|
Title of this microfilm publication;
historical note; contents description;
roll list. |
# of
rolls |
CSWS coll.
no. or location |
M1
|
Office of
Indian Affairs records of the Michigan Superintendency, 1814-1851.
Roll
Dates
Letters received and sent by the Superintendent, 1814-1818:
2 May 31, 1814-Apr. 17, 1817
3 Apr. 24, 1817-June 3, 1818
Letters sent by the Superintendent, 1818-23:
4 June 6, 1818-Apr. 25, 1822
5 May 2, 1822-June 17, 1823
Letters received by the Superintendent, 1819-1835:
6 1819
7 1820
8 Jan.-June 1821
9 July-Dec. 1821
10 Jan.-June 1822
11 July-Dec. 1822
12 Jan.-June 1823; July-Aug. 16, 1824
13 July-Dec. 1823
14 Jan.-June 1824
15 Aug. 17-Dec. 1824
16 Jan.-June 1825
17 July-Dec. 1825
18 Jan.-June 1826
19 July-Dec. 1826
20 Jan.-June 1827
21 July-Dec. 1827
22 Jan.-May 1828
23 June-Dec. 1828
24 Jan.-June 1829
25 July-Dec. 1829
26 Jan.-July 1830
27 Aug.-Dec. 1830
28 Jan.-Aug. 1831; 1814-1825
29 Aug.-Dec. 1831
30 Jan.-June 1832
31 July-Dec. 1832
32 Jan.-May 1833
33 June-Dec. 1833
34 Jan-July 1834
35 Aug.-Dec. 1834
36 Jan.-Dec. 1835
Letters sent by the Superintendent and the Agent at Mackinac,
1836-1851:
37 July 18, 1836-June 26, 1839
38 July 1, 1839-Aug. 20, 1842
39 Aug. 20, 1842-May 2, 1845
40 May 2, 1845-Apr. 14, 1851
Letters received by the Superintendent and the Agent at Mackinac,
1836-1851:
41 July-Dec. 1836
42 Jan.-July 1837
43 Aug.-Dec. 1837
44 Jan.-June 1838
45 July-Dec. 1838
46 Dec. 1838-July 1839
47 July-Dec. 1839
48 Jan.-Aug. 1840
49 Aug.-Dec. 1840
50 Jan-June 1841
51 July-Dec. 1841
52 Jan-June 1842
53 July-Dec. 1842
54 Dec. 1842-June 1843
55 July-Dec. 1843
56 Dec. 1843-June 1844
57 June-Dec. 1844
58 Jan.-June 1845
59 July 1845-Jan. 1846
60 Dec. 1845-Dec. 1846
61 Jan.-Dec. 1847
62 Jan. 1848-Apr. 1849
63 Apr.-Dec. 1849
64 Jan.-Dec. 1850
Letters sent by the Agent at Sault Ste. Marie, 1822-1833:
65 July 22, 1822-May 2, 1833
Letters received by the Agent at Sault Ste. Marie, 1822-1833:
66 Apr. 7, 1822-Nov. 23, 1826
67 Jan. 21, 1827-Dec. 29, 1828
68 Jan. 1, 1829-Apr. 30, 1833
Letters sent by the Agent at Mackinac, 1833-1836:
69 May 31, 1833-July 1, 1836
Letters received by the Agent at Mackinac, 1816-1836:
70 May 7, 1816-Nov. 1, 1831
71 May 1, 1833-Dec. 29, 1834
72 Jan. 3, 1835-June 29, 1836 |
72
rolls |
|
M2
|
Office of Indian Affairs records of the Oregon
Superintendency, 1848-1873. Roll
Description
2 Register of letters sent, 1849-1872; copies of letters received,
1848-1850; and copies of letters
sent, 1849-1850 and 1852-1853
3 Copies of letters received and sent, July 1850-Dec. 1853
4 Copies of letters received and sent, Nov. 1853-Aug. 1854
5 Copies of letters received and sent, Mar. 1854-Jan. 1856
6 Copies of letters sent, Jan. 1856-Sept. 1857
7 Annual reports, 1853-1854: reports of subordinates, 1853-1855; and
copies of letters sent,
Sept. 1857-Sept. 1859
8 Copies of letters sent, Sept. 1859-July 1861
9 Copies of letters sent, Aug. 1861-Mar. 1866
10 Register of letters sent, Apr. 1866-Dec. 1872; and copies of
letters sent, Apr. 1866-Dec. 1872
11 Copies of instructions and reports, 1850-1855
12 Register of letters received, Sept. 30, 1848-Jan. 14, 1873; and
letters received,
Sept. 30, 1848-Dec. 25, 1852
Letters received:
13 Jan. 15, 1853-Dec. 31, 1855
14 Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 1856
15 Jan. 4-Dec. 31, 1857
16 Jan. 1-Dec. 30, 1858
17 Jan. 3-Dec. 30, 1859
18 Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 1860
19 Jan. 4-Dec. 27, 1861
20 Jan. 7, 1862-June 28, 1883
21 July 1, 1863-Aug. 10, 1865
22 Aug. 12, 1865-May 31, 1866
23 June 1, 1866-June 14, 1867
24 June 15, 1667-Mar. 31, 1868
25 Apr. 1, 1868-Mar. 8, 1870
26 Mar. 31-Dec. 1, 1870
27 Dec. 17, 1870-June 21, 1873
Other records:
28 Copies of treaty proceedings and depredation claims, 1851-1856
29 Financial records, 1850-1855 and 1861-1873
30 Miscellaneous records, 1850-1873 |
30 rolls |
|
M3 |
State Department
territorial papers for
Colorado. "The Department of State supervised affairs in the
territories of the United States from 1789 to
1873. The department
attended to such matters as correspondence between the President and
territorial officials, the printing of territorial laws, and the
provision of seals for the official use of
the territories. In 1873
Congress transferred the supervision of the territories to the Office of
the Secretary of the Interior. Records of the period of territorial
administration by the Department
of State are among the General Records
of the Department of State,
Record Group 59.
These records include correspondence, reports, copies of journals of
proceedings of legislative
assemblies, and other records relating to
territorial administration."
|
1
roll |
|
M4 |
Creek Trading House records, 1795-1816. |
1
roll |
|
M5 |
Office of Indian Affairs records of the Washington
Superintendency, 1853-1874. Roll
Description and dates
Copies and drafts of letters sent, 1853-1874:
1 Mar. 21, 1853-Mar. 31, 1856
2 Apr. 2-Nov. 29, 1856
3 Dec. 1, 1856-June 2, 1857
4 June 2, 1857-Jan. 31, 1874
5 Jan. 11, 1867-Aug. 14, 1869
6 Aug. 4, 1869-Sept. 22, 1872
Letters from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1853-1874:
7 Apr. 18, 1853-Dec. 9, 1859
8 Mar. 2, 1861-June 30, 1874
Letters from agents and employees in local jurisdiction of the superintendency, 1853-1874:
9 Letters from agents assigned to the Puget Sound District as
a whole, Dec. 4, 1853-
Aug. 16, 1862
10 Letters from employees assigned to local agencies of the Puget
Sound District, Jan.
1, 1856-Nov. 29, 1858
11 Letters from employees assigned to the Puyallup
Agency (Puyallup, Nisqualli, and Squaxon
Reservations), serving Indians, parties to the Treaty of Medicine Creek, Dec. 31, 1856-
Aug. 31,
1874
12 Letters from employees assigned to the Tulalip
Agency, serving Indians, parties to the
Treaty of Point Elliot, Apr. 24, 186l-July
1, 1874
13 Letters from employees assigned to the Sklallam
Agency (Skokomish Reservation), serving
tribes who were parties to the Treaty of Point No Point, Apr. 30, 1861-June 1, 1874
14 Letters from employees assigned to the Neah Bay
Agency (Makah Reservation), serving
Indians who were parties to the Treaty
of Neah Bay, Sept. 24, 1861-July 1, 1874
15 Letters from employees assigned to the Quinaielt
Agency (Quinaielt Reservation), serving
Indians who were parties to the
Treaty of Olympia, Oct. 8, 1861-June 1, 1874
16 Letters from employees assigned to the
Western, or Coast, District and the Chehalis
Locality, serving Indians who were parties
to no treaty, Mar. 11, 1856-Aug. 31, 1874
17 Letters from employees assigned to the
Columbia River, or Southern, District and the
Yakima Agency, May 1, 1854-July 20, 1861
18 Letters from employees assigned to the Yakima
Agency, Aug. 16, 1861-Dec. 31, 1868
19 Letters from employees assigned to the Yakima
Agency, Jan. 4, 1869 July 21, 1874
20 Letters from employees assigned to the
Central, or Middle, District and the Colville Agency,
Feb. 24, 1854-July 13, 1874
21 Letters from employees assigned to the Nez Perce
and Umatilla Agencies, Jan. 24, 1856-
May 15, 1864
22 Letters from employees assigned to the
Eastern District, or Flathead Agency, and the
Blackfeet Agency, Dec. 26, 1853-Jan. 30, 1863
Miscellaneous letters received 1853-1874:
23 Aug. 22, 1853-Apr. 9, 1861
24 May 17, 1861-June 24, 1868
25 July 2, 1868-July 14, 1874
Records relating to treaties:
26 Dec. 7, 1854-June 9, 1863 |
26 rolls |
|
M12 |
State
Department Territorial Papers for Utah, 1853-1873. "The Department
of State supervised affairs in the territories of the United States from
1789 to
1873. The department attended to such matters as correspondence
between the President and
territorial officials, the printing of
territorial laws, and the provision of seals for the official use of
the
territories. In 1873 Congress transferred the supervision of the
territories to the Office of the Secretary of the Interior. Records of
the period of territorial administration by the Department
of State are
among the General Records of the Department of State,
Record Group 59.
These records include correspondence, reports, copies of journals of
proceedings of legislative
assemblies, and other records relating to
territorial administration."
Roll
Dates
1 Apr. 30, 1853-Dec. 24, 1859
2 Jan. 5, 1860 Jan. 3, 1873 |
2
rolls |
|
M13 |
State
Department Territorial Papers for Nevada, 1861-1864. "The
Department of State supervised affairs in the territories of the United
States from 1789
to 1873. The department attended to such matters as
correspondence between the President
and territorial officials, the
printing of territorial laws, and the provision of seals for the
official
use of the territories. In 1873 Congress transferred the
supervision of the territories to the Office
of the Secretary of the Interior. Records of the period of territorial administration by the
Department of State are among the General Records of the Department of
State,
Record Group 59.
These records include correspondence, reports, copies of journals of
proceedings of legislative
assemblies, and other records relating to
territorial administration." |
1
roll |
|
M15 |
Letters
sent by the Secretary of War relating to Indian Affairs, 1800-1824.
Correspondence to and from the Secretary of War pertaining to Indian
affairs, prior to
establishment of the Bureau of Indian Affairs:
outgoing correspondence, 1800‑1824.
"This
series includes handwritten copies of letters to territorial governors,
Indian superintendents,
Indian agents and subagents, the Superintendent
of Indian Trade, factors of trading posts, military
commanders, private
traders, bankers, persons having commercial dealings with the
department,
missionaries, Indians, and others. Some of the letters are
noted as signed by clerks in the Department
rather than by the Secretary, and a few are noted as signed by the President. Included are
copies of
addresses to Indian delegations, appointments, passports
issued for travel in Indian country, and
instructions to treaty commissioners. This series is arranged chronologically. Each volume is
indexed
alphabetically, primarily by name of addressee but sometimes by
name of tribe or other principal
subject."
Roll Dates
1 Nov. 17, 1800-Apr. 20, 1804
2 Apr. 23, 1804-July 5, 1809
3 July 8, 1809-Dec. 31, 1816
4 Jan. 8, 1818-July 31, 1820
5 Aug. 3, 1820-0ct. 5, 1823
6 Oct. 28, 1823-Apr. 26, 1824
|
6
rolls |
|
M16 |
Superintendent of Indian Trade letters sent, 1807-1823
"This publication includes handwritten
copies of the outgoing correspondence of the
Superintendents of Indian
Trade with the Secretary of War, factors and other representatives
of
the Office of Indian Trade, Indian agents, the Secretary of the Treasury
and other Treasury
officials, the President, merchants, manufacturers,
bankers, and others. The letters relate to the
purchase of goods for the
factories, the disposal of furs and other commodities received from
the
factories, the operation of the factories, annuity payments, accounts,
and appointments as
well as to Indian trade and Indian affairs in
general. Each volume is arranged chronologically,
but there is some
overlapping between volumes. Each volume is indexed by name of
addressee."
Roll
Dates
1 Oct. 31, 1807-May 27, 1809
2 June 1, 1809-June 20, 1812
3 June 26, 1812-Apr. 18, 1816
4 Apr. 12. 1816-Apr. 11, 1818
5 Mar. 31, l818-July 20, 1820
6 July 11, 1820-Apr. 18, 1823 |
6
rolls |
|
M18 |
Office of
Indian Affairs (Central Office) registers of letters received,
1824-1880. "These are
registers for the records filmed as microfilm publication M234. Each
letter includes
the name of the writer; the date the letter was written;
the date it was received, beginning in April
1834; the place where it
was written; a summary of its contents; the jurisdiction or other
heading
under which the letter was filed; and beginning in July 1838,
the file number assigned to each letter
upon its receipt.
Each volume is divided into alphabetical
sections; the letters "i" and "j" were combined for
registering and
filing purposes. The registers contain some cross-references to
enclosures
and to letters registered under a name different from the
expected one."
Roll
Dates
1 Jan. 1, 1824-Dec. 31, 1826
2 Jan. 1, 1827-Dec. 31, 1830
3 Jan. 1, 1831-Dec. 31, 1832
4 Jan. 1, 1833-Mar. 31, 1834
5 Apr. 1, 1834-Jan. 31, 1835
6 Feb. 1, 1835-Mar. 28, 1836
7 Mar. 29-Dec. 8, 1836
8 Dec. 9, 1836-June 2, 1837
9 June 3-Sept. 19, 1837
10 Sept. 20-Dec. 31, 1837
11 Jan. 1-Mar. 31, 1838
12 Apr. 1-June 12, 1838
13 June 12-Sept. 24, 1838
14 Sept. 25-Dec. 31, 1838
15 Jan. l-Mar. 12, 1839
16 Mar. 13-July 31, 1839
17 Aug. 1, 1839-Jan. 31, 1840
18 Feb. l-July 2, 1840
19 July 3, 1840-Feb. 27, 1841
20 Mar. l-July 31, 1841
21 Aug. 1, 1841-Jan. 31, 1842
22 Feb. l-June 30, 1842
23 July l-Dec. 31, 1842
24 Jan. l-May 31, 1843
25 June 1-Oct. 31, 1843
26 Nov. 1, 1843-Mar. 3, 1844
27 Mar. 4-June 26, 1844
28 June 25-Oct. 31, 1844
29 Nov. 1, 1844-Apr. 1, 1845
30 Apr. 1-Sept. 1, 1845
31 Sept. 1, 1845-Feb. 1, 1846
32 Feb. 1-Dec. 1, 1846
33 Dec. 1, 1846-June 30, 1847
34 July 1, 1847-Mar. 31, 1848
35 Apr. 1-Dec. 31, 1848
36 Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 1849
37 Jan. 1-Oct. 11, 1850
38 Oct. 12, 1850-Apr. 30, 1851
39 May 1-Dec. 31, 1851
40 Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 1852
41 Jan. 1-Oct. 4, 1853
42 Oct. 5, 1853-May 14, 1854
43 May 15, 1854-Jan. 3, 1855
44 Jan. 4-July 31, 1855
45 Aug. 1-Dec. 31, 1855
46 Jan. 1-June 30, 1856
47 July 1-Dec. 31, 1856
48 Jan. 1-June 30, 1857
49 July 1-Dec. 31, 1857
50 Jan. 1-June 30, 1858
51 July 1-Dec. 31, 1858
52 Jan. 1-June 30, 1859
53 July 1-Dec. 31, 1859
54 Jan. 1-May 31, 1860
55 June 1-Dec. 31, 1860
56 Jan. 1-June 30, 1861
57 July 1-Dec. 31, 1861
58 Jan. 1-June 30, 1862
59 July 1-Dec. 31, 1862
60 Jan. 1-June 30, 1863
61 July 1-Dec. 31, 1863
62 Jan. 1-May 31, 1864
63 June 1-Dec. 31, 1864
64 Jan. 1-June 30, 1865
65 July 1-Dec. 31, 1865
66 Jan. 1-Apr. 30, 1866
67 May 1-Aug. 31, 1866
68 Sept. 1-Dec. 31, 1866
69 Jan. 2-Mar. 31, 1867
70 Apr. 1-June 30, 1867
71 July 1-Sept. 30, 1867
72 Oct. 1-Dec. 31, 1867
73 Jan. 1-Mar. 31, 1868
74 Apr. 1-June 30, 1868
75 July 1-Sept. 30, 1868
76 Oct. 1-Dec. 31, 1868
77 Jan. 1-Mar. 31, 1869
78 Apr. 1-June 30, 1869
79 July 1-Sept. 20, 1869
80 Sept. 22-Dec. 31, 1869
81 Jan. 1-Mar. 30, 1870
82 Apr. 1-June 30, 1870
83 July 1-Sept. 3, 1870
84 Oct. 1-Dec. 31, 1870
85 Jan. 1-Mar. 31, 1871
86 Apr. 1-June 30, 1871
87 July 1-Sept. 30, 1871
88 Oct. 1-Dec. 31, 1871
89 Jan. 1-Mar. 31, 1872
90 Apr. 1-June 30, 1872
91 July 1-Sept. 30, 1872
92 Oct. 1-Dec. 31, 1872
93 Jan. 1-Mar. 31, 1873
94 Apr. 1-June 30, 1873
95 July 1-Sept 30, 1873
96 Oct. 1-Dec. 31, 1873
97 Jan. 1-Mar 31, 1874
98 Feb. 26-June 30, 1874
99 July 1-Sept. 30, 1874
100 Oct. 1-Dec. 31, 1874
101 Jan. 1-Mar. 31, 1875
102 Apr. 1-June 30, 1875
103 July 1-Sept. 30, 1875
104 Oct. 1-Dec. 31, 1875
105 Jan. 1-Mar. 31, 1876
106 Apr. 1-June 30, 1876
107 July 1-Sept. 30, 1876
108 Oct. 1-Dec. 31, 1876
109 Jan. 1-Mar. 31, 1877
110 Apr. 1-June 30, 1877
111 July 1-Sept. 30, 1877
112 Oct. 1-Dec. 31, 1877
113 Jan. 1-Mar. 31, 1878
114 Apr. 1-June 30, 1878
115 July 1-Sept. 30, 1878
116 Oct. 1-Dec. 31, 1878
117 Jan. 1-Apr. 30, 1879, A-M
118 Jan. 1-June 30, 1879, N-Z
119 May 1-Aug. 31, 1879, A-M
120 Sept. 1-Dec. 31, 1879, A-M
121 July 1-Dec. 31, 1879, N-Z
122 Jan. 1-May 31, 1880, A-M
123 June 1-Oct. 31, 1880, A-M
124 Nov. 1-Dec. 31, 1880, A-M
125 Jan. 1-May 31, 1880, N-Z
126 June 1-Dec. 31, 1880, N-Z |
126
rolls |
|
M21 |
Office of
Indian Affairs (Central Office) letters sent, 1824-1881.
