Wyandot Nation of Kansas

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      • CRAIGLEITH AND THE BIRTH OF THE HISTORIC WYANDOT TRIBE
      • HISTORY OF THE HURON PEOPLE TO 1614
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      • Excerpt from American Notes, Charles Dickens
      • Farewell to A Beloved Land
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      • CHIPPEWA TREATY WITH THE WYANDOT, ETC., 1785.
      • THE TREATY OF GREENVILLE:
      • Address of Tarhe, Grand Sachem of the Wyandot Nation to the assemblage at the Treaty of Greenville
      • TREATY WITH THE WYANDOT, ETC. {1805, July 4}
      • TREATY WITH THE WYANDOT, ETC. 1815, Sept. 8
      • TREATY OF THE RAPIDS OF THE MIAMI OF LAKE ERIE WITH THE WYANDOT, SENECA, DELAWARE, SHAWNEE, POTAWATOMI, OTTAWA, AND CHIPPEWA ON SEPTEMBER 29, 1817
      • TREATY WITH THE WYANDOT {1818, Sept. 20}
      • TREATY OF MCCUTCHEONVILLE, OHIO WITH THE WYANDOT ON JANUARY 19, 1832
      • TREATY WITH THE WYANDOT {1836, Apr. 23}
      • TREATY WITH THE WYANDOT {1850, Apr. 1}
      • TREATY OF WASHINGTON D.C. WITH THE WYANDOT ON JANUARY 31, 1855
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        • Antoine Daniel 1601 – 1648
        • A NEUTRAL POINT
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        • Brebeuf’s Instructions to the Missionaries
        • BLACK ROBE Blinds Viewers to Canadian History
        • Charles Garnier 1606 – l649
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      • THREE SISTERS’ DEFENSE OF CEMETERY CONTINUED FOR NEARLY FORTY YEARS
      • “When Can They Rest?”
      • Curse May Play Role In Cemetery Combat
      • Lyda Conley’s Legal Argument to Preserve the Huron Indian Cemetery
      • Lawyer for Indians says Huron exhumption possible
      • Kansas Governor Bill Graves Letter to Bruce Babbitt
      • First Burial in Old Quindaro Cemetery
      • Hurons reunite after 350 years: Hundreds from across North America gather in Ontario homeland to rebury Wendat ancestors’ bones
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        • KANSAN STILL OPPOSES TRIBAL CASINO
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AGREEMENT WITH THE DELAWARES AND WYANDOT {1843, Dec. 14}

9 Stat., 337.
Ratified July 25,. 1848,
with the proviso: “That the Wyandot Indian Nation shall take no better right or interest in and to said lands than is now vested in the Delaware Nation of Indians.

Agreement between the Delaware and Wyandot nations of Indians, concluded on the 14th day of December, 1843.

Whereas from a long and intimate acquaintance, and the ardent friendship which has for a great many years existed between the Delawares and Wyandots and from a mutual desire that the same feeling shall continue and be more strengthened by becoming near neighbors to each other; therefore the said parties, the Delawares on one side, and the Wyandots on the other, in full council assembled, have agreed, and do agree, to the following stipulations, to Wit:-

ARTICLE 1. The Delaware nation of Indians, residing between the Missouri and Kansas rivers, being very anxious to have their uncles, the Wyandots, to settle and reside near them, do hereby donate, grant and quitclaim forever, to the Wyandot nation, three sections of land, containing six hundred and forty acres each, lying and being situated at the point of the junction of the Missouri and Kansas Rivers.

ARTICLE 2. The Delaware chiefs, for themselves, and by the unanimous consent of their people; do hereby cede, grant, quitclaim to the Wyandot nation and their heirs forever, thirty-six sections of land, each containing six hundred and forty acres, situated between the aforesaid Missouri and Kansas rivers, and adjoining on the west the aforesaid three donated sections, making in all thirty-nine sections of land, bounded as follows, viz:: Commencing at the point at the junction of the aforesaid Missouri and Kansas rivers, running west along the Kansas river sufficiently far to include the aforesaid thirty-nine sections: thence running north to the Missouri river; thence down the said river with its meanders to the place of beginning; to be surveyed in as near a square form as the rivers and territory ceded will admit of.

ARTICLE 3. In consideration of the foregoing donation and cession of land, the Wyandot chiefs bind themselves, successors in office, and their people to pay to the Delaware nation of Indians, forty-six thousand and eighty dollars, as follows, viz: six thousand and eighty dollars to be paid the year eighteen hundred and forty-four, and four thousand dollars annually thereafter for ten years.

ARTICLE 4. It is hereby distinctly understood, between the contracting parties, that the aforesaid agreement shall not be binding or obligatory until the President of the United States shall have approved the same and caused it to be recorded in the War Department.

In testimony whereof, we, the chiefs and headmen of the Delaware nation, and the chiefs and headmen of the Wyandott nation, have, this fourteenth day of December, eighteen hundred and forty-three, set our signatures.

Delaware chiefs:
Nah-koo-mer, his x mark.
Captain Ketchum, his x mark.
Captain Suavec, his x mark,
Jackenduthen, his x mark.
San-kock-sa, his x mark.
Cock-i-to-wa, his x mark,
Sa-sar-sit-tona, his x mark,
Pemp-scah, his x mark,
Nah-que-non, his x mark,

Wyandotts:
Henry Jacquis, his x mark.
James Washington, his x mark
Matthew Peacock, his x mark.
James Bigtree, his x mark.
George Armstrong, his x mark.
Tan-roo-mie, his x mark.
T. A. Hicks.

Signed in open council in presence of
Jonathan Phillips, Sub-agent for the Wyandotts.
Richard W. Cummins, Indian Agent.
James M. Simpson.
Charles Graham.
Joel Walker, Secretary of the Wyandott Council.
Henry Tiblow, Indian interpreter, Delaware.” [1049]

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