commissioners on
the part of the United States, and Alfred Wade, Allen Wright,
James Riley, and John Page, commissioners on the part of the
Choctaws, and Winchester Colbert, Edmund Pickens, Holmes
Colbert, Colbert Carter, and Robert H. Love, commissioners on
the part of the Chickasaws.