"This series consists of handwritten copies
of the general outgoing correspondence of the Office of
Indian Affairs.
Included are instructions to superintendents, agents, and other
employees and
acknowledgments of and replies to incoming correspondence. Reports to the Secretary of War
(or to the Secretary of the Interior
after 1849) and to certain other officials, including chairmen of
congressional committees, were copied in a separate series of volumes
called "Report Books"
(see NARA publication M348 [not held at the Center of Southwest Studies]).
Until 1869 the letters were copied in
chronological order. Beginning in that year, two or more books
were used
simultaneously. Letters relating to certain broad subjects (such as
land, finance, and
civilization) were copied into separate books, but
within each book the arrangement continued to
be chronological. Most of
the volumes are indexed by name of addressee and, to some extent, by
subject. There are also marginal notations of the page numbers for other
letters to the same person."
Roll Dates
1 Mar. 18, 1824-May 3, 1825
2 May 4, 1825-May 31, 1826
3 June 1, 1826-Mar. 31, 1827
4 Apr. 1, 1827-June 5, 1828
5 June 5, 1828-June 7, 1829
6 June 8, 1829-July 30, 1830
7 Aug. 1, 1830-Dec. 31, 1831
8 Jan. 1-July 4, 1832
9 July 5, 1832-Jan. 27, 1833
10 Jan. 28-June 18, 1833
11 June 19-Dec. 31, 1833
12 Jan. 1-May 31, 1834
13 June 1-Sept. 30, 1834
14 Oct. 1, 1834-Jan. 31, 1835
15 Feb. 1-Apr. 28, 1835
16 Apr. 28-Aug. 23, 1835
17 Aug. 24, 1835-Jane 31, 1836
18 Feb. l-May 31, 1836
19 June 1-Sept. 30, 1836
20 Oct. 1, 1836-Jan. 27, 1837
21 Jan. 28-June 20, 1837
22 June 21-Nov. 27, 1837
23 Nov. 28, 1837-Mar. 31, 1838
24 Apr. 1-July 26, 1838
25 July 27, 1838-Jan. 30, 1839
26 Jan. 31-June 30, 1839
27 July 1-Dec. 31, 1839
28 Jan. 1-June 30, 1840
29 July 1-Dec. 31, 1840
30 Jan. 1-Aug. 1, 1841
31 Aug. 2, 1841-Feb. 23, 1842
32 Feb. 24-Oct. 2, 1842
33 Oct. 3, 1842-May 15, 1843
34 May 10, 1843-Feb. 25, 1844
35 Feb. 26-0ct. 15, 1844
36 Oct. 15, 1844-July 22, 1845
37 July 23, 1845-Mar. 20, 1846
38 Mar. 21-Oct. 31, 1846
39 Nov. 2, 1846-July 31, 1847
40 Aug. 2, 1847-May 31, 1848
41 June 1, 1848-Mar. 31, 1849
42 Apr. 1, 1849-Jan. 31, 1850
43 Feb. 1-Oct. 31, 1850
44 Nov. 1, 1850-July 20, 1851
45 July 21, 1851-Mar. 31, 1852
46 Apr. 1, 1852-Jan. 20, 1853
47 Jan. 21-Aug. 24, 1853
48 Aug. 25, 1853-Mar. 27, 1854
49 Mar. 28-Aug. 26, 1854
50 Aug. 27, 1854-Feb. 20, 1855
51 Feb. 21-June 12, 1855
52 June 13-Oct. 27, 1855
53 Oct. 28, 1855-Mar. 19, 1856
54 Mar. 20-July 31, 1856
55 July 31-Dec. 31, 1856
56 Jan. 1-May 25, 1857
57 May 26-0ct. 31, 1857
58 Nov. 1, 1857-Apr. 30, 1858
59 May 1-Oct. 23, 1858
60 Oct. 25, 1858-Apr. 29, 1859
61 Apr. 30-Aug. 23, 1859
62 Aug. 24, 1859-Feb. 9, 1860
63 Feb. 10-June 26, 1860
64 June 27-Dec. 7, 1860
65 Dec. 8, 1860-June 1, 1861
66 June 3-Oct. 23, 1861
67 Oct. 24, 1861-Mar. 25, 1862
68 Mar. 26-Aug. 7, 1862
69 Aug. 8, 1862-Jan. 20, 1863
70 Jan. 20-June 5, 1863
71 June 5-Oct. 14, 1863
72 Oct. 15, 1863-Jan. 8, 1864
73 Jan. 9-Apr. 23, 1864
74 Apr. 25-July 28, 1864
75 July 28-Dec. 7, 1864
76 Dec. 8, 1864-Apr. 4, 1865
77 Apr. 4-Aug. 3, 1865
78 Aug. 3-Dec. 8, 1865
79 Dec. 9, 1865-Apr. 6, 1866
80 Apr. 6-July 17, 1866
81 July 18-Oct. 26, 1866
82 Oct. 27, 1866-Apr. 18, 1867
83 Apr. 19-Aug. 2, 1867
84 Aug. 3-Nov. 14, 1867
85 Nov. 15, 1867-Feb. 25, 1868
86 Feb. 26-June 9, 1868
87 June 10-Sept. 24, 1868
88 Sept. 25, 1868-Jan. 13, 1869
89 Jan. 14-Apr. 30, 1869
90 Apr. 30-July 8, 1869
91 July 8-Oct. 14, 1869
92 Land and civilization, Aug. 2-Dec. 14, 1869
93 Finance and miscellaneous, Oct. 14, 1869-Mar. 12, 1870
94 Land and civilization, Dec. 15, 1869-Apr. 14, 1870
95 Finance and miscellaneous, Mar. 14-Aug. 3, 1870
98 Land and civilization, Apr. 15-Aug. 25, 1870
97 Finance and miscellaneous, Aug. 4-Dec. 30, 1870
98 Land and miscellaneous, Aug. 26-Dec. 21, 1870
99 Finance and miscellaneous, Jan. 3-May 23, 1871
100 Land and civilization, Dec. 22, 1870-Apr. 19, 1871
101 Finance and miscellaneous, May 24-Aug. 26, 1871
102 Land and civilization, Apr. 20-Aug. 24, 1871
103 Land and civilization, Aug. 25, 1871-Jan. 25, 1872
104 Finance and miscellaneous, Aug. 28-Dec. 18, 1871
105 Finance and miscellaneous, Dec. 19, 1871-Apr. 23, 1872
106 Land and civilization, Jan. 26-May 21, 1872
107 Finance and miscellaneous, Apr. 24-Oct. 16, 1872
108 Land and civilization, May 22-Oct. 8, 1872
109 Finance and miscellaneous, Oct. 17, 1872-Apr. 16, 1873
110 Land and civilization, Oct. 9, 1872-Mar. 21, 1873
111 Finance, Apr. 17-July 30, 1873
112 Land and civilization, Mar. 21-July 26, 1873
113 Finance, July 31-Nov. 15, 1873
114 Land and civilization, July 28-Dec. 20, 1873
115 Finance, Nov. 17, 1873-Mar. 17, 1874
116 Land and civilization, Dec. 20, 1873-Apr. 7, 1874
117 Finance, Mar. 18-July 15, 1874
118 Land and civilization, Apr. 7-Aug. 4, 1874
119 Finance, July 13-Sept. 21, 1874
120 Land and civilization, Aug. 5-Nov. 23, 1874
121 Finance, Sept. 22-Dec. 22, 1874
122 Land and civilization, Nov. 24, 1874-Mar. 20, 1875
123 Finance, Dec. 22, 1874-Apr. 3, 1875
124 Miscellaneous, Mar. 22-July 7, 1875
125 Finance, Apr. 3-June 24, 1875
126 Miscellaneous, July 8-Nov. 6, 1875
127 Finance, June 25-Sept. 25, 1875
128 Miscellaneous, Nov. 6, 1875-Mar. 18, 1876
129 Finance, Sept. 25, 1875-Jan. 19, 1876
130 Miscellaneous, Mar. 18-Aug. 28, 1876
131 Finance, Jan. 20-Apr. 20, 1876
132 Miscellaneous, Aug. 28, 1876-Mar. 22, 1877
133 Finance, Apr. 20-Aug. 21, 1876
134 Accounts, Nov. 17, 1876-Sept. 8, 1877
135 Finance, Aug. 21-Dec. 14, 1876
136 Miscellaneous, Mar. 22-Sept. 3, 1877
137 Finance, Dec. 14, 1876-Apr. 21, 1877
138 Miscellaneous, Sept. 3, 1877-Mar. 13, 1878
139 Finance, Apr. 20-Aug. 25, 1877
140 Accounts, Sept. 10, 1877-Apr. 10, 1878
141 Finance, Aug. 25-Dec. 15, 1877
142 Miscellaneous, Mar. l4-July 31, 1878
143 Accounts, Apr. 10-Sept. 23, 1878
144 Miscellaneous, July 31, 1878-Jan. 20, 1879
145 Finance, Dec. 17, 1877-Mar. 27, 1878
146 Accounts, Sept. 23, 1878-Feb. 1, 1879
147 Land, Jan. 2-Aug. 2, 1879
148 Accounts, Feb. 3-June 13, 1879
149 Accounts, June 13-Sept. 29, 1879
150 Miscellaneous, Jan. 21-Sept. 25, 1879
151 Accounts, Sept. 30, 1879-Jan. 26, 1880
152 Land, Aug. 2, 1879-Apr. 5, 1880
153 Finance, Mar. 27-July 10, 1878
154 Miscellaneous, Sept. 25, 1879-Oct. 15, 1880
155 Accounts, Jan. 26-June 15, 1880
156 Finance, July 11-Oct. 13, 1878
157 Accounts, June 15-Oct. 9, 1880
158 Land, Apr. 6, 1880-May 6, 1881
159 Miscellaneous, Oct. 16, 1868-Jan. 5, 1882
160 Finance, Oct. 16, 1878-Mar. 31, 1879
161 Finance, Apr. l-July 31, 1879
162 Accounts, Oct. 11, 1880-Feb. 7, 1881
163 Finance, Aug. l-Dec. 13, 1879
164 Finance, Dec. 15, 1879-May 4, 1880
165 Finance, May 4-Aug. 31, 1880
166 Finance, Sept. 1, 1880-Jan. 10, 1881 |
166
rolls |
|
M74 |
Letters of
Tench Coxe, Commissioner of the Revenue, relating to the procurement of
military, naval, and Indian supplies, 1704-1796. |
1
roll |
|
M96 |
Bureau of Reclamation
project records (U.S. federal
Record Group 115). Organized and
microfilmed in two records series. This first series is project
histories and reports of Reclamation Bureau projects, 1905-1925, on roll
#s 1-24, 31-44, 46-102, 115-117, 148-158, 160-161, 167-175, 177,
183-187, 206-214, 217, 223-224 and 227-229. (The second series is
photographs of irrigation projects of the Bureau of Reclamation,
1902-1938, which is NARA publication M1145, 24
rolls, #s 1-21 including #s 18A, 20A and 21A). |
141 rolls |
|
M142 |
Arkansas
Trading House letterbook, 1805-1810. |
1 roll |
|
M157 |
Registers of
letters received by the United States Geological Survey, 1879-1901.
"This microfilm publication reproduces a series of 26 registers of
letters received by the Office of
the Director of the United States
Geological Survey, 1879-1901. The entries in these volumes are
arranged in chronological order by the date of receipt of the incoming
communication with some
exceptions. For each letter, the following
information is entered in the register: the date of receipt
and file
number assigned to the incoming communication (document number), the
name and address
of the writer, the date of the letter, a brief abstract
of the contents, and a reference date or notation
indicating the action
taken in regard to the communication. Occasional omissions and other
errors
occur.
Notations relating to action taken with regard to the incoming
correspondence are of particular
significance for 1899-1901, since
copies of outgoing communications of the survey are not
available for
those years."
Roll
Dates
1 Jan. 8,
1879-Dec. 31, 1880
2 Jan. 3,
1881-Dec. 30, 1882
8 Jan. 2,
1883-Dec. 81, 1884
4 Jan. 1,
1885-Dec. 31, 1886
5 Jan. 3,
1887-Dec. 31, 1888
6 Jan.
2-Dec. 31, 1889
7 Jan. 2,
1890-Dec. 31, 1891
8 Jan. 2,
1892-Dec. 30, 1893
9 Jan. 2-Dec.
31 , 1894
10 Jan. 2-Dec.
31, 1895
11 Jan.
2-Dec. 30, 1896
12 Jan.
2-Dec. 31, 1897
13 Jan.
3-Dec. 31, 1898
14 Jan. 3-Dec.
30, 1899
15 Jan.
2-Dec. 31, 1900
16 Jan.
2-Nov. 12, 1901 |
16 rolls |
|
M152 |
Letters sent
by the United States Geological Survey, 1879-1895. "This microfilm
publication reproduces a series of 35 letterbooks containing transcripts
of
outgoing communications of the Office of Director of the United
States Geological Survey,
1879-95, and a two-volume index to these
communications for 1879-83."
Roll Dates
1 July 7, 1879-Dec. 31, 1880
2 Jan. 3-Dec. 31, 1861
3 Jan. 3-Dec. 30, 1882
4 Jan. 2-Dec. 31, 1883
5 Jan. 2-Aug. 12, 1884
6 Aug. 12-Dec. 31, 1884
7 Jan. 2-Dec. 31, 1885
8 Jan. 2-July 20, 1886
9 July 20-Dec. 30, 1886
10 Jan. 3-June 30, 1887
11 July 1, 1887-Feb. 18, 1888
12 Feb. 18-Oct. 2, 1888
13 Oct. 2, l888-Mar. 30, 1869
14 Mar. 30-July 15, 1889
15 July 15-Dec. 11, 1889
16 Dec. 10, 1889-Apr. 15, 1890
17 Apr. 14-Sept. 1, 1890
18 Sept. 1, 1890-Jan. 21, 1891
19 Jan. 20-May 8, 1891
20 May 8-Sept. 23, 1891
21 Sept. 25, 1891-Mar. 16, 1892
22 Mar. 16-Aug. 6, 1892
23 Aug. 6-Dec. 31, 1892
24 Jan. 3-June 16, 1893
25 June 15-Dec. 30, 1893
26 Jan. 2-Aug. 13, 1894
27 Aug. 13-Dec. 31, 1894
28 Jan. 2-May 21, 1895
29 May 21-Dec. 8, 1895
|
29 rolls |
|
M156 |
Letters
received by John Wesley Powell, Director of the Geographical and
Geological Survey of the Rocky Mountain Region, 1869-1879."The
Geological Survey was established in 1879 in the Department of the
Interior to classify
public lands and to examine the geological
structure, mineral resources, and other products of
the national domain.
It replaced four earlier surveys: the U.S. Geological and Geographic
Survey of the Territories (Hayden Survey), 1867-79; the U.S.
Geographical and Geological
Survey of the Rocky Mountain Region (Powell
Survey), 1869-79; the U.S. Geographical
Surveys West of the One
Hundredth Meridian (Wheeler Survey), 1872-79; and the Geological
Exploration of the Fortieth Parallel (King Survey), 1867-79. The
Hayden and Powell Surveys
in particular included ethnological and archaeological studies."
"This microfilm publication reproduces the letters received by Maj.
John Wesley Powell, 1869-79.
It includes letters from frontiersmen
and Indian agents, including Jacob Hamblin, the `Mormon
Leatherstocking.'
The letters are arranged systematically first by year and then
alphabetically by
the surname of the correspondent and, occasionally, by
the name of the institution represented
by the correspondent.
John Wesley Powell, director of the Rocky Mountain Survey, was
especially concerned with
Indian vocabularies and linguistics, and he
published works about these interests. Most of the
records relating to these works are with the Records of the Bureau of American
Ethnology
at the National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian
Institution, Washington, D.C."
A related guide is the Catalogue and Index of the Publications of
the Hayden, King, Powell, and Wheeler Surveys by L. F. Schmeckebier,
1904, a book that was reprinted by Northwest Books (Portland, Oregon),
Library of Congress call number:
QE75.B9 #222. (The Delaney Library at the Center of Southwest
Studies has this book, for use in the library only.)
Roll Description Inclusive
Dates
1 Jan. 1, 1869-Dec 31, 1872
2 Jan. 1, 1873-Dec. 31, 1874
3 Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 1875
4 Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 1876
5 A-I Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 1877
6 J-Z Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 1877
7 A-I Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 1878
8 J-Z Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 1878
9 A-L Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 1879
10 M-Z Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 1879 |
10 rolls |
|
M184 |
U.S. consuls despatches from American consul in Ciudad Juarez (Paso
del Norte),
Mexico, 1850‑1906.
(This is located in Microfilm Drawer 5.80 in the Delaney
Library at the Center of Southwest Studies.) |
6 rolls |
|
M199 |
U.S. consuls despatches from American consul in Santa
Fe, NM, 1830‑1846. |
1 roll |
|
M208 |
Records of
the Cherokee Indian Agency in Tennessee, 1801-1835.
Roll
Description
1 Correspondence and miscellaneous records, 1801-2
2 Correspondence and miscellaneous records, 1803-4
3 Correspondence and miscellaneous records, 1805-7
4 Correspondence and miscellaneous records, 1808-9
5 Correspondence and miscellaneous records, 1810-12
6 Correspondence and miscellaneous records, 1813-15
7 Correspondence and miscellaneous records, 1816-18
8 Correspondence and miscellaneous records, 1819-20
9 Correspondence and miscellaneous records, 1821-23
10 Agency letter books, Dec. 30, 1822-Dec. 27, 1827, and Feb. 6, 1832-Dec. 2, 1835
11 Fiscal records, 1801-20, comprising (1) copies of accounts, receipts, and disbursements,
1801-20; and (2) Cherokee journals, 1801-11
12 Fiscal records, 1801-34, comprising Cherokee day books
13 Fiscal records, 1801-17, comprising (1) receipt book, 1801-2; (2) journal and account
book, 1801-17;
and (3) ledger, 1801-9; and (4) a passbook, 1801-4
14 Records of the Agent for the Department
of War in Tennessee, 1800-1815; and records
of Joseph McMinn, Agent for Cherokee Removal, 1817-1821 |
14
rolls |
|
M234 |
Office of
Indian Affairs (Central Office) letters received, 1824-1881.
