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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 15:34:49 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 15:44:36 GMT -5
Available Minnesota Historical Society Manuscript Collection Microfilm Call #: M559 Author United States. Office of Indian Affairs. Title Indian census rolls, 1885-1940 [microform]. Publisher Washington, D.C. : National Archives, 1965. Physical Details 88 microfilm reels. General Note Available for sale from the National Archives Trust Fund (Microcopy No. 595). Summary This group of reels was selected from a much larger body, and contains only records of Minnesota Indians, as well as Indian groups in Wisconsin and North and South Dakota that had strong Minnesota connections. Microfilm (selected reels) of census rolls submitted each year by agents or superintendents in charge of reservations. The data on the rolls varies but usually includes English and/or Indian name, roll number, age or birth date, sex, and relationship to head of family. Reels included in this selection focus on Minnesota Ojibwe (Chippewa) and Dakota (Sioux) bands, though numerous Wisconsin and North Dakota groups are also included. Beginning in 1930 the rolls also show degree of Indian blood, marital status, ward status, place of residence, and sometimes other information. For certain years, including 1935, 1936, 1938, and 1939, only supplemental rolls of additions and deletions were compiled. There is not a census for every reservation or group of Indians for every year. Only persons who maintained a formal affiliation with a tribe under Federal supervision are listed in these census rolls. Originals Originals in: U.S. National Archives. (Record Group 75, Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs). Finding Aids A roll contents list and complete catalog of Indian census rolls is available in the repository; filed as M559. (MD) mhs.lute.msus.edu/F/?func=find-c&ccl_term=sys%3D1722953
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 16:14:24 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 16:15:28 GMT -5
Chippewa Annuity Payrolls” 1864 – 1878 on the “Old Crossing Treaty” between the United States and “chiefs and headmen” of the Red Lake and Pembina Bands of Chippewa Indians concluded October 2, 1863 - amended April 12, 1964 compiled by Wub-e-ke-niew and Clara NiiSka from Minnesota Historical Society Microfilm Series M-390: United States Office of Indian Affairs, Chippewa Annuity Rolls note: the punctuation - for example <,’,’:^;( - is a kind of phonetic alphabet described in the footnotes to Appendix IV of Wub-e-ke-niew’s book, We Have The Right To Exist (MD) LINK BELOW- www.maquah.net/genealogy/ANN-ALL.htm
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 16:15:55 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 16:16:50 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 16:17:57 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 16:23:44 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 16:38:21 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 16:52:02 GMT -5
May 2, 2006, 6:20pm, denney wrote:The Treaties of 1837, by which the Dakota ceded their lands east of the Mississippi to the United States, required that all Dakota villages be moved, so in 1838 Medicine Bottle moved across the river. His unused houses were taken over by the families of fur trader Hazen Mooers and his son-in-law Andrew Robertson. Robertson named the island for his mother-in-law, Marpiyarotawin (mock'-pee-ya-kho'-ta-ween'), or Grey Cloud Woman, whose English name was Margaret Aird Anderson Mooers. www.wchsmn.org/research/communities/grey_cloud_island/ Tamara posted This is my ancestor GreyCloud Woman. I have recently obtained a copy of the Wisconsin Historical Society Volume that contained the journals of Margaret's father Captain Thomas Anderson. Another of the Wisconsin Volumes contained writings by a man named Forsyth, also interesting.
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 17:08:56 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 17:27:25 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 17:32:22 GMT -5
016.973 Lib 1996 - "Many Nations" Oglala Lakota Archives Reference Books Nonfiction - A cross reference page of names found in the nonfiction books located in the Oglala Lakota College Archives Reference Collection (in call number order). You can search this page using the Edit-Find function (Ctrl-F). American Horse, Big Foot, Black Hawk, Chief Crazy Horse, Chief Joseph, Dull Knife, Hollow Horn Bear, Little Big Man, Little Thunder, Lone Wolf, Russell Means, Pocahontas, Red Cloud, Red Eagle, Red Fox And alot more names on this page .... library.olc.edu/Archives/archnficreflst.htm
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 18:09:09 GMT -5
Hiawatha Insane Asylum Canton, South Dakota In 1898, Congress passed a bill creating the first and only Institution for insane Indians The names of those buried in the Hiawatha Asylum Cemetery are-- link below www.rootsweb.com/~sdlincol/hiawatha.htm
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Post by mdenney on Jan 20, 2007 18:09:49 GMT -5
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