"This series contains incoming
correspondence from all sources concerning Indian lands,
emigration, treaty negotiations, subsistence, annuity payments, conflicts,
depredations, claims,
traders and licenses, population, education,
progress in agriculture, health, employees, buildings,
supplies,
accounts, other administrative matters, and many other subjects relating
to Indians and
to the operations of the bureau. The letters are arranged
alphabetically by name of field jurisdiction (superintendency or agency)
or other subject heading, thereunder by year, and thereunder in
registry
order (alphabetically by initial letter of surname or other designation
of writer and
thereunder chronologically by date of receipt). Letters
relating to an agency for all or part of its
existence may be filed
under the agency's own name or under the name of the superintendency
to
which it was or had been responsible. The registers for these records
have been filmed as
microfilm publication M18."
Roll Subject and
inclusive dates
1 Alaska Agency, 1873-1874
Annuity goods, 1858-1869
2 Annuity goods, 1870-1878
Apalachicola Agency, 1826-1842
Apalachicola Agency Reserves, 1841-1842
Arizona Superintendency, 1863-1880:
3 1863-1869
4 1870-1871
5 1872 (A747-H532)
6 1872 (I1117-W648)
7 1873 (A375-B1065)
8 1873 (C354-R515)
9 1873 (S391-W1764)
10 1874 (A45-I958)
11 1874 (I959-T205)
12 1874 (T215-W2061)
13 1875 (A49-H1624)
14 1875 (I5-S1786)
15 1875 (T26-W1803)
16 1876 (A11-L420)
17 1876 (M24-Z1)
18 1877 (A128-S1047)
19 1877 (S1048-Z4)
20 1878 (A4-I1568)
21 1878 (I1612-S974)
22 1878 (S990-Z91)
23 1879 (A16-I313)
24 1879 (I376-O260)
25 1879 (O261-Z13)
26 1880 (A7-L759)
27 1880 (L770-T993)
28 1880 (T1014-Z10)
29 Arkansas Superintendency, 1824-1834
30 Blackfeet Agency, 1855-1869
31 Caddo Agency, 1824-1842
California Superintendency, 1849-1880:
32 1849-1852
33 1853-1854
34 1855
35 1856-1857
36 1858
37 1859-1860
38 1861-1862
39 1863-1864
40 1865
41 1866
42 1867-1868
43 1869-1870
44 1871-1872
45 1873
46 1874
47 1875
48 1876
49 1877
50 1878
51 1879
52 1880 Centennial
Exhibition, 1875-1878:
53 Register of letters received; and letters, 1875
54 Letters, 1876-1878
Central Superintendency, 1851-1880:
55 1851-1856
56 1857-1860 (R440)
57 1860 (R527)-1862 (I867)
58 1862 (K184)-1867
59 1868-1870
60 1871-1872 (B1073)
61 1872 (C801-W628)
62 1872 (W1221)-1873 (M745)
63 1873 (N33)-1874 (H876)
64 1874 (H902-W2041)
65 1875 (A1-I1388)
66 1875 (I1407)-1876 (G235)
67 1876 (G314-T324)
68 1876 (W18)-1877 (N296)
69 1877 (N307)-1878 (R870)
70 1878 (S99)-1880 (W2207)
Cherokee Agency, 1824-1880
(Cherokee Agency, East)
71 1824-1825
72 1826-1828
73 1829
74 1830-1831
75 1832-1833
76 1834-1836
(Cherokee Agency, West)
77 1824-1831
78 1832-1833
79 1834-1836
(Cherokee Agency)
80 1836
81 1837
82 1838
83 1839
84 1840
85 1841
86 1842
87 1843
88 1844
89 1845
90 1846
91 1847
92 1848
93 1849
94 1850
95 1851-1852
96 1853-1854
97 1855
98 1856-1858
99 1859-1864
100 1865-1866
101 1867-1868
102 1869
103 1870
104 1871
105 1872
106 1873
107 1874
108 1875 (173-M929)
109 1875 (M930-W1846)
110 1876-1877
111 1878-1879
112 1880
(Cherokee Emigration)
113 1828-1836
114 1837
115 1838
116 1839-1854
(Cherokee Reserves)
117 1828-1840
118 1841-1850
Cheyenne and Arapahoe Agency, 1875-1880:
119 1875 (A120-M479)
120 1875 (M482-W1804)
121 1876
122 1877
123 1878
124 1879 (A241-M1799)
125 1879 (M1805-W2577)
126 1880
Cheyenne River Agency, 1871-1880:
127 1871-1872
128 1873-1875
129 1876-1877
130 1878
131 1879-1880
Chicago Agency, 1824-1847:
132 1824-1834
133 1835-1839
134 Chicago Agency Emigration, 1835-1847
Chickasaw Agency, 1824-1870:
135 1824-1829
136 1830-1835
137 1836-1839
138 1840-1843
139 1844-1849
140 1850-1852
141 1853-1855
142 1856-1861, 1867-1870
(Chickasaw Agency Emigration)
143 1837-1838
144 1839-1850
(Chickasaw Agency Reserves)
145 1836-1837
146 1838-1839
147 1840-1842
148 1843-1850
Chippewa Agency, 1851-1880:
149 1851-1853
150 1854-1855
151 1856-1857
152 1858-1861
153 1862-1863
154 1864-1865
155 1866-1867
156 1868-1869
157 1870
158 1871
159 1872
160 1873
161 1874
162 1875
163 1876
164 1877
165 1878 (A239-K186)
166 1878 (K207-Z3)
167 1879
168 1880, Chippewa Agency Emigration, 1850-1859;
and Chippewa Agency Reserves, 1853-1855
Choctaw Agency, 1824-1878:
169 1824-1831
170 1832-1838
171 1839-1851
172 1852-1853
173 1854
174 1855-1856
175 1857-1859
176 1860-1866
177 1867-1868
178 1869
179 1870-1871
180 1872-1873
181 1874
182 1875
183 1876
(Choctaw Agency, West)
184 1825-1838
(Choctaw Agency Emigration)
185 1826-1845
186 1846-1849
187 1850-1859
(Choctaw Agency Reserve)
188 1833-1835
189 1836-1837
190 1838-1840
191 1841-1842
192 1843
193 1844
194 1845
195 1846-1850
196 1851-1860
Colorado Superintendency, 1861-1880:
197 1861-1864
198 1865-1866
199 1867-1868
200 1869-1870
201 1871
202 1872
203 1873
204 1874
205 1875
206 1876
207 1877
208 1878 (A20-L861)
209 1878 (M19-Y201)
210 1879 (A2-M572)
211 1879 (M602-S1094)
212 1879 (S1131-W2608)
213 1880 (A100-S1159)
214 1880 (S1205-W2762)
Council Bluffs Agency, 1836-1857:
215 1836-1843
216 1844-1846
217 1847-1851
218 1852-1857
Creek Agency, 1824-1876:
219 1824-1825 (O)
220 1825 (P)-1826
221 1827-1828
222 1829-1831
223 1832-1833
224 1834-1835
225 1836-1838
226 1839-1842
227 1843-1847
228 1848-1852
229 1853-1856
230 1857-1863
231 1864-1868
232 1869-1870
233 1871-1872
234 1873
235 1874-1876
(Creek Agency, West)
236 1826-1836
(Creek Agency Emigration)
237 1826-1836
238 1837
239 1838-1839
240 1840-1849
(Creek Agency Reserves)
241 1832-1834
242 1835
243 1836
244 1837
245 1838
246 1839
247 1840-1841
248 1842-1850
249 Crow Creek Agency, 1871-1876; Crow Wing Agency,
1835-1840; and Dakota
Superintendency, 1861-1880:
250 1861-1867
251 1868-1870
252 1871-1873
253 1874
254 1875 (A47-I856)
255 1875 (I865-W1842 1/2)
256 1876 (A4-H893)
257 1876 (H919-R310)
258 1876 (R357-Y3)
259 1877 (A6-D392)
260 1877 (D395-L338)
261 1877 (L358-W92)
262 1877 (W94-Y159)
263 1878 (A10-D541)
264 1878 (D543-H853)
265 1878 (H858-M1460)
266 1878 (M1495-Y165)
267 1879 (A4-D252)
268 1879 (D264-G333)
269 1879 (G341-O353)
270 1879 (O354-Y151)
271 1880 (A2-D141)
272 1880 (D143-H1465)
273 1880 (H1505-Y82)
Delaware Agency, 1855-1873:
274 1855-1857
275 1858-1861
276 1862-1864
277 1865-1868
278 1867
279 1868
280 1869-1873
Devils Lake Agency, 1871-80:
281 1871-1873
282 1874-1876 (M889)
283 1876 (M930)-1878 (M452)
284 1878 (M471)-1880
285 Flandreau Agency, 1873-1876
Florida Superintendency, 1824-1853:
266 1824-1826
287 1827-1831
288 1832-1837
289 1838-1850
290 Florida Superintendency Emigration, 1828-1838
291 Florida Superintendency Emigration, 1839-1853
Florida Superintendency Reserves, 1839-1847
Fort Berthold Agency, 1867-1880:
292 1867-1870
293 1871-1872
294 1873-1874
295 1875-1876
296 1877-1878 (A908)
297 1878 (A910)-1879 (E361)
298 1879 (E362-W2331)
299 1880
Fort Leavenworth Agency, 1824-1851:
300 1824-1836
301 1837-1842
302 1843-1848
303 1849-1851
304 Fort Wayne Agency, 1824-1830
Grand River Agency, 1871-1875:
305 1871-1872
306 1873-1875
Great Nemaha Agency, 1837-1876:
307 1837-1847
308 1848-1856
309 1857-1859
310 1860-1862
311 1863-1864
312 1865-1868
313 1869-1872
314 1873-1876
Great Nemaha Agency Emigration, 1837-1838
Green Bay Agency, 1824-1880:
315 1824-1832
316 1833-1837
317 1838-1839
318 1840-1843
319 1844-1847
320 1848-1850
321 1851-1852
322 1853-1855
323 1856-1860
324 1861-1864
325 1865-1867
326 1868-1869
327 1870-1871
328 1872
329 1873
330 1874
331 1875
332 1876
333 1877
334 1878
335 1879
336 1880
Idaho Superintendency, 1863-1880:
337 1863-1867
338 1868-1869
339 1870-1871
340 1872
341 1873
342 1874
343 1875
344 1876
345 1877 (A71-N692)
346 1877 (N702-W1284)
347 1878 (A91-I2488)
348 1878 (K26-W691)
349 1878 (W979-Y177)
350 1879 (A231-N313)
351 1879 (P104-W2625)
352 1880 (A338-W40)
353 1880 (W56-W2658)
Indiana Agency, 1824-1850:
354 1824-1834
355 1835-1837
356 1838-1839
357 1840
358 1841
359 1842
380 1843-1850
361 Indiana Agency Emigration, 1833-1849
Indiana Agency Reserves, 1836-1850
362 Ioway Agency, 1825-1837
363 Iowa Superintendency, 1838-1849
Kansas Agency, 1851-1876:
364 1851-1855
365 1856-1861
366 1862-1864
367 1865-1868
368 1869-1871
369 1872-1873
370 1874-1876
Kickapoo Agency, 1855-1876:
371 1855-1863
372 1864-1866
373 1867-1871
374 1872-1876
Kiowa Agency, 1864-1880:
375 1864-1868
376 1869-1870
377 1871-1872
378 1873
379 1874
380 1875
381 1876
382 1877
383 1878 (A263-H1917)
384 1878 (H1959)-1879 (H309)
385 1879 (H324-Y114)
386 1880
La Pointe Agency, 1831-1880:
387 1831-1839
388 1840-1843
389 1844-1847
390 1848-1850
391 1855-1859
392 1860-1862
393 1863-1866
394 1867-1872
395 1873-1874
396 1875-1876
397 1877
398 1878
399 1879
400 1880
401 Lower Brule Agency, 1875-1876
Mackinac Agency, 1828-1880:
402 1828-1838
403 1839-1852
404 1853-1855
405 1856-1857
406 1858-1861
407 1862-1866
408 1867-1869
409 1870-1871
410 1872-1873
411 1874-1876
412 1877
413 1878
414 1879
415 1880
Mackinac Agency Emigration, 1838-1839
Miami Agency, 1824-1853:
416 1824-1841; 1846-1850
417 Miami Agency Reserves, 1838-1850
418 Miami Agency Emigration, 1842-1853
Michigan Superintendency, 1824-1851:
419 1824-1827
420 1828-1831
421 1832-1835
422 1836-1837
423 1838-1839
424 1840-1841
425 1842-1845
426 1846-1851
427 Michigan Superintendency Emigration, 1830-1848,
and Michigan Superintendency Reserves, 1837-1848
428 Minnesota Superintendency, 1849-1856
Miscellaneous, 1824-1880:
429 1824-1826
430 1827
431 1828
432 1829
433 1830
434 1831-1832
435 1833-1835
436 1836
437 1837
438 1838
439 1839
440 1840
441 1841
442 1842-1843
443 1844-1845
444 1846
445 1847
446 1848-1849
447 1850
448 1851
449 1852
450 1853
451 1854
452 1855
453 1856
454 1857
455 1858-1859
456 1860-1861
457 1862-1863
458 1864-1865
459 1866
460 1867
461 1868
462 1869
463 1870
464 1871
465 1872
466 1873 (A365-I1004)
467 1873 (K5-Y16)
468 1874 (A39-I1529)
489 1874 (I1536-W2009)
470 1875 (A5-P534)
471 1875 (P538-Y15)
472 1876 (A21-P265)
473 1876 (P266-W1530)
474 1877 (A16-R548)
475 1877 (S68-Y146)
476 1678 (A2-H1350)
477 1878 (H1375-O112)
478 1878 (P28-T91)
479 1878 (T112-Z3 1/2)
480 1879 (A5-F221)
481 1879 (F222-I2537)
482 1879 (K72-S1632)
483 1879 (S1655-Y88)
484 1880 (A22-I551)
485 1880 (I561-P1126)
486 1880 (P1144-Z6)
487 Miscellaneous Emigration, 1824-1848
Montana Superintendency, 1864-1880:
488 1864-1868
489 1869
490 1870
491 1871
492 1872 (A88-V297)
493 1872 (V298-W512)
494 1873 (A386-E124)
495 1873 (F34-S323)
496 1873 (S324-W327)
497 1873 (W328-W1757)
498 1874 (A2-I231)
499 1874 (I232-M1469)
500 1874 (N93-W2048)
501 1875 (A10-F546)
502 1875 (G20-R514)
503 1875 (S45-Y7)
504 1876 (A7-I1174)
505 1876 (K5-Y17)
506 1877 (A43-C1921)
507 1877 (D72-I861)
508 1877 (K8-Y28 1/2)
509 1878 (A47-E145)
510 1878 (F1-I2484)
511 1878 (K25-V9)
512 1878 (W101-Y176)
513 1879 (A68-K345)
514 1879 (K362-P1344)
515 1879 (Q1-Y147)
516 1880 (A16-L1844)
517 1880 (M44-T1654)
518 1880 (W15-Y279)
Nebraska Agencies, 1876-1880:
519 1876
520 1877 (A28-L100)
521 1877 (L108-W109)
522 1877 (W121)-1878 (I126O)
523 1878 (I1306-O2)
524 1878 (O32-W2614)
525 1879 (A15-K530)
526 1879 (K531-V16)
527 1879 (V22)-1880 (G94)
528 1880 (G106-L532)
529 1880 (L568-Y19)
Neosho Agency, 1831-1875:
530 1831-1847
531 1848-1858
532 1859-1861
533 1862-1865
534 1866-1867
535 1868-1869
536 1870-1871
537 1872-1875
Nevada Superintendency, 1861-1880:
538 1861-1869
539 1870-1871
540 1872-1873
541 1874-1875
542 1876-1877
543 1878
544 1879
545 1880
New Mexico Superintendency, 1849-1880:
546 1849-1853
547 1854-1855
548 1856-1857
549 1858-1859
550 1860-1861
551 1862-1863
552 1864-1865
553 1866
554 1867
555 1868
556 1869
557 1870
558 1871
559 1872 (A667-P256)
560 1872 (P257)-1873 (D315)
561 1873 (D317-W1742)
562 1874 (A1-L334)
563 1874 (L336-Y11)
564 1875 (A8-S105)
565 1875 (S114-W1823)
566 1876 (A5-G385)
567 1876 (G386-R92)
568 1876 (R95-S663)
569 1876 (S676-W1374)
570 1877 (A2-M931)
571 1877 (N44-P427)
572 1877 (P431-W1238)
573 1878 (A8-I2047)
574 1878 (I2064-T187)
575 1878 (T192-W2487)
576 1879 (A120-R383)
577 1879 (R384-T470)
578 1879 (T471-Y11)
579 1880 (A27-M1998)
580 1880 (M2276-T9)
581 1880 (T11-W240)
582 1880 (W247-Y70)
New York Agency, 1829-1880:
583 1835-1839
584 1840-1842
585 1843-1844
586 1845-1847
587 1848-1851
588 1852-1857
589 1858-1861
590 1862-1868
591 1869-1873
592 1874-1875
593 1876
594 1877
595 1878
596 1879-1880
597 New York Agency Emigration, 1829-1851
Northern Superintendency, 1851-1876:
598 1851-1860
599 1861-1867
600 1868-1876
Ohio Agency, 1831-1843:
601 1831-1838
602 1839-1843
603 Ohio Agency Emigration, 1831-1839, and
Ohio Agency Reserves, 1834-1843
Omaha Agency, 1856-1876:
604 1856-1863
605 1864-1870
606 1871-1876
Oregon Superintendency, 1842-1880:
607 1842-1852
608 1853-1855
609 1856
610 1857
611 1858-1859
612 1860-1861
613 1862-1863
614 1864-1865
615 l866-1869
616 1870-1871
617 1872 (A919)-1873 (H1144)
618 1873 (I366-W1663)
619 1874 (A9-M1107)
620 1874 (M1121)-1875 (C1520)
621 1875 (D9-W1725)
622 1876 (A47-P108)
623 1876 (P112)-1877 (K260)
624 1877 (K272-W1294)
625 1878 (A32-R97)
626 1878 (R99-W2613)
627 1679 (A57-P700)
628 1879 (P810-W2610)
629 1880 (A220-S21)
630 1880 (S22-W2759)
Osage Agency, 1824-1880:
631 1824-1841
632 1842-1846
633 1847-1874
634 1875
635 1876 (A22-N421)
636 1876 (N435-W1390)
637 1877
638 1878 (A261-G325)
639 1878 (G337-W2601)
640 1879
641 1880
Osage River Agency, 1824-1871:
642 1824-1843
643 1844-1848
644 1849-1854
645 1855-1857
646 1858-1860
647 1861-1863
648 1864-1866
649 1867-1868
650 1869
651 1870-1871
Otoe Agency, 1856-1876:
652 1856-1860
653 1861-1867
654 1868-1871
655 1872-1876
Ottawa Agency, 1863-1873:
656 1863-1865
657 1866-1869
658 1870-1873
Pawnee Agency, 1859-1880:
659 1859-1862
660 1863-1869
661 1870-1872
662 1873
663 1874-1875
664 1876
665 1877
666 1878
667 1879
668 1880
669 Pima Agency, 1859-1861, and Piqua Agency, 1824-1830
Ponca Agency, 1859-1880:
670 1859-1863
671 1864-1870
672 1871-1873
673 1874-1875
674 1876-1877
675 1878 (A350-W1582)
676 1878 (W1627)-1879
677 1880
Potawatomi Agency, 1851-1880:
678 1851-1852
679 1853-1854
680 1855-1856
681 1857-1858
682 1859-1860
683 1861-1862
684 1863-1864
685 1865
686 1866
687 1867
688 1868
689 1869
690 1870-1871
691 1872-1874
692 1875-1877
693 1878
694 1879
695 1880
Prairie du Chien Agency, 1824-1842:
696 1824-1833
697 1834-1837
698 1838
699 1839
700 1840
701 1841
702 1842, and Prairie du Chien Agency
Emigration, 1837-1841
Quapaw Agency, 1871-1880:
703 1871-1873
704 1874-1875
705 1876-1877 (N231)
706 1877 (N241)-1878 (12142)
707 1878 (I2154)-1879 (C206)
708 1879 (C207-I435)
709 1879 (I440-K900)
710 1879 (K911)-1880 (D335)
711 1880 (D353-H106)
712 1880 (H133-L1304)
713 1880 (L1313-Z11)
714 Raccoon River Agency, 1843-1845
Red Cloud Agency, 1871-1880:
715 1871
716 1872
717 1873
718 1874
719 1875
720 1876
721 1877
722 1878 (A5-I1975)
723 1878 (I1976-W2582)
724 1879 (A8-M2227)
725 1879 (M2228-W2595)
726 1880
727 Red River Agency, 1824-1830
Sac and Fox Agency, 1824-1880:
728 1824-1833
729 1834-1837
730 1838-1840
731 1841-1842
732 1843-1850
733 1851-1858
734 1859-1861
735 1862-1864
736 1865-1866
737 1867-1868
738 1869-1870
739 1871-1873
740 1874-1875
741 1876
742 1877-1878
743 1879
744 1880
Sac and Fox Emigration, 1845-1847, and Sac and Fox Agency Reserves, 1837-1850
Saginaw Agency, 1824-1850:
745 1824-1839
746 1840-1850
St. Louis Superintendency, 1824-1851:
747 1824-1826
748 1827-1828
749 1829-1831
750 1832-1835
751 1836-1838
752 1839-1841
753 1842-1845
754 1846-1847
755 1848-1849
756 1850-1851, and St. Louis Superintendency Emigration, 1837-1841
St. Peter's Agency, 1824-1870:
757 1824-1836
758 1837-1839
759 1840-1844
760 1845-1850
761 1851-1854
762 1855-1858
763 1859-1861
764 1862-1865
765 1866-1867
766 1868-1870, and St. Peter's Agency Reserves, 1839-1849
767 Sandy Lake Agency, 1850-1851, and Santa Fe Agency, 1849-1851
Santee Sioux Agency, 1871-1876:
768 1871-1873
769 1874-1876
Sault Ste. Marie Agency, 1824-1852:
770 1824-1841
771 1842-1852
Schools, 1824-1873:
772 1824-1825
773 1826-1828
774 1829-1830
775 1831-1832
776 1833-1834
777 1835-1836
778 1837-1838
779 1839-1840
780 1841-1842
781 1843
782 1844-1845
783 1846-1847
784 1848-1849
785 1850-1851
786 1852-1853
787 1854
788 1855
789 1856
790 1857
791 1858-1859
792 1860-1861
793 1862-1863
794 1864-1865
795 1866
796 1867-1868
797 1869-1870
798 1871
799 1872-1873, and Schools Reserves, 1837-1839
Seminole Agency, 1824-1876:
800 1824-1845
801 1846-1855
802 1856-1858
803 1859-1867
804 1868-1871
805 1872-1876
Seminole Agency Emigration, 1827-1859
806 1827-1846
807 1848-1859
808 Seneca Agency in New York, 1824-1832
Shawnee Agency, 1855-1876:
809 1855-1857
810 1858-1859
811 1860
812 1861-1862
813 1863-1864
814 1865-1866
815 1867
816 1868
817 1869
818 1870 (A637-G375)
819 1870 (G395-W1629)
820 1871
821 1872-1873
822 1874
823 1875-1876
Sisseton Agency, 1867-1880
824 1867-1871
825 1872-1873
826 1874
827 1875
828 1876
829 1877-1878
830 1879
831 1880
832 Six Nations Agency, 1824-1834
Southern Superintendency, 1851-1871:
833 1851-1856
834 1857-1862
835 1863-1864
836 1865
837 1866-1867
838 1868-1869
839 1870-1871
Spotted Tail Agency, 1875-1880:
840 1875-1876 (H338)
841 1876 (H345)-1877
842 1878 (A183-L394)
843 1878 (L395)-1879 (H400)
844 1879 (H606-W1923)
845 1880
Standing Rock Agency, 1875-1880:
846 1875-1876 (B829)
847 1876 (B835)-1877 (H181)
848 1877 (H182-W1124)
849 1878 (A295-W42)
850 1878 (W116)-1879
851 1880 (A81-S1874)
852 1880 (S1885-W2575)
Stocks, 1836-1873:
853 1836-1839
854 1840-1845
855 1846-1852
856 1853-1863
857 1864-1873
Texas Agency, 1847-1859:
858 1847-1852
859 1853-1854
860 1855-1857
861 1858-1859
Turkey River Agency, 1842-1846:
862 1842-1843
863 1844-1845
864 1846
Union Agency, 1875-1880:
865 1875-1876 (M1008)
866 1876 (M1025-W1364)
867 1877 (A54-P557)
868 1877 (R6-W1268)
869 1878 (A13-M168)
870 1878 (M196-Z1)
871 1879 (A7-L377)
872 1879 (L419-W1381)
873 1879 (W1415)-1880 (H647)
874 1880 (H665-L956)
875 1880 (L1113-S3875)
876 1880 (T5-899)
877 1880 (T902-Y62)
Upper Arkansas Agency, 1855-1874:
878 1855-1864
879 1865-1867
880 1868-1870
881 1871-1873
882 1874
Upper Missouri Agency, 1824-1874:
883 1824-1835
884 1836-1851
885 1852-1864
886 1865-1866
887 1867-1869
888 1870-1874, and Upper Missouri Agency Reserve, 1837-1849
Upper Platte Agency, 1846-1870:
869 1846-1856
890 1857-1862
891 1863-1866
892 1867
893 1868
894 1869
895 1870 (A628-D1020)
896 1870 (D1024-W1625)
Utah Superintendency, 1849-1880:
897 1849-1855
898 1856-1858
899 1859-1860
900 1861-1862
901 1863-1865
902 1866-1869
903 1870-1872
904 1873-1874
905 1875-1877
906 1878-1880
Washington Superintendency, 1853-1880:
907 1853-1857, 1861-1862
908 1863-1864
909 1865-1867
910 1868-1869
911 1870-1871
912 1872-1873
913 1874
914 1875 (A18)-1876 (H716)
915 1876 (H722)-1877 (N848)
916 1877 (N886)-1878 (I1895)
917 1878 (I1912-W1910)
918 1878 (W1917)-1879 (S2604)
919 1879 (S2605)-1880 (M2502)
920 1880 (M2507-W2765)
Western Superintendency, 1832-1851:
921 1832-1836
922 1837-1839
923 1840-1846
924 1847-1851, and Western Superintendency Emigration, 1836-1842
Whetstone Agency, 1871-1874:
925 1871-1872
926 1873
927 1874
Wichita Agency, 1857-1878:
928 1857-1866
929 1867-1875
930 1876-1878
Winnebago Agency, 1826-1875:
931 1826-1847
932 1848-1850
933 1851-1853
934 1854-1859
935 1860-1862
936 1863
937 1864
938 1865
939 1866
940 1867
941 1868
942 1869-1870
943 1871-1872
944 1873
945 1874
946 1875
947 Winnebago Agency Emigration, 1833-1852, and Winnebago Agency Reserves, 1836-1847
Wisconsin Superintendency 1836-1848:
948 1836-1840
949 1841-1848
Wyandot Agency, 1843-1863, 1870-1872:
950 1843-1849
951 1850-1851, 1870-1872
952 Wyandot Agency Emigration, 1839-1851, and Wyandot Agency Reserves, 1845-1863
Wyoming Superintendency 1869-1880:
953 1869-1871
954 1872-1874
955 1875-1877
956 1878
957 1879
958 1880
Yankton Agency, 1859-1876:
959 1859-1863
960 1864-1869
961 1870-1872
962 1873-1876 |
962
rolls |
|
M271 |
Letters
received by the Secretary of War relating to Indian affairs, 1800-1823.
"This series primarily concerns Indians
in the southern United States and the Seneca in New
York. It represents
only a small part of the original incoming correspondence relating to
Indian
affairs. The series contains correspondence from Indian
superintendents and agents, factors of
trading posts, territorial and
state governors, military commanders, Indians, and missionaries.
Some drafts of letters sent, vouchers, receipts, requisitions, abstracts and
statements, certificates
of deposit, depositions, and newspapers are
included. The records relate to the negotiation of
Indian treaties, land
reserves of individual Indians, mission schools, government trading
posts,
issuance of licenses to private traders, distribution of
annuities, slaves in Indian country, liquor
control, investment of
Indian moneys, accounts, and other subjects. The correspondence is
arranged by year, thereunder alphabetically by the name of the writer,
and thereunder
chronologically by the date of the letter."
Roll Dates
1 1800-1816
2 1817-1819
3 1820-1821
4 1822-1823 |
4
rolls |
|
M283 |
U.S. consuls despatches from American consul in
Nogales, Mexico, 1889‑1906. |
4
rolls |
|
M289 |
U.S. consuls despatches from American consul in
Chihuahua, Mexico, 1830‑1906. |
3
rolls |
|
M290 |
U.S. consuls despatches from American consul in Durango, Mexico, 1886‑1906. |
1 roll |
|
M318 |
Confederate soldiers service records:
Compiled service records (muster roll) of
Confederate soldiers who
served in organizations from the Territory of
microfilm
publication |
1 roll |
I 049 |
M337 |
Enrolled original acts and resolutions of the U.S. Congress |
1
roll |
|
M338 |
Certificates of ratification of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights |
1
roll |
|
M342 |
State Department Territorial Papers for
Arizona, 1864-1872. "The Department of State supervised affairs in
the territories of the United States from 1789 to 1873.
The department
attended to such matters as correspondence between the President and
territorial
officials, the printing of territorial laws, and the
provision of seals for the official use of the territories.
In 1873
Congress transferred the supervision of the territories to the Office of
the Secretary of the
Interior. Records of the period of territorial
administration by the Department of State are among
the General Records
of the Department of State,
Record Group 59.
These records include correspondence, reports, copies of journals of
proceedings of legislative
assemblies, and other records relating to
territorial administration." |
1
roll |
|
M348 |
Office of
Indian Affairs (Central Office) report books, 1838-1885.
"These Report Books contain
manuscript copies of communications sent by the Office of Indian
Affairs
to members of the President's cabinet having supervisory responsibility
for Indian affairs.
The Report Books also contain some copies of letters
to the President, Members of Congress,
and other government officials. During the early years of the office, the letters to the President
and
the Members of Congress were often signed by the Secretary of War rather
than by the
Commissioner of Indian Affairs. The use of the Report Books
to record letters to officials other
than the supervising Secretary was
gradually discontinued, and by 1870 Report Books contained
only copies
of letters to the Secretary of the Interior.
"All communications to the Secretary were
considered `reports.' They range from extensive
narratives, such as
annual reports, to brief letters transmitting documents or recommending
appointments. They relate to almost every aspect of the administration
of Indian affairs, including
the negotiation and enforcement of
treaties; estimates and appropriations; legislation; investigations;
claims (particularly for depredations); maintenance of order and
military operations; liquor control;
establishment of reservations,
trust funds, and schools; the field organization of the Indian service;
location of agencies; appointments; and employees, buildings, supplies,
and accounts.
"The letters were transcribed in
chronological order, with some exceptions. Frequently, at the
end of a
volume there are some letters that were omitted from their proper date
order in the book.
Report Book 33 (reproduced on roll 33) contains many
letters erroneously omitted from other
volumes.
"The earlier volumes have indexes to both
subjects and addresses. There are also notations in
the margin, opposite
the copied document, that indicate the page number of the last preceding
and the next succeeding letters to the same correspondent.
"The original Report Books are on M825,
Selected Classes of Letters Received by the Indian
Division of the
Office of the Secretary of the Interior, 1849-l880."
Roll Dates
1 Nov. 25, 1838-Mar. 21, 1840
2 Mar. 21 1840-Aug. 31, 1841
3 Sept. 1, 1841-Aug. 17, 1843
4 Aug. 18, l843-Feb. 26, 1846
5 Feb. 27, 1846-July 25, 1848
6 July 25, 1848-June 23, 1851
7 June 28, 1851-Apr. 29, 1854
8 May 1, 1854-Aug. 9, 1855
9 Aug. 10, 1855-Dec. 31, 1856
10 Jan. 2, 1857-May 31, 1858
11 June 1, l858-Aug. 29, 1860
12 Sept. 3, 1860 Dec. 11, 1862
13 Dec. 12, 1862-Aug. 19, 1864
14 Aug. 19, 1864-Dec. 11, 1865
15 Dec. 13, 1865-Sept. 29, 1866
16 Oct. 1, 1866 0ct. 25, 1867
17 Oct. 26, 1867-Oct. 31, 1868
18 Nov. 2, l868-Aug. 23, 1869
19 Aug. 24, 1869-Sept. 9, 1870
20 Sept. 10, 1870-Sept. 6, 1871
21 Sept. 7, 1871-June 21, 1872
22 June 24, 1872-May 13, 1873
23 May 13, 1873-Jan. 17, 1874
24 Jan. 19-Aug. 7, 1874
25 Aug. 8, 1874-Mar. 13, 1875
26 Mar. 15-Sept. 28, 1875
27 Sept. 27, 1875-Apr. 4, 1876
28 Apr. 4, 1876-Mar. 13, 1877
29 Mar. 13-Dec. 29, 1877
30 Jan. 2-June 1, 1878
31 July 1-Dec. 19, 1878
32 Jan. 2-Apr. 12, 1879
33 Mar. 30, 1878-Oct. 19, 1882
34 Apr. 14-July 26, 1879
35 July 26-Dec. 31, 1879
36 Jan. 2-May 20, 1880
37 July 1-Nov. 30, 1880
38 Dec. 1, 1880-Mar. 31, 1881
39 Apr. l-July 28, 1881
40 July 25-Dec. 81, 1881
41 Jan. 3-Apr. 12, 1882
42 Apr. 13-July 24, 1882
43 July 24-Dec. 19, 1882
44 Dec. 19, 1882-Apr. 30, 1883
45 May l-Sept. 13, 1883
46 Sept. 14, 1883-Jan. 10, 1884
47 Jan. 10-Mar. 28, 1884
48 Mar. 28-June 30, 1884
49 July 1-Oct. 8, 1884
50 Oct. 9, 1884-Jan. 28, 1885
51 Jan. 28-Apr. 30, 1885
52 May 1-Aug. 17, 1885
53 Aug. 18-Nov.
12, 1885 |
53
rolls |
|
M364 |
Interior Department Territorial Papers
for New Mexico, 1851-1914.
"Congress delegated supervision of the territories to the Secretary
of State until 1873, when
they were assigned to the Department of the
Interior. The papers described below are chiefly
original letters from
the territorial governors and secretaries to the President or to the
Secretaries
of State or the Interior; journals of executive proceedings
in territories; acts of territorial
legislatures; and letters and
documents predating the establishment of a territory. These papers
are
from the Records of the Office of the Secretary of the Interior,
Record
Group 48."
Roll Contents
Executive proceedings:
1 Oct. 8, 1874-Dec. 31, 1888
2 July 1, 1889-Dec. 31, 1899
3 Jan. 1, 1900-Dec. 31, 1906
4 Letters received relating to: (1) public buildings and grounds, Sept. 18, 1858-Feb. 16,
1899, and (2) Adobe Palace, Sept. 1867-Dec. 14, 1900
Letters received relating to inspection of coal mines:
5 Nov. 12, 1892-Dec. 14, 1896
6 Jan. 14, 1897-Dec. 9, 1901
7 Jan. 10, 1902-May 9, 1907
Letters received relating to miscellaneous subjects:
8 Apr. 1851-Nov. 20, 1900
9 Mar. 30, 1901-May 29, 1907
Subject-classified files of the Office of the Secretary of the
Interior, 1906-14 and 1923:
10 9-5-2 Extradition with Mexico, 1908-09
9-5-3 Progress and development, annual reports,
executive proceedings, etc., 1907-13,
parts 1-3 and supplements
9-5-4 Depository for territorial funds, 1907
11 9-5-5 Investigation of land transactions, American Lumber Co., parts 1-3, 1907-13;
general, parts 1-12, 1906-7
12 General, parts 13-17, supplements A2-A5, and special memorandums, 1906-09;
Pennsylvania Development Co., New Mexico Fuel and Iron Co., and
W. S. Hopewell, 1906-09; Rio Mimbres Irrigation Co., parts 1-2, 1908
13 9-5-6 Miscellaneous matters, parts 1-2, 1907-12, 1923
9-5-7 Legislation, acts of legislature, journal of legislative proceedings, general, 1906-12
Legislative Assembly of New Mexico--legislation, 60th and 61st Congresses,
parts 1-2, 1908-10
9-5-8 Statehood, general, parts 1-5, 1907-11
14 General, parts 6-8, 1911-14
Legislation, 1909-14
9-5-9 Investment of territorial funds, 1907-11
9-5-10 Proclamations of governor, 1907-10
15 9-5-11 Normal University, 1907
9-5-12 Attorney General, 1907
9-5-13 Leave granted territorial officials, 1907-11
9-5-14 Cruelty to animals, 1908
9-5-15 Protection of Mexican citizens: improper treatment of Mexicans, etc., 1908-11
9-5-16 Liquor traffic, regulation, prohibition, etc., 1908
9-5-17 New Mexico College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, 1908
9-5-18 Territorial and school lands, general, 1907-12; leases; forms, 1907; Gaar,
James M., et al., 1908-10; general, parts 1-3, 1907-11; legislation, 1910
9-5-19 Judicial affairs, 1908-10
9-5-20 Messages of governor to legislative assembly, 1909
9-5-21 Bond issues, general, 1909; legislation, 60th and 61st Congresses, parts 1-2,
1908-10
9-5-22 Sale of timber on territorial lands, 1908
9-5-23 Professional practice in territory, 1908-10
9-5-24 National forests, proceeds from, etc., 1909
9-5-25 New Mexico Institute for the Blind, 1909
9-5-26 General legislation, 1908-12
9-5-27 Construction of public wells, legislation, 1910
9-5-28 Official seal, 1911
9-5-29 Court of Private Land Claims, 1911 |
15
rolls |
|
M375 |
Confederate soldiers service records:
Index of compiled service records
(muster roll) of Confederate soldiers
who served in organizations
from the Territory of
microfilm
publication |
1 roll |
|
M428 |
Interior Department Territorial Papers
for Utah, 1850-1902. "Congress delegated supervision of the
territories to the Secretary of State until 1873, when
they were assigned to the Department of the Interior. The papers described below
are chiefly
original letters from the territorial governors and
secretaries to the President or to the Secretaries
of State or the
Interior; journals of executive proceedings in territories; acts of
territorial
legislatures; and letters and documents predating the
establishment of a territory. These papers
are from the Records of the
Office of the Secretary of the Interior,
Record Group 48."
Roll Contents
Executive proceedings:
1 Mar. 12, 1877-Dec 31, 1888
2 Jan. 1, 1889-Dec. 31, 1893
Letters received relating to:
3 The U.S. penitentiary in Utah, Sept. 30, 1885-July 8, 1896
4 Polygamy, Jan. 27, 1879-Dec. 17, 1897
5 Inspection of coal mines, Nov. 12, 1892-Feb. 7, 1896
6 Miscellaneous subjects, Jan. 1, 1850-Apr. 3, 1886, and June 20, 1902 |
6
rolls |
|
M429 |
Interior Department Territorial Papers
for Arizona, 1868-1813. "Congress delegated supervision of the
territories to the Secretary of State until 1873,
when they were
assigned to the Department of the Interior. The papers described below
are chiefly original letters from the territorial governors and
secretaries to the President or
to the Secretaries of State or the
Interior; journals of executive proceedings in territories;
acts of
territorial legislatures; and letters and documents predating the
establishment of a
territory. These papers are from the Records of the
Office of the Secretary of the Interior,
Record Group 48."
Roll Contents
1 Executive proceedings and official correspondence, July 1, 1877-Dec. 31, 1903
2 Messages of the governor and reports of territorial officials, 1905-7
3 Letters received, Feb. 14, 1868-Jan. 24, 1888,
relating to (1) disturbances along the
Mexican border, Dec. 13, 1878-Jan. 25, 1884, and (2) miscellaneous subjects,
Feb. 14, 1868-Jan. 24, 1888
Letters received relating to miscellaneous subjects:
4 Apr. 2, 1889-0ct. 27, 1898
5 Mar. 11, 1899-June 25, 1907
Subject-classified files of the Office of the Secretary of the
Interior, 1907-1913 and 1919:
6 9-2-1 Annual reports of governors and territorial officials, parts 1-2, and
supplements A-1-4, 1907-12 and 1919
7 9-2-2 Claims against the territory, 1907
9-2-3 Smuggling of arms to Yaqui Indians, 1907-9
9-2-4 Comptroller's decisions, 1907
9-2-5 Toll road through Grand Canyon Forest Reserve, 1907
9-2-6 Extradition with Mexico for escaped convicts, 1907-11
9-2-7 Arizona Corporation Charter Guarantee Co., 1907
9-2-8 Acts of legislature, 1907-12
9-2-9 Miscellaneous, parts 1-3, 1907-12
9-2-10 Federal appointments, 1907-8
9-2-11 Leave granted governor, 1907-12
9-2-12 Observatory land tract, 1908
9-2-13 Protection of Mexican citizens, improper treatment of Mexicans, parts
1-2, 1908-11
9-2-15 Bond issue, general, 1908-10; legislation, 1909-11
8 9-2-16 Statehood, general, parts 1-16, 1908-13; legislation, 1911-12
9-2-17 Judicial affairs, 1909-11
9-2-18 Professional practice in
the Territory, 1909-11
9-2-19 National forests, 1909
9-2-21 General legislation, 1909-11 |
8
rolls |
|
M431 |
Interior Department Territorial Papers
for Colorado, 1861-1888. "Congress delegated supervision of the
territories to the Secretary of State until 1873, when
they were
assigned to the Department of the Interior. The papers described below
are chiefly
original letters from the territorial governors and
secretaries to the President or to the Secretaries
of State or the
Interior; journals of executive proceedings in territories; acts of
territorial
legislatures; and letters and documents predating the
establishment of a territory. These papers
are from the Records of the
Office of the Secretary of the Interior,
Record Group 48." |
1
roll |
|
M567 |
Letters received by the
Office of the Adjutant General (Main Series), 1822-1860.
The Center of Southwest Studies only has roll #601 of
this publication.NARA has listed the following as
part of its microfilm publications pertaining the military
establishments. Its online description (viewed on August 2, 2004,
at
http://www.archives.gov/publications/microfilm_catalogs/american_indian/american_indian_part07.html
)
notes that "The Army's primary responsibility in the West was the
protection of white settlers
against hostile Indians. To do this,
the Army frequently established camps and forts in hostile
territory.
"Army garrisons were often established close to Indian agencies.
The respective areas of
authority of the agents and the Army commanders
were often in dispute, and their viewpoints
sometimes conflicted.
There was continual controversy over the respective merits of civilian
and military control over the Indians, particularly during the 1870s,
when there was a strong
movement to transfer the Office of Indian
Affairs back to the War Department.
RECORDS OF THE ADJUTANT GENERAL'S OFFICE, 1780s-1917
(Record Group 94)
"The Continental Congress on June 17, 1775, appointed an Adjutant
General of the Continental
Army. After 1783 no further provision was
made for such an officer until an act of March 5, 1792
(1 Stat. 241),
provided for an adjutant, who was also to do the work of inspector.
"The Adjutant General is charged with matters relating to command,
discipline, and administration
of the military establishment, and has
the duties of recording, authenticating, and communicating
the
Secretary's orders, instructions, and regulations to troops and
individuals in the Army. He is
also responsible for issuing
commissions, compiling and issuing the Army Register and the Army
List
and Directory, consolidating the general returns of the Army and
militia, and recruiting.
"The Adjutant General's Office chiefly handles Army orders,
correspondence, and other records,
and it receives final custody of
virtually all records concerned with the military establishment,
including personnel of the Army and discontinued commands, non-current
holdings of bureaus of
the War Department, and special collections.
"The Letters Received by the Office of the Adjutant General, 1822-80,
are available as microfilm
publications M567, M619, and M666.
Correspondence relating to Indian matters is interspersed
throughout
these publications. The following rolls contain consolidated files
relating to Indians that
were identified during the preparation of the
publications."
|
1 roll |
|
M574 |
Office of
Indian Affairs (Central Office) special files, 1807-1904.
"The Special Files consist of
correspondence, reports, accounts, affidavits, and other records
that were brought together for easy reference. The records relate principally
to claims and
investigations but include some other subjects. The claims
were those of traders for goods
furnished to Indians or to the
government, transportation contractors furnished to Indians or
to the
government, transportation contractors for shipping services, attorneys
for legal fees,
other persons for services to Indians or to the
government, both Indians and whites for losses
from depredations,
Indians for losses resulting from their removal from the East, and
persons
claiming the right to share in tribal benefits. Many of the
claims were submitted in conformance
with provisions of treaties between
Indian tribes and the United States. The investigations,
other than
those of claims, relate principally to the conduct of employees of the
office. The
descriptive pamphlet contains an index of names and subjects
and a list of file numbers,
subjects, and date spans.
Most of the records in the series were
withdrawn from the general incoming correspondence
of the office; but
some records of special commissions, transmitted to the office when
their
work was completed, also are included. Most of the files relate to
a single subject. The
inclusive dates of the series are those of the
records in the files, usually the date of receipt in
the office or by a
commission. The actual dates of individual documents, especially those
submitted as evidence for claims, may be much earlier. Researchers
should consult the
descriptive pamphlet for a list of the subjects
covered on each roll." |
85
rolls |
|
M595 |
Indian census rolls, 1885-1940.
"These census rolls were usually submitted each year by agents or
superintendents in charge of
Indian reservations, as required by an act
of July 4, 1884 (23 Stat. 98). The data on the rolls
vary to some
extent, but usually given are the English and/or Indian name of the
person, roll number,
age or date of birth, sex, and relationship to head
of family. Beginning in 1930, the rolls also show
the 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. Most of the 1940 rolls have been retained by the Bureau
of Indian
Affairs and are not included in this publication.
"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 on these census rolls."
Roll Jurisdiction and Dates
1 Albuquerque School (Pueblo and Navajo Indians), 1904-7, 1910-11
2 Bay Mills School (Chippewa Indians), 1909-11, 1913-15
Birch Cooley Agency (Mdewakanton Sioux Indians), 1891-93, 1895-98
Bishop Agency (Paiute and other Indians), 1916-26
Blackfeet Agency:
3 1890-1896
4 1897-1906
5 1907-1913
6 1914-1919
7 1920-1925
8 1926-1930
9 1931-1932
10 1933-1935
11 1936-1939
12 Bloomfield Seminary, 1924
California Special:
1907-1911
13 1912-1913
14 1914-1915
15 Camp McDowell, 1905-1909, 1911-1912; Camp Verde (Apache-Mojave Indians), 1915-1927;
Campo (Mission Indians), 1916-1920;
Canton Asylum, 1910-1911, 1921, 1924
Cantonment (Cheyenne and Arapahoe Indians):
16 1903-1916
17 1917-1927
Carlisle School, 1911
Carson (chiefly Paiute, Shoshoni, and Washo Indians):
18 1909, 1925-1930
19 1931-1932
20 1933-1936
21 1937-1939
22 Carter (Potawatomi Indians), 1915
Cherokee (North Carolina), 1898-1899, 1904, 1906, 1909-1912, 1914
23 1915-1922
24 1923-1929
25 1930-1932
26 1933-1939
Cheyenne and Arapahoe:
27 1887-1888, 1891-1894
28 1895-1904
29 1905-1920
30 1921-1930
31 1931-1933
32 1934-1939
Cheyenne River (Sioux Indians):
33 1886-1887, 1890-1891
34 1892, 1894-1900
35 1901-1907, 1909
36 1910-1914
37 1915-1920
38 1921-1929
39 1930-1932
40 1933-1942
Choctaw (Mississippi):
41 1926-1932
42 1933-1939
Coeur d'Alene:
43 (Coeur d'Alene, Kalispel, Kutenai, and Spokan Indians), 1906, 1910-1925
44 (Coeur d'Alene, Kalispel, and Kutenai Indians), 1926-1933
45 (Coeur d'Alene, Kalispel, Kutenai, and Nez Perce Indians), 1934-1937
Colorado River:
46 (Mohave, Chemehuevi, and Walapai Indians), 1885-1893, 1895-1905
47 (Mohave, Chemehuevi, and other Indians), 1906-1929
48 (Mohave, Chemehuevi, Cocopa, Yuma, and other Indians), 1930-1940
Colville:
49 (Colville, Spokan, Coeur d'Alene, Kalispel, Lake, Nespelem, Okanagon, Joseph's
Band of Nez Perce, and Moses Band of Columbia Indians), 1885-1888, 1890-1893
(Colville, Spokan, Coeur d'Alene, Lake, Nespelem, Okanagon, Sanpoil, Joseph's Band of
Nez Perce, and Moses Band of Columbia Indians):
50 1894-1898
51 1899-1905
52 (Colville, Spokan, Lake, Nespelem, Okanagon, Sanpoil, Kalispel, Wenatchee, Joseph's
Band of Nez Perce, Moses Band of Columbia, and other Indians), 1906-1916
53 (Colville Reservation), 1917-1924
(Colville and Spokane Reservations):
54 1925-1929
55 1930-1932
56 1933-1939
Consolidated Chippewa:
57 1923
58 1924
59 1925
60 1926
61 1927
62 1928
63 White Earth Subagency, 1929
64 Fond du Lac, Grand Portage, Leech Lake, and Nett Lake (Bois Forte) Subagencies, 1929
65 White Earth Reservation, 1930
66 Bois Forte (Nett Lake), Cass and Winnibigoshish, Fond du Lac, Grand Portage, Leech
Lake, Mille Lac, and White Oak Point Reservations, 1930
67 White Earth Reservation, 1931
68 Bois Forte (Nett Lake), Cass and Winnibigoshish, Fond du Lac, Grand Portage, Leech
Lake, and White Oak Point Reservations, 1931 (with supplemental rolls)
69 White Earth Reservation, 1932
70 Cass and Winnibigoshish, Fond du Lac, Grand Portage, Leech Lake, Nett Lake (Bois
Forte), and White Oak Point Reservations, 1932 (with birth and death rolls)
71 White Earth Reservation, 1933
72 Cass and Winnibigoshish, Fond du Lac, Grand Portage, Leech Lake, Nett Lake (Bois
Forte), Nonremoval Mille Lac, and White Oak Point Reservations, 1933
(with supplemental rolls)
73 White Earth Reservation, 1934
74 Cass and Winnibigoshish, Fond du Lac, Grand Portage, Leech Lake, Nett Lake (Bois
Forte), Nonremoval Mille Lac, and White Oak Point Reservations, 1934,
1934-1936 (supplemental rolls)
75 White Earth Reservation, 1937
76 Cass and Winnibigoshish, Fond du Lac, Grand Portage, Leech Lake, Nett Lake (Bois
Forte), Nonremoval Mille Lac, and White Oak Point Reservations, 1937,
1937-1939 (supplemental rolls)
Consolidated Ute:
77 1923-1924, 1926-1931
78 1932-1939
Crow:
79 1891-1895, 1897-1898
80 1899-1905
81 1906-1908, 1912-1916
82 1917-1924
83 1925-1930
84 1931-1933
85 1934-1937
86 1938-1940
Crow Creek (Lower Yanktonai Sioux and Lower Brule Sioux Indians):
87 1886-1892
88 1893-1905
89 (Lower Yanktonai Sioux Indians), 1906-1920
(Lower Yanktonai Sioux and Lower Brule Sioux Indians):
90 1921-1929
91 1930-1933
92 1934-1939, 1942
93 Cushman (Skokomish, Clallam, Chehalis, Squaxin Island, Nisqualli, Muckleshoot,
Quinaielt, Queet, and Georgetown Indians), 1910-1913, 1915-1920
Devils Lake (Sioux and Chippewa Indians):
94 1885-1990
95 1892-1997
96 1898-1902
97 1903-1905
Digger, 1899-1904, 1915-1920
Eastern Navajo:
98 1929
99 1930
100 1931
101 1932
102 1933
103 1934-1935
104 Fallon (Paiute Indians), 1909-1924
Flandreau:
105 1892-1921
106 1922-1939
Flathead:
107 (Flathead, Kutenai, Pend d'Oreille, and Kalispel Indians), 1886-1893
108 (Flathead, Kutenai, Pend d,Oreille, Kalispel, and Spokan Indians), 1895-1897, 1900-1905
Flathead:
109 1906-1907, 1909-1913
110 1914-1918
111 1919-1923
112 1924-1928
113 1929-1931
114 1932-1934
115 1935-1937
116 1938-1939
117 Fond du Lac, 1910-1920
Fort Apache (White Mountain Apache Indians):
118 1898-1907
119 1908-1913
120 1914-1918
121 1919-1923
122 1924-1927
123 1929-1931
124 1932-1933
125 1934-1939
Fort Belknap (Grosventre and Assiniboin Indians):
126 1885-1895
127 1896-1908
128 1909, 1911-20
129 1921-1929
130 1930-1935
131 1936-1939
Fort Berthold (Arikara, Grosventre, and Mandan Indians):
132 1889-1893, 1895-1902
133 1903-1915
134 1916-1929
135 1930-1935
136 1936-1939
137 Fort Bidwell (Paiute, Pit River, and Digger Indians), 1915-1930
Fort Hall (Shoshoni and Bannock Indians):
138 1885-1887, 1890-1891, 1894-1901
139 1902-1909
140 1910-1918
141 1919-1926
142 1927-1931
143 1932-1934
144 1935-1939
Fort Lapwai (Nez Perce Indians):
145 1902-1910
148 1911-1920
147 1921-1929
148 1930-1933
149 Fort Lewis (Southern Ute Indians), 1904-1908; Fort McDermitt (Paiute Indians), 1910-1923
150 Fort Mojave (Mohave and Chemehuevi Indians), 1892 (Hualapai or Walapai Indians--
total only), 1905-1907, 1909-1915
Fort Peck (Sioux and Assiniboin Indians):
151 1885-1896
152 1897-1905
153 1906-1912
154 1913-1919
155 1920-1925
156 1926-1929
157 1930-1931
158 1932-1933
159 1934-1936
160 1937-1939
161 Fort Shaw School, 1910
Fort Totten (Devils Lake Sioux and Turtle Mountain Chippewa Indians), 1906-1909
(Devils Lake Sioux Indians):
162 1910-1920
163 1922-1929
164 1930-1939
Fort Yuma (Yuma and Cocopa(h) Indians):
165 1905, 1915-1929
166 1930-1935
167 Goshute (Goshute, Shoshoni, Paiute, Kanosh, and Pahvant Indians), 1917-1923
Grand Portage (Chippewa Indians), 1912, 1914-1918, 1920-1921
168 Grand Rapids (Winnebago Indians of Wisconsin), 1916-1917, 1919-1926
169 Grand Ronde, 1885-1892, 1894-1914
Great Lakes (Chippewa and Potawatomi Indians):
170 1936-1937
171 1938-1940
Great Sioux Reservation, 1892 (totals only)
Green Bay (Menominee, Oneida, and Stockbridge and Munsee Indians):
172 1885, 1888-1889, 1891-1894
173 1895-1899
174 (Menominee and Stockbridge and Munsee Indians), 1900-1908
175 Greenville (Digger and other Indians), 1916-1923
Haskell (Potawatomi, Kickapoo, Iowa, and Sauk and Fox Indians):
176 1927-1931
177 1932-1934
178 Havasupai, 1905-1933
Hayward (Lac Courte Oreilles Chippewa Indians):
179 1916-1923
180 1924-1926, 1928-1929
181 1930-1933
Hoopa Valley:
182 (Hupa or Hoopa and Klamath Indians), 1885-1897, 1899-1907
(Hupa or Hoopa, Klamath, and other Indians):
183 1915-1922
184 1923-1929
185 1930-1932
186 1933-1935
187 1936-1939
Hopi:
188 1924-1926
189 1927-1929
(Hopi and Navajo Indians):
190 1930
191 1931
192 1932 (with birth and death rolls, 1925-1931)
193 1933
194 1934-1936
195 Hopi, 1937-1939
196 Hualapai (Walapai or Hualapai and Havasupai Indians), 1896-1899
Jicarilla:
1900-1915
197 1916-1929
198 1930-1939
199 Kaibab (Paiute and Goshute Indians), 1910-1919, 1921-1927; Kaw, 1905, 1909-1911
Keshena:
200 (Menominee and Stockbridge and Munsee Indians), 1909-1914
201 (Menominee and Stockbridge Indians), 1915-1919
(Menominee and Oneida Indians):
202 1920-1924
203 1925-1929
204 1930-1931
205 1932 (with birth and death rolls, 1924-1932)
206 1933
207 1934-1939
Keshena (Menominee Indians):
208 1936-1937
209 1938-1942
210 Kickapoo (Kickapoo, Iowa, and Sauk and Fox of the Missouri Indians; Potawatomi
Indians for 1920), 1903-1920
Kiowa:
211 (Kiowa, Comanche, Apache, Caddo, and Wichita and affiliated Indians), 1895-1899
(Kiowa, Comanche, Apache, Caddo, and Wichita Indians):
212 1900-1904
213 1905-1906, 1909-1913
(Kiowa, Comanche, Apache, Wichita, and Caddo Indians, and Apache prisoners of war):
214 1914-1917
215 1918-1921
(Kiowa, Comanche, Apache, Wichita, and Caddo Indians, and Apache prisoners of war
or Fort Sill Apache):
216 1922-1925
217 1926-1929
218 (Kiowa, Comanche, Apache, Fort Sill Apache, Wichita, and Caddo Indians), 1930
(Kiowa, Comanche, Apache, Fort Sill Apache, Wichita, Caddo, and Delaware Indians):
219 1931
220 1932 (with birth and death rolls, 1924-1932)
221 1933
222 1934-1936
223 1937-1939
Klamath:
224 (Klamath, Modoc, Paiute or Snake, and Pit River Indians), 1885-1908
(Klamath, Modoc, and Yahooskin Band of Paiute or Snake Indians):
225 1907-1920
226 1921-1929
(Klamath, Modoc, Paiute, and other Indians):
227 1930-1933
228 1934-1939
Lac du Flambeau:
229 (Chippewa Indians), 1910-1927
(Lac du Flambeau, Bad River, and Red Cliff Chippewa Indians, and Potawatomi Indians):
230 1928-1930
231 1931-1932 (with birth and death rolls, 1924-1932)
232 (Lac du Flambeau, Bad River, Lac Courte Oreilles, Red Cliff Chippewa Indians, and
Potawatomi Indians), 1933-1935
233 Laona (Potawatomi Indians), 1916-1927
La Pointe:
234 (Bad River, Bois Fort, Fond du Lac, Grand Portage, Lac Courte Oreilles, Lac du
Flambeau, and Red Cliff Chippewa Indians), 1886-1889
235 (Bad River, Bois Fort or Vermillion Lake, Fond du Lac, Grand Portage, Lac Courte
Oreilles, Lac du Flambeau, and Red Cliff Chippewa Indians), 1890-1892
(Bad River, Fond du Lac, Grand Portage, Lac Courte Oreilles, Lac du Flambeau, Red Cliff,
and Vermillion Lake Chippewa Indians):
236 1893-1894
237 1895-1897
(Bad River, Fond du Lac, Grand Portage, Lac Courte Oreilles, Lac du Flambeau, Red Cliff,
Rice Lake, and Vermillion Lake Chippewa Indians):
238 1898-1902
239 1903-1907
240 (Bad River, Fond du Lac, Grand Portage, Lac Courte Oreilles, Lac du Flambeau, Red Cliff,
and Rice Lake Chippewa Indians), 1908-1915
241 (Bad River Chippewa Indians), 1916-1922
242 (Bad River and Red Cliff Chippewa Indians), 1923-1927
Leech Lake (Chippewa Indians):
243 1899-1902
244 1903-1905
245 1906-1912
246 1913-1917
247 1918-1922
248 Lemhi (Shoshoni, Bannock, and Sheepeater Indians), 1885, 1887-1906
Leupp (Navajo Indians):
249 1915-1917, 1920-1925, 1927, 1929
250 1930-1932
251 1933-1935
252 Lovelocks (Paiute Indians), 1910-1912; Lower Brule, 1897-1924
253 Mackinac (Chippewa Indians), 1902-1903; 1910, 1915-1927
254 Malki, 1916-1919
Mescalero:
1885-1914
255 1915-1929
256 1930-1939
257 Mexican Kickapoo (Mexican Kickapoo and Big Jim Band of Absentee Shawnee
Indians), 1899-1901
Mission Tule River:
1886, 1888, 1890, 1893
258 1894-1897
259 1898-1903
Mission:
260 1922-1925
261 1926-1929
262 1930-1931
263 1932 (with birth and death rolls, 1924-1932)
264 1933
265 1934-1935
266 1936
267 1937-1939
268 Moapa River (Paiute Indians), 1910-1919, 1921, 1923-26
Moqui:
1906, 1908-1914
269 1915-1916, 1918
270 1919-1920
271 1921-1923
Navajo:
272 (Moqui Pueblo, or Hopi, and Navajo Indians), 1885 (with 1891 general schedule,
and letter, 1898)
Navajo:
273 1915 (with letters, 1919 and 1923)
274 1936 (supplements only)
275 Eastern Navajo Reservation, 1937
276 Leupp Reservation, 1937
277 Northern Navajo Reservation, 1937
Southern Navajo Reservation:
278 1937 (Arizona (pt.)
279 1937 (Arizona (pt.)
280 1937 (New Mexico and supplements)
281 Western Navajo Reservation, 1937
282 Navajo, 1938-1939
Navajo Springs, 1909-1914
Neah Bay (Makah, Ozette, Quileute, and Hoh Indians):
283 1885-1899
284 1900-1913
285 1914-1928
286 (Makah, Ozette, and Hoh Indians), 1930-1933
287 Nett Lake (Bois Fort Band of Chippewa Indians), 1908-1918
Nevada (Paiute Indians):
288 1886-1905
289 1906-1907, 1909-1921
New York:
290 1885-1887
291 1888-1889, 1891-1893
292 1894-1897
293 1898-1901
294 1903-1906
295 1907-1909
296 1910-1912
297 1913-1915
298 l916-1918
299 1919-1921
300 1922-1924
301 Nez Perce, 1890-1901
302 Nisqually and Skokomish (Puyallup, Skokomish, Nisqualli, Squaxon, Sklallam, and
Chehalis Indians), 1885-1887
Northern Idaho (Coeur d'Alene, Kalispel, Kutenai, and Nez Perce Indians), 1938-
1939 (supplemental rolls only)
Northern Navajo:
303 1930
304 1931
305 1932
306 1933
307 1934-1935
Northern Pueblo:
308 1920-1924
309 1925-1928
310 1929-1930
Omaha (Omaha and Winnebago Indians):
311 1886-1891
312 1892-1898
313 1899-1909
314 Omaha, 1915-1924
Oneida:
315 1900-1910
316 1911-1920
Osage:
317 (Osage, Kansa or Kaw, and Quapaw Indians), 1887-1888, 1890-1896
316 (Osage and Kansa or Kaw Indians), 1897-1905
Osage:
319 1906-1907, 1909-1913
320 1914-1918
321 1919-1922
322 1923-1926
323 1927-1929
324 1930-1931
325 1932
326 1933
327 1934-1936
328 1937-1939
329 Otoe (Oto and Missouri Indians), 1906-1910, 1912, 1915-1919
Paiute (Paiute, Goshute, and Ute Indians):
330 1928-1931
331 1932-1933
332 1934-1935
333 1936-1937
334 1938-1939
335 Pala (Mission Indians), 1905-1907, 1916-1920
336 Pawnee:
1902-1919
337 (Kansa or Kaw, Oto and Missouri, Pawnee, and Ponca Indians), 1920-1927
(Kansa or Kaw, Oto, Pawnee, Ponca, and Tonkawa Indians):
338 1928-1930
339 1931
340 1932 (with birth and death rolls, 1924-1932)
341 1933
342 1934-1936
343 1937-1939
Phoenix (Pima, Apache, and Mohave-Apache Indians of the Camp Verde,
Fort McDowell, and Salt River Reservations):
344 1928-1931
345 1932-1933 (with birth and death rolls, 1924-1932)
346 (Apache Indians of the Camp Verde Reservation), 1934-1937
Pima (Pima, Papago, and Maricopa Indians):
347 1887, 1890-1891, 1894
348 1895-1896, 1899, 1901
349 1919-1921 (with letters, 1912 and 1916)
350 1922-1924
351 1925-1926
352 1927-1928
(Pima, Papago, and Maricopa Indians of the Gila River, Ak Chin, and
Gila Bend Reservations):
353 1929
354 1930
355 1931
356 1932 (with birth and death rolls, 1924-1932)
357 1933
358 (Pima, Papago, Maricopa, and Mohave-Apache Indians of the Fort McDowell,
Gila River, Maricopa or Ak Chin, and Salt River Reservations), 1934
(Pima, Papago, Maricopa, and Mohave-Apache Indians of the Fort McDowell, Gila
River, Maricopa, and Salt River Reservations):
359 1935-1936
360 1937
361 1938, 1939 (supplemental rolls only)
Pine Ridge (Sioux and Cheyenne Indians):
362 1886 (two census rolls)
363 1887-1888
364 1890, 1891 (summary only), 1892
365 1893 (two census rolls)
366 1894-1895
367 1896-1899
Pine Ridge:
368 1900-1903
369 1904-1905, 1907, letters for 1909
(Oglala Sioux Indians):
370 1913, 1915-1917
371 1918-1920
372 1921-1923
373 1924-1926
374 1927-1928
375 1929
376 1930
377 1931
378 1932
379 1924-1932 (birth and death rolls)
380 1933
381 1934
382 1934-1936 (supplemental census rolls)
383 1937
384 1937-1939, 1942-1943 (supplemental census rolls)
385 Pipestone (Mdewakanton Sioux Indians), 1914, 1915 letter,
1918-1919 and 1923 letters, 1924-1939
Ponca (Ponca, Oto and Missouri, Pawnee, and Tonkawa Indians):
388 1886-1890
387 1891-1996
388 1897-1903
389 (Ponca and Tonkawa Indians), 1904-1912
390 (Ponca, Tonkawa, and Kansa or Kaw Indians), 1913-1919
391 (Ponca, Tonkawa, and Oto and Missouri Indians), 1922-1927
Potawatomi:
392 (Prairie Band of Potawatomi, Iowa, Kickapoo, Sauk and Fox of the Missouri,
and Chippewa and Christian or Munsee Indians), 1891-1893, 1895-1902
393 (Prairie Band of Potawatomi Indians), 1903-1919
(Potawatomi, Iowa, Kickapoo, and Sauk and Fox Indians):
394 1921-1926
395 1935-1940, 1942 (supplement)
Pueblo:
396 1885-1886
397 1887-1888
398 1889-1890
399 1891-1892, Pueblo Indians; 1892, Jicarilla Apache Indians
400 1898-1899, Pueblo Indians; 1893-95, 1897-99, Jicarilla Apache Indians
Pueblo Bonito (Navajo Indians):
401 1909-1912, 1914
402 1915-1919
403 1920-1924, 1926
Pueblo Day Schools (Pueblo and Navajo Indians):
404 1912-1914
405 1915-1916
406 1917-1919
Puyallup (Chehalis, Clallam or Sklallam, Nisqualli, Puyallup, Quinaielt, Skokomish,
Squaxon, and other Indians):
407 1888-1893
408 1894-1900
409 1901-1909
410 Pyramid Lake (Paiute Indians), 1931-1932
Quapaw (Eastern Shawnee, Miami, Modoc, Ottawa, Peoria, Quapaw, Seneca, and
Wyandot Indians):
411 1885-1892
412 1893-1900
(Eastern Shawnee, Ottawa, Quapaw, Seneca, and Wyandot Indians):
413 1922-1929
414 1930-1932
415 1933-1935
416 (Eastern Shawnee, Miami, Ottawa, Peoria, Quapaw, Seneca, and Wyandot Indians), 1936-1939
417 Quinaielt (Quinaielt and other Indians), 1885, 1887
Red Cliff (Chippewa Indians), 1912, 1914-1917, 1919-1922
Red Lake (Red Lake and Pembina Chippewa Indians):
418 1907-1912
419 1913-1917, 1919
420 (Red Lake and Pembina, Fond du Lac, Grand Portage, Bois Fort, Vermillion Lake,
and Deer Creek Chippewa Indians), 1920-1923
(Chippewa Indians):
421 1924-1929
422 1930-1932
423 1933-1935
424 1936-1939
425 Red Moon (Cheyenne Indians), 1909-1912, 1914-1916
Reno (Paiute Indians), 1922-1924 (with letters 1915, 1917-1920)
426 Rocky Boy, 1919-1939
Rosebud:
427 (Brule and other bands of Sioux Indians), 1886 (totals only), 1887, 1891
(Brule Sioux Indians):
428 1892, 1895-1896
429 1897-1900
430 1901-1905
(Sioux Indians):
431 1906-1907, 1909-1910
432 1911-1912, 1915
433 l916-1917
434 1918-1920
435 1921-1923
436 1924-1925
437 1926
438 1927-1928
439 1929
440 1930
441 1931 (with birth and death rolls, 1924-1931)
442 1932
443 1933
(Rosebud and Yankton Sioux Indians):
444 1934-1935
445 1936-1939, 1942-1943
446 Roseburg (Shasta, Klamath, Pit River, Wintu, and other Indians)
Round Valley:
447 (Concow, Little Lake, Redwood, Pit River, Potter Valley, Yuki, Wailaki, and
Nomelaki Indians), 1885-1905, 1909
(Concow, Little Lake, Redwood, Pit River, Nomelaki, Yuki, Wailaki, and other Indians):
448 1915-1919
449 1920-1923
Sac and Fox, Iowa:
450 1888-1910
451 1911-1920, 1922-1929
452 1930-1939
Sac and Fox, Oklahoma:
453 (Sauk and Fox, Iowa, Citizen Potawatomi, Absentee Shawnee, and Mexican
Kickapoo Indians), 1885 (letter only), 1889-1998
454 (Sauk and Fox, Iowa, Citizen Potawatomi, and Absentee Shawnee Indians), 1899-1904
455 (Sauk and Fox and Iowa Indians), 1905-1919
Sacramento:
456 (Indians of Fort Bidwell, Round Valley, and Tule River Reservations, and public
domain Indians), 1924 (letter only), 1926, 1930, 1932-1933
457 (Indians of Fort Bidwell, Round Valley, and Tule River Reservations and of Modoc
County), 1934-1939
Salem (Indians of Grande Ronde and Siletz Reservations and non-reservation Indians):
458 1926-1932
459 1933-1939
460 Salt Lake Special (Paiute Indians), 1913, and letter for 1915
Salt River (Camp McDowell, Lehi, and Salt River Indians), 1913-1927
San Carlos (Apache, Mohave, and Yuma Indians):
461 1887-1890, 1892
462 1893-1896
463 1897-1902
464 1904-1912
(Apache and Mohave Indians):
465 1914-1915
466 l916-1919
467 1920-1924
468 1925-1929
469 1930-1933
470 (Apache Indians), 1934-1939
471 San Jacinto (Mission and other Indians), 1904-1906
San Juan (Navajo Indians), 1916 and letters for 1905, 1909, 1918-1920, 1922-1924
Santa Fe (Pueblo Indians):
472 1904, 1906, 1910-1914
473 1931-1932
474 1933-1935
Santee:
475 (Santee and Flandreau Sioux and Ponca Indians), 1885-1898
(Santee Sioux and Ponca Indians):
476 1899-1907, 1909-1910
477 1911-1917
478 San Xavier (Papago Indians), 1904, 1910-1917
479 Seger (Cheyenne and Arapahoe Indians), 1903-1912, 1914-1927
Sells (Papago Indians):
480 1918-1921
481 1922-1924
482 1925-1928 (letters only for 1927)
483 1929-1930
484 1931-1932
485 1933-1934, 1937-1939
Seminole (Florida):
486 1913-1929
487 1930-1940
Seneca (Eastern Shawnee, Miami, Modoc, Ottawa, Peoria, Quapaw, Seneca, and Wyandot Indians):
488 1901-1907
489 1910-1921
Shawnee:
490 (Absentee Shawnee, Mexican Kickapoo, and Citizen Potawatomi Indians), 1904-1906, 1915-1919
(Absentee Shawnee, Mexican Kickapoo, Citizen Potawatomi, Iowa, and Sauk and Fox Indians):
491 1920-1923
492 1924-1929
493 1930-1931
494 1932-1933
495 1934-1936
496 1937-1939
497 Shivwits, 1910-1917, 1919, 1921-1922
Shoshoni (Shoshoni and Arapahoe Indians):
498 1885, 1890-1893, 1895-1899
499 1900-1911
500 1912-1918
501 1919-1925
502 1926-1929
503 1930-1932
504 1933-1937
Siletz:
505 1885-1908
506 1909-1925
Sisseton (Sisseton and Wahpeton Sioux Indians):
507 1888-1891, 1893, 1895, 1897-1898
508 1899-1907
509 1909-1914
510 1915-1918
511 1919-1924
512 1925-1927, 1929
(Sioux Indians):
513 1930-1931
514 1932-1933
515 1934-1936
516 1937-1939
517 1916-1920
Southern Navajo:
518 1929 (transmittal letter and recapitulation)
1930 (A-G)
519 1930 (H-Z)
520 1931 (A-G)
521 1931 (H-Z and supplemental rolls)
522 1932 (A-B)
523 1932 (C-M)
524 1932 (N-Z and supplemental rolls)
525 1933 (Arizona, A-G)
526 1933 (Arizona, H-Z)
527 1933 (New Mexico and supplemental rolls)
528 1934 (Arizona, A-G)
529 1934 (Arizona, H-Z)
530 1934 (New Mexico)
531 1934-1935 (supplemental rolls)
Southern Pueblo:
532 1920-1921
533 1922-1923
534 1924-1925
535 1926-1927
536 1928
537 1929
538 1930
539 1931 (with birth and death rolls, 1924-1931)
540 1932 (with birth and death rolls, 1926-1932)
541 1933
542 1934-1935
543 Southern Utah (Shivwits or Shebits and Kaibab Indians), 1897-1905
Southern Ute (Ute and Jicarilla Apache Indians), 1885-1892
Southern Ute:
544 1893-1895, 1897-1908
545 1909-1923
546 Spokane, 1913-1924
Standing Rock (Sioux Indians):
547 1885-1888
548 1889-1893
549 1894-1899
550 1900-1904
551 1905-1908
552 1909-1911
553 1912-1913, 1915-1916
554 1917-1920
555 1921-1924
556 1925-1929
557 1930-1931
558 1932 (with birth and death rolls, 1924-1932)
559 1933
560 1934-1935
561 1936
562 1937-1938
563 1939
Taholah:
564 (Quinaielt, Chehalis, Nisqualli, Skokomish, and Squaxin Island Indians), 1915-1925
(Chehalis, Nisqualli, Quileute, Quinaielt, Skokomish, and Squaxin Island Indians):
565 1926-1929
566 1930-1932
567 (Chehalis, Nisqually, Quinaielt, Skokomish, and Squaxin Island Reservations), 1933
(Chehalis, Makah, Nisqually, Ozette, Quinaielt, Skokomish, and Squaxin Island Reservations):
568 1934-1936
569 1937-1939
Tomah (Winnebago Indians):
570 1911-1915, letter for 1916, 1927-1929
571 1930-1933
572 (Winnebago and Oneida Indians), 1934-1936
573 (Winnebago and Oneida Indians and Stockbridge-Munsee Community for 1938), 1937-1939
Tongue River (Northern Cheyenne Indians):
574 1868, 1888-1900
575 1901-1908
576 1909-1920
577 1922-1929
578 1930-1933
579 1934-1939
Truxton Canon:
580 (Walapai and Havasupai Indians), 1901-1907, 1910-1926, 1928-1929
581 (Walapai, Havasupai, Yavapai, and Camp Verde Apache Indians), 1930-1939
Tulalip (Lummi, Muckleshoot, Port Madison, Swinomish, and Tulalip Reservations):
582 1885-1897
583 1898-1910
584 (Lummi, Muckleshoot, Port Madison, Swinomish, and Tulalip Reservations, and Clallam
Indians for 1912), 1911-1915
585 (Lummi, Port Madison, Swinomish, and Tulalip Reservations), 1916-1920
(Clallam, Lummi, Muckleshoot, Nooksak, Port Madison or Suquamish, Skagit-Suiattle,
Swinomish, and Tulalip or Snohomish Indians):
586 1921-1923
587 1924-1926
(Clallam, Lummi, Muckleshoot, Nooksak, Port Madison or Suquamish, Puyallup,
Skagit-Suiattle, Swinomish, and Tulalip or Snohomish Indians):
588 1927-1929
589 1930
590 1931 (with birth and death rolls, 1924-1931)
591 1932-1933
592 1934-1936
593 1937-1939
594 Tule River, 1885-1887, 1915-1923
Turtle Mountain (Chippewa Indians):
595 1910-1912
596 1913-1915
597 1916-1918
598 1919-1921
599 1922-1924
600 1925-1927
601 1928-1929
602 1930
603 1931
604 1932 (with birth and death rolls, 1924-1932)
605 1933
606 1934-1936
607 1937-1939
Uintah and Ouray:
(Uintah, Uncompahgre, and White River Ute Indians):
608 1885-1889, 1891-1892, 1894-1895
609 1896-1902
610 1903-1911
611 1912-1920
612 1921-1929
(Ute Indians):
613 1930-1933
614 1934-1939
615 (Paiute and Ute Indians), 1940, 1942-1944
Umatilla:
(Cayuse, Umatilla, and Wallawalla Indians):
616 1886-1894, 1896, 1898-1900
617 1901-1905, 1910-1912
618 1913-1917
619 1918-1923
620 1924-1929
(Cayuse, Umatilla, Wallawalla, and other Indians):
621 1930-1932
622 1933-1939
623 Union (Choctaw Indians only), 1885
United Pueblos:
624 1936 (supplemental rolls only)
625 1937
626 (Laguna Pueblo), 1936 (with supplemental rolls for other
Pueblos)
627 United Pueblos, 1939
628 Ute Mountain (Ute Indians), 1915-1922
Vermillion Lake (Bois Fort Band of Chippewa Indians), 1907
Walker River:
(Paiute Indians):
629 1897-1912
630 1914-1924
631 (Paiute, Monache, Shoshoni, and Washo Indians), 1925-1929
(Paiute and other Indians):
632 1930-1931
633 1932-1933
634 1934-1935
Warm Springs:
635 (Warm Springs, John Day, Paiute, Tenino, and Wasco Indians), 1886-1891, 1895, 1897-1908
(Warm Springs and other Indians):
636 1909-1911, 1913-1921
637 1922-1929
(Warm Springs, Paiute, and other Indians):
638 1930-1933
639 1934-1939
Western Navajo:
640 (Hopi Indians and Navajo and Paiute Indians for 1929), 1905 (letter), undated Hopi roll,
1915-1920, 1922, 1923 (letter), 1924-1927, 1929
(Navajo, Hopi, and Paiute Indians):
641 1930
642 1931
643 1932
644 1933 (with birth and death rolls, 1925-1933)
645 1934-1935
Western Shoshone (Shoshoni and Paiute Indians):
646 1885, 1887-1890, 1892-1909
647 1910-1929
648 1930-1939
White Earth (Chippewa Indians):
649 1885-1888
650 1890-1892
651 1894-1895
652 1896-1897
653 1898-1900
654 1901-1904
655 1905-1909
656 1910-1911
657 1912-1913
658 1914-1915
659 1916-1917
660 1918-1919
661 1920-1921
662 1922
663 Wind River (Shoshoni and Arapahoe Indians), 1938-1939 (supplemental rolls)
Winnebago, 1904-1907, 1909
664 (Omaha and Winnebago Indians), 1910-1914
Winnebago:
665 1915-1924
(Omaha and Winnebago Indians):
666 1925-1929
667 1930-1931
668 1932-1933
(Omaha, Ponca, Santee, and Winnebago Indians):
669 1934-1936
670 1937-1939
671 Wittenberg (Winnebago Indians of Wisconsin), 1905, 1910
Yakima (Yakima and other Indians), 1885, 1887-1891, 1893-1897
Yakima:
672 1898-1907
673 1910-1916
674 1917-1921
675 1922-1925
676 1926-1929
677 1930-1931
678 1932-1933
679 1934-1939
Yankton:
680 1885-1887, 1890, 1892-1894
681 1895-1905
682 1906-1907, 1909-1911
683 1913-1917
(Ponca and Santee and Yankton Sioux Indians):
684 1918-1920
685 1921-1924
686 1925-1927
687 1928-1929
688 1930-1931
Zuni:
689 1904-1905, 1907, 1915 (letter), 1916-1920
690 1921-1924, 1926-1929
691 1930-1932
692 1933-1935
|
692
rolls |
|
M617 |
Office of the
Adjutant General returns from U.S. military posts, 1879‑1894.
The Center of Southwest Studies has roll #s 262, 624, 655, 820, and 1532 only.
Archival Intern Linda Baker produced the following descriptive list from
these rolls of microfilm at the Center of Southwest Studies, Fort Lewis
College, February 2006.Roll
Description
262
Returns from Fort Craig, New Mexico, 1871-01/1884-06
624 Returns from
Fort Lewis, Colorado, 1878-10/1884-06
655 Returns
from Fort Lowell, New Mexico, 1867-12/ 1870-07
820
Returns from Mt. Vernon Barracks, Alabama, 1879-01/1894/12
1532 Camp
Pinal, Ariz.; Pinamalayan, Mindoro, P.I.; Pine Ridge Agency, S. Dak.;
Camp Piso, Mindanao, P.I.; Pittsburgh Landing, Tenn.; Pittsfield, Mass.;
Camp on Platte River, Nebr. Terr.; Platt Point, N.Y.; Plum Creek, Nebr.;
Camp Plummer, N. Mex.; Plymouth, N.C.; Pocatello, Idaho, 1800/1916
Itemized descriptive list of the five rolls listed above:
Roll 262: Fort Craig, New Mexico
Forms include:
1) Post return of fort name, commanded by rank/name,
month, year; and
2) Commissioned officers, present and absent, accounted for by name.
Roll Count |
Fort |
Years |
0006 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
January 1871-June 1885, cover page |
0010-0095 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1871 (January-December) |
0097-0182 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1872 (January-December) |
0184-0260 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1873 (January-November) |
0263-0265 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1874 (January); 1st Post Return
form for Jan., commanded by Captain James H. Stewart. |
0266-0269 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1873 (December); Commissioned Officers form
only. |
0271-0352 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1874 (January-December); 2nd
Post Return form for Jan., commanded by Captain E. W. Whiltmore. |
0353-0457 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1875 (January-December); January and
February have two of each form. |
0459-0479 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1876 (January-March) |
0482 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1876 (March); One page correspondence from
War Department regarding Return form and requesting information. |
0484 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
Notes, with bottom left notation: “Rec.
Fort Craig, N.M. April 28, 76”. |
0487-0534 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1876 (April-October); ends with October
Post Return form. |
0537 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1876 (October); One page correspondence
from War Department regarding Post Return form and requesting
information. |
0538 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
One page correspondence |
0542-0548 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1876 (October-November); begins with
October Commissioned Officers form; ends with November Post
Return form. |
0550 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1876 (November); One page correspondence
from War Department regarding Post Return form and requesting
information. |
0552 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1876 (November 20); One page
correspondence. |
0554-0563 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1876 (November-December); begins with
November Commissioned Officers form. |
0564-0589 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1877 (January-April); ends with April Post
Return form. |
0593 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1877 (April); One page correspondence from
War Department regarding Post Return form and requesting
information. |
0594 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1877 (May 22); One page correspondence. |
0597-0664 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1877 (April-December); begins with April
Commissioned Officers form; May has two of each form. |
0666-0754 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1878 (January-December); July has two of
each form; one blank Return of the Regiment form; two blank
September/October Commissioned Officers forms, each with an
attached note . |
0755-0775 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1879 (January-February, April) |
0776-0826 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1880 (July-December); July-October Post
Return forms edited to “Field” Return; December has two of each
form. |
0827-0970 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1881 (January-December); March has two of
each form; October has two of each form edited to “Special”
status; November has one of each form edited to “Special”
status; December has three of each form edited to “Special”
status. |
0971-1070 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1882 (January-December); January has two of
each form edited to “Special” status. |
1071-1118 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1883 (January-June); April has one of each
form edited to “Special” status. |
1119 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
One page correspondence from War Department
Post Return form and requesting information. |
1121 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
Portion of Commissioned Officers form. |
1123-1124 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
Portion of Commissioned Officers form. |
1126-1172 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1883 (June-December); begins with June
Commissioned Officers form. |
1172-1287 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1884 (January-December); June has two of
each form edited to “Special” status; June has two Special
Return forms; October has one of each form edited to “Special”
status. |
1288-1320 |
Fort Craig, New Mexico |
1885 (January-February, April-June) |
Roll 624: Fort Lewis,
Colorado and Cantonment Rio de la Plata, Colorado
Forms include:
1) Post return of fort name, commanded by rank/name,
month, year; and
2) Commissioned officers, present and absent, accounted for by name.
Roll Count |
Fort |
Years |
0037 |
Fort Lewis, Colorado
|
October 1878-August 1891, Cover page
|
Cantonment Rio de la Plata, Colorado |
August 1880-Janauary 1881, Cover page |
0039 |
Fort Lewis, Colorado |
October 1878-August 1891 |
0043 |
Fort Lewis, Colorado |
Note states: “Lewis, Ft., Colo., Indian
wars, data and precedent, File with Returns. |
0048-0050 |
|
1879-1889 Notes |
0052 |
Fort Lewis, Colorado and
Cantonment on Rio de la Plata, Col. |
Undated, one page Post Return, Record of
Events |
0053-0055 |
Fort Lewis, Colorado |
1878-1895 data and chronology, two pages. |
0056 |
Fort Lewis, Colorado |
1931, one-page letter to private citizen. |
0061-0079 |
Camp Lewis, Colorado |
1878 (October- November); Field Return of
“I” Company 15th Infantry. |
0081-0094 |
Camp Lewis, Colorado |
1878 (November-December). |
0096-0107 |
Camp Lewis, Colorado |
1878-1879 (December-January); Field Return
of “I” Company 15th Infantry. |
0109-0194 |
Fort Lewis, Colorado |
1879 (January-December). |
0195-0294 |
Fort Lewis, Colorado |
1880 (January-November); February has two
of each form; April has three Commissioned Officers forms, two
with attached notes; May has one of each form edited to
“Special” status. |
0295-0403 |
Fort Lewis, Colorado |
1881 (February-December); June has one of
each form edited to “Reinforcement”; August has one of each form
edited to “Withdrawal”; November has three of each form edited
to “Special reinforcement”; December has one of each form edited
to “Special reinforcement”. |
0404-0518 |
Fort Lewis, Colorado |
1882 (January-December); February has one
of each form edited to “Special withdrawal”; August has one of
each form edited to “Reinforcement”; November has one of each
form edited to “Special withdrawal”; December has two of each
form. |
0519-0605 |
Fort Lewis, Colorado |
1883 (January-December) |
0606-0710 |
Fort Lewis, Colorado |
1884 (January-December); May has one of
each form edited to “Special” status; December has one Post
Return form and three Commissioned Officers’ forms, two with
attached notes. |
0711-0806 |
Fort Lewis, Colorado |
1885 (January-December); June has one Post
Return form and three Commissioned Officers’ forms, one with an
attached note. |
0807-0900 |
Fort Lewis, Colorado |
1886 (January-December); July has one Post
Return form and three Commissioned Officers’ forms, two with
attached notes. |
0901-1007 |
Fort Lewis, Colorado |
1887 (January-December); June has three
Post Return form, one with an attached note, and one
Commissioned Officers’ form; August has two Post Return forms,
one with an attached note, and one Commissioned Officers’ form;
November has one Post Return forms and three Commissioned
Officers’ forms, two with attached notes. |
1008-1111 |
Fort Lewis, Colorado |
1888 (January-December ); April has one
Post Return forms and four Commissioned Officers’ forms, three
with attached notes; July has one Post Return forms and two
Commissioned Officers’ forms. |
1112-1198 |
Fort Lewis, Colorado |
1889 (January-December) |
1199-1302 |
Fort Lewis, Colorado |
1890 (January-December); January, March and
April’s Post Return form each have a second page attachment;
July has one Post Return form and three Commissioned Officers’
forms, two with attached notes. |
1304-1354 |
Fort Lewis, Colorado |
1891 (January-February, April-August) |
1357 |
Cantonment Rio de la Plata, Colo. |
August 1880-Janaury 1881, Cover page |
1359-1401 |
Cantonment Rio de la Plata, Colo. |
1880 (August-December); August has two of
each form. |
1403-1410 |
Cantonment Rio de la Plata, Colo. |
1881 (January) |
Roll 655: Fort
Lowell, New Mexico and Camp Plummer, New Mexico
Forms include:
1) Post return of fort name, commanded by rank/name,
month, year; and
2) Commissioned officers, present and absent, accounted for by name.
Roll Count |
Fort |
Years |
0039 |
Fort Lowell, New Mexico |
December 1867-July 1869, cover page |
0043 |
Fort Lowell, New Mexico |
Note which states: “Lowell, Ft., N.M.,
Indian Wars” |
0044 |
Fort Lowell, New Mexico |
Data on one note card |
0047-0054 |
Camp Plummer, N.M. |
1867 (December) |
0055-0107 |
Camp Plummer, N.M. |
1869 (January-July) |
0108-0143 |
Fort Lowell, New Mexico |
1869 (August-December) |
0145- |
Fort Lowell, New Mexico |
18[70?] (January-July); March has two of
each form. |
Roll 820: Mt. Vernon
Barracks, Ala.
Forms include:
1) Post return of fort name, commanded by rank/name,
month, year; and
2) Commissioned officers, present and absent, accounted for by name.
Roll Count |
Fort |
Years |
0010 |
Mt. Vernon Barracks, Ala. |
January 1879-December 1894, Cover page |
0014 |
|
Notes on Roll 820 |
0020-0115 |
Mt. Vernon Barracks |
1879 (January-December); June has one of
each form, edited to “Special” status. |
0116-0167 |
Mt. Vernon Barracks |
1880 (January-June); February has one Post
Return form and three Commissioned Officers’ forms, two with
attached notes. |
No
returns from July 1880-October 1881 (0014) |
0168-0192 |
Mt. Vernon Barracks |
1881 (November-December); November has one
of each form edited to “Special Field” Return; December has two
Post Return forms and one Commissioned Officers’ form. |
0194-0290 |
Mt. Vernon Barracks |
1882 (January-December); August has one
Post Return form and three Commissioned Officers’ forms;
November has one Post Return form and two Commissioned Officers’
forms, two with attached notes. |
0291-0378 |
Mt. Vernon Barracks |
1883 (January-December) |
0380-0477 |
Mt. Vernon Barracks |
1884 (January-December); August has two
Post Return forms and one Commissioned Officers’ form; October
has two of each form. |
0478-0571 |
Mt. Vernon Barracks |
1885 (January-December); October has three
Post Return forms, two with attached notes, and one Commissioned
Officers’ form. |
0572-0660 |
Mt. Vernon Barracks |
1886 (January-December); June Commissioned
Officers’ form has two copies of the same report. |
0662-0766 |
Mt. Vernon Barracks |
1887 (January-December); April, July,
August, September, and October each have two Post Return forms
and one Commissioned Officers’ form. |
0768-0865 |
Mt. Vernon Barracks |
1888 (January-December); January, March,
and April each have two Post Return forms and one Commissioned
Officers’ form. |
0867-0977 |
Mt. Vernon Barracks |
1889 (January-December); May, November, and
December have one of each form, edited to “Special” status;
December has two Post Return forms and one Commissioned
Officers’ form. |
0979-1071 |
Mt. Vernon Barracks |
1890 (January-December); May has one of
each form edited to “Special” status. |
1072-1169 |
Mt. Vernon Barracks |
1891 (January-December); May has one of
each form edited to “Special” status; June has two Post Return
forms and one Commissioned Officers’ form. |
1170-1271 |
Mt. Vernon Barracks |
1892 (January-December); March has three
Post Return forms, two with attached notes, and one
Commissioned Officers’ form; July has one Post Return form and
three Commissioned Officers’ forms, two with attached notes. |
1273-1363 |
Mt. Vernon Barracks |
1893 (January-December); June has two Post
Return forms and one Commissioned Officers’ form. |
1364- |
Mt. Vernon Barracks |
1894 (January-December); March has two Post
Return forms and one Commissioned Officers’ form; October has
one of each form edited to “Special” status; December has two
Special Field Return forms. |
Roll 1532: Camp
Pinal, Ariz.; Pinamalayan, Mindoro, P.I.; Pine Ridge Agency, S. Dak.;
Camp Piso, Mindanao, P.I.; Pittsburgh Landing, Tenn.; Pittsfield, Mass.;
Camp on Platte River, Nebr. Terr.; Platt Point, N.Y.; Plum Creek, Nebr.;
Camp Plummer, N. Mex.; Plymouth, N.C.; Pocatello, Idaho.
Forms include:
1) Post return of fort name, commanded by rank/name,
month, year; and
2) Commissioned officers, present and absent, accounted for by name.
Roll Count |
Fort |
Years |
0027 |
Camp Pinal Arizona, through Pocatello,
Idaho |
1800-1916 |
0030 |
12 fort list |
Notes on Roll 1532 |
0033 |
|
“Pinal Mts Ariz [sic], Indian Wars” note |
0035 |
|
Data on one note card |
0037-0042 |
Infantry Camp, Pinal Mountains A.Z. |
1870 (December) |
0044-0088 |
Infantry Camp, Pinal Mountains A.Z. |
1871 (January-June); January Post Report
and Commissioned Officers report is all hand-written, including
headings. |
0090-0112 |
Pinamalayan, Mindoro, P.I. |
1901 (October-December) |
0113-0120 |
Pinamalayan, Mindoro, P.I. |
1902 (January) |
0121-0134 |
Pinamalayan, Mindoro, P.I. |
1902 (February-March); February and March
Post Return form edited to “Station” Return. |
0134-0171 |
Pinamalayan, Mindoro, P.I. |
1902 (July- December); September and
October’s Post Report and Commissioned Officers report is all
hand-written, including headings. |
0171-0176 |
Pinamalayan, Mindoro, P.I. |
1902 (December); Special Field Return and
Special Field Return Commissioned Officers form. |
0178 |
|
Note states: “Pine Ridge Agency Dak
Returns, Indian Wars.” |
0179-0180 |
|
Data on two note cards |
0183-0190 |
Camp at Pine Ridge Agency, S.D. |
1890 (November); November has one of each
form, edited to “Field” return. |
0191-0230 |
Camp at Pine Ridge Agency, S.D. |
1890 (December); one of each form, edited
to “Field” return; one Commissioned Officers form edited to
“Camp” return; two Special Field Return forms for “Indian
Scouts”; two Return of Casualties forms; Special Field Return
forms for “Seventh Calvary on the field” and “Light Battery &
First U.S. Artillery”. |
0232-0276 |
Camp at Pine Ridge Agency, S.D. |
1891 (January-June); January has Special
Field Return; February has one of each form edited to “Special
Camp” return; June has two Special Field Return form. |
0277-0284 |
Piso, Mampissin, and Sigaboy, Davao Bay,
Mindanao |
1910 (June); June has no Enlisted Men form |
0286-0367 |
Camp Piso, Mindanao; Camp Piso, Davao,
Mind. |
1910 (July-December); each month has the
following forms: Post or Sub-Post Return, Officers, Enlisted
Men, and Record of Events; November’s Officers and Enlisted Men
forms each have an attached note (January, 1911). |
0368-0385 |
Camp Piso, Mindanao, P.I. |
1911 (January-February); February is
missing the Officers and Enlisted Men forms. |
0387-0401 |
Pittsburg Landing, Tenn. |
1862 (June-July) June Consolidated Morning
Report and Remarks (blank) forms; July Post Return and
Commissioned Officers (blank) forms. |
0402-0450 |
Pittsburg Landing, Tenn. |
1867 (May-December); each month has the
following forms: Post Return, Commissioned Officers. |
0452-0469 |
Pittsfield (MS) |
1813 (August-September, November); Monthly
Return forms only. |
0470-0473 |
Between Ft. Laramie and Kearney, N.J. |
1859 (June); June Post Return form edited
to “Field” Return. |
0474-0477 |
Camp on Platte River |
1859 (June); Commissioned Officers form |
0480-0484 |
Platte Point |
1814 (May); Morning Report completely
hand-written. |
0484-0520 |
Plum Creek, Nebraska |
1864 (September-December); September
Consolidated Morning Report; October Post Return, Commissioned
Officers, Consolidated Tri-monthly Report, Officers Present
(completely hand-written) forms; November and December Post
Return Commissioned Officers forms. |
0521-0567 |
Plum Creek, Nebraska |
1865 (January-May, August, December);
February Post Return and Commissioned Officers forms completely
hand-written; May Tri-monthly Consolidated Morning report and
Record of Events; August Remarks form; |
0570-0572 |
Plummer, Cp, NM |
Envelope and one note card |
0576-0605 |
Camp of Plummer, New Mexico |
1866 (November-December) |
0606-0668 |
Camp Plummer, New Mexico |
1867 (January-October) |
0669-0713 |
Post of Plymouth N.C. |
1867 (May-September); August has four Post
Return and two Commissioned Officer forms. |
0715-0722 |
Post of Plymouth |
1868 (October) |
0724-0747 |
Post of Plymouth |
1867 (October-December) |
0749-0756 |
Pocatello, Idaho |
1894 (May) |
|
5 rolls |
MC 6.8 |
M619 |
Letters
received by the Office of the Adjutant General (Main Series), 1861-1870.
The Center only has 32 rolls of this publication, #s between
195 and 812, incomplete."The letters received by the Office of the Adjutant General,
1822-80, are available as microfilm
publications M567, M619, and M666.
Correspondence relating to Indian matters is interspersed
throughout
these publications. The following rolls contain consolidated files
relating to Indians that
were identified during the preparation of the
publications."
Roll
File
Description
283 87 N
1864
Communications relating to affairs in the Department of New Mexico,
Aug.
1863-Jan. 1884.
285 255 N
1864 Report, with
enclosures, by a board of officers appointed to investigate
the complaints of Charles Poston, Superintendent of Indian Affairs for
Arizona Territory, against certain Army officers in the District of
Western
Arizona, 1864.
286 280 N
1864 Papers
relating to the procurement and issuance of commissary stores for
captive Navajo Indians in the Department of New Mexico, 1884. For
additional records, see file 2143 S 1865 on roll 417.
367 145 1
1665 Papers
relating to the investigation of charges made against Maj. Gen.
Alfred
Sully and his administration of Indian affairs on the Upper Missouri
River, 1865.
483 5 I
1866
Papers relating to the Sioux uprising in Minnesota, 1862-1916.
484 91 I
1866
Papers relating to the confinement of the Navajo Indians on the
Bosque
Redondo Reservation, New Mexico Territory, and to the transfer of
their custody from the War Department to the Department of the
Interior, 1866-67.
560 102 M
1867 Papers
relating to the Fetterman massacre near Fort Phil Kearny,
Dakota Territory, on Dec. 21, 1866.
561 223 M
1867 Papers
relating to the relocation of the Navajo Indians on a military
reservation at the Bosque Redondo, New Mexico Territory, 1863-67.
Some of the papers relate to the cost of feeding the Navajo Indians
during this period.
563 590 M
1867 Reports of
the campaigns of Gens. Winfield S. Hancock and George A.
Custer against
the Sioux and the Cheyenne Indians, March-May 1867.
For additional reports, see files 523 M 1867 and 1093 M 1867 on
rolls 562 and
565, respectively.
573 625 P
1867
Correspondence relating to unratified treaties made with the Apache
Indians by Lt. Col. Guido Ilges, 14th Infantry, 1866-67.
574 798 P
1867 Report of
Lt. Col. Robert N. Scott concerning the Indian tribes living
near the
boundary between British Columbia and Alaska, November
12, 1867.
629 42 I
1868
Correspondence relating to the implementation of the Medicine Lodge
treaties with the Kiowa, Kiowa Apache, Comanche, Cheyenne,
and Arapahoe Indians, July-Sept. 1868.
639 807 M
1868 Report of
Lt. Gen. William T. Sherman stating the reasons for the
removal of the Navajo Indians from the Bosque Redondo
Reservation, New Mexico Territory, June 24, 1868.
642 1275 M
1868 Reports relating
to Indian tribes (Kickapoo, Lipan, and Mescalero
Apache) inhabiting
the territory of Mexico adjacent to the United
States, 1868-69.
642 1285 M 1868
Papers relating to the engagement on the Arickaree Fork of the
Republican River, Kansas, between scouts under Maj. George
A. Forsyth
and a band of Sioux and Cheyenne Indians, Sept.
17-20, 1868.
650 523 P
1868 Reports of
Capt. Charles A. Whittier and Lt. Wager Barnet concerning
military posts, settlements, and Indians in Arizona Territory and
conditions in
Sonora, Mexico, June 1868.
656 504 R
1868 Reports of
expenditures made by War Department bureaus and
commands in suppressing
Indian hostilities, 1866-68.
671 645 W
1868 Papers relating to
the cost of providing subsistence stores for certain
bands of Ute and
Apache Indians in the Department of New
Mexico, 1866-68.
711 108 I
1869 Papers
relating to the military expedition against the Piegan Indians
and to other matters concerning Indians in Montana Territory, 1869-70.
718 207 M
1869 Reports of minor
clashes with Kiowa and Pawnee Indians in western
Kansas, Jan.-Apr. 1869.
722 703 M
1869 Correspondence
relating to policy in regard to Indians who refused to
move onto reservations, May-Aug. 1869.
724 942 M
1869 Reports by Maj. Alexander Moore,
38th Infantry, of an expedition against
the Apache Indians, Apr.-May
1869.
737 925 P
1869 Report of Bvt. Col. Reuben F.
Bernard relating to the engagement between
troops of the 1st and 8th
Regiments, Cavalry, and Chiricahua Apache at
Chiricahua Pass, Arizona
Territory, on Oct. 20, 1869. For other reports
of actions against
the Apache at this time, see file 841 P 1869 on the
same roll.
791 65 I
1870 Papers relating
to the claim of Yankton Indians for services as scouts
in 1864 under Gen. Alfred Sully, 1870-92.
792 120 I
1870 Papers
relating to the removal of intruders from lands belonging to the
Cherokee Nation in the Indian Territory, 1870-71.
792 186 I
1870 Papers
relating to the removal of trespassers from the Miami Indian
Reservation
in Kansas, 1870.
799 488 M
1870 Papers relating to
the return of the Kickapoo and the Seminole (Negro)
Indians from Mexico
to the United States, 1870-85.
807 98 P
1870 Reports relating to a
proposal to establish a reservation for the Apache
Indians in the White
Mountains area of Arizona Territory, Nov. 1869-
Mar. 1870.
808 507 P
1870 Reports of operations against the
Apache Indians in the Department of
Arizona, Apr.-June 1870.
812 102 R
1870 Copies of report by Generals
Sheridan and Custer and by other officers
relating to activities against
the Indians in the Military Division of the
Missouri, 1868-69. For
1870 reports of Indian matters in the division,
see file 786 M 1870 on
roll 802. |
32 rolls |
|
M622 |
Records of the
Geological Exploration of the Fortieth Parallel ("King Survey"). |
3 rolls |
I 029 |
M623 |
Records of the
Geological and Geographical Survey of the Territories ("Hayden Survey"),
1867-1879."Dr. Ferdinand Vandiver Hayden directed the Geological
and Geographical Survey of the
Territories, 1867-1879. The survey
included ethnological and archaeological studies in
Nebraska, Wyoming,
Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, and Colorado.
The records are arranged in part alphabetically by the name of the
person or country and in
part chronologically."
Roll
Description Dates
Letters received:
1 Vol. 1 Jan. 4, 1866-Jan. 4, 1870
2 Vols. 3-5 Jan. 1870-Dec. 31, 1872
3 Vols. 6-7 Jan. 1-Dec. 29, 1873
4 Vol. 2 1873-Mar. 21, 1874
5 A-B 1871-1879
6 C-D 1871-1879
7 E-G 1871-1879
8 H-Mc 1871-1879
9 M-O 1871-1879
10 Q-Z 1871-1879
Personal letters received:
11 A-L, 1872-1879
12 M-Y, 1872-1879
13 Personal letters, received chiefly from Fielding Bradford Meek,
1863-1866, 1874-1876
14 Letters received from government agencies, 1867-1879
Letters received from persons in foreign countries:
15 Australia-Denmark
16 England
17 Finland-Ireland
18 Italy-Venezuela
19 Letters of application for positions, recommendations, and
requests for publication, 1872-1879
20 Fiscal records, including: accounts of records; records of the
Treasurer of the United States in
account with F. V. Hayden,
1872-1880; ledger of Dr. C. Peale; ledgers, 1878-Mar. 1880
21 Miscellaneous records relating to the Hayden Survey, 1867-1879 |
21 rolls |
|
M640 |
Office of
Indian Affairs records of the
Southern Superintendency, 1832-1870, and
Western Superintendency,
1832-1851.Roll Dates
Western Superintendency, letters received:
1 1832, 1834-1837
2 1838-1839
3 1840-1841
4 1842-1843
5 1844-1845
6 1846-1848
7 1849-1851
Southern Superintendency, letters received:
8 1851-1852
9 1853
10 1854
11 1855
12 1856
13 1857
14 1858
15 1859
16 1860-1861
Letters sent:
17 June 1, 1853-June 1, 1854
18 June 3, 1854-May 7, 1855
19 May 26, 1855-Dec. 31, 1856
20 Jan. 5, 1857-May 3, 1860
21 June 27, 1860-June 12, 1861; correspondence,
Oct. 12, 1869-Aug. 18, 1870
22 Agency records, 1860-1870; Confederate records,
1861-1862 |
22
rolls |
|
M666 |
Letters
received by the Office of the Adjutant General (Main Series), 1871-1880.
The Center only has 123 of the 593 rolls in this publication."The
Letters Received by the Office of the Adjutant General, 1822-1880, are
available as microfilm
publications M567, M619, and M666.
Correspondence relating to Indian matters is interspersed
throughout
these publications. The following rolls contain consolidated files
relating to Indians that
were identified during the preparation of the
publications."
Roll File
Description
2 113 AGO 1871 Correspondence relating to the provision of food and ammunition
for
hunting to nearly 3,000 starving Indians of the Arapahoe, Cheyenne,
and
Sioux tribes under Chief Red Cloud at Fort Laramie, Wyoming
Territory,
1871-1872.
4 557 AGO 1871
Report by Brig. Gen. John Pope, commanding the Department of the
Missouri, of a possible war with the Cheyenne and Arapahoe Indians
in
the spring of 1871. Included is correspondence relating to
conditions
at the Cheyenne and Arapahoe Agency and to the agent's
defense of his
policies against charges by the military officers of
inefficient administration.
10 1305 AGO 1871
Correspondence relating to the
arrest of Kiowa Chiefs Satanta, Satank,
and Big Tree, who were charged with attacking a corn train of 12
wagons. The arrest was made by troops under Gen. William T.
Sherman at Fort Sill, Indian
Territory, May-June 1871.
10 1339 AGO 1871
Correspondence relating to
the request of financier Jay Cooke that
800 to 1,000 troops be sent to Dakota and Montana Territories to
protect the Northern Pacific Railroad
engineer-surveying parties, 1871.
15 1839 AGO 1871 Correspondence relating to
the massacre of 23 Apache Indians at
Camp Grant, Arizona Territory, on April 30, 1871, by a party of
citizens from Tucson.
16 2019 AGO 1871 Correspondence relating to
activities of the Santee, Yankton, and other
Sioux Indians in 1871 and 1872 in various locations (including the
settlement on the Milk River, Montana Territory), and to the attack on
Gallatin Valley, Montana
Territory, by Sioux tribes from the Big Horn
area.
20-22 2418 AGO 1871 Papers
relating to the war with the Modoc Indians in northern
California,
1871-1873.
24 2465 AGO 1871 Correspondence
relating to the selection by Vincent Colyer of the Board
of Indian Commissioners of sites for Apache Indian reservations at
Tularosa Valley
and White Mountain, New Mexico Territory, and at
Camp Grant and Camp
Verde, Arizona Territory, 1871-1872. Included
is the order by Gen. George
Crook that the Apache move onto the
reservations by Feb. 15, 1872, or be
considered hostile.
25 2564 AGO 1871
Correspondence
relating to recommendations that the military posts at
Cheyenne River, Grand River, Lower Brule, and Whetstone Agencies
in Dakota Territory be
moved or discontinued, Apr. 1872.
32 3314 AGO 1871
Correspondence relating to requests for the establishment of a military
post at Beaver
City in southern Utah, 1871-1872. Included is information
information relating to the Mormons and the Mountain Meadows
massacre in 1857.
37 3971 AGO 1871 Correspondence
relating to the successful removal of intruders from
lands set aside for the Osage and Cherokee Indians in Kansas, Nov.
1871-May 1872.
37 3996 AGO 1871 Correspondence
pertaining to a letter from the Superintendent of Indian
Affairs
for Montana regarding illicit trading with the Indians, 1871-1872.
55 1119 AGO 1872 Correspondence
relating to the proposed establishment of temporary
posts along the Texas frontier to protect U.S. citizens against raiders
from Mexico,
1872-1873 ("Mexican Border Papers").
58 1388 AGO 1872 Correspondence
relating to reports by William H. Miller, subagent of
the Whetstone Agency, Sioux Indian Reservation, Dakota Territory,
that the commander
of the agency refused to provide a guard to
protect property under the
charge of the agent, 1872.
60 1582 AGO 1872 Correspondence
relating to raids by Comanche and Kiowa Indians in
Texas, 1872-1873
(including the Kiowa demand for the release of
Chiefs Satanta and Big
Tree), and to the scouting expedition under
Col. Ranald S. MacKenzie to
the Brazos River, June-Sept. 1872.
61 1603 AGO 1872 Correspondence
relating to the attack on a Miniconjou Sioux war party
by Capt. Charles Meinhold's company of the 3d Cavalry on the South
Fork of Loup River,
Nebraska, and to the subsequent award of the
Medal of Honor to three
members of the company and to William F.
("Buffalo Bill") Cody, who
accompanied the party as a guide, 1872.
73 2770 AGO 1872
Correspondence
relating to Ute Indians who had left their agencies at
Uintah, Utah
Territory, and White River, Colorado Territory, and were
congregating in the San Pete Valley. The correspondence also deals
with the suspected influence of Brigham Young and the Mormons in
inducing the Indians off of the reservations and with military efforts
towards
securing their return.
80 3323 AGO 1872 Correspondence
relating to the attack on the escort party of the
surveyors of the
Northern Pacific Railroad by Arapahoe, Cheyenne,
and Sioux warriors on
August 14, 1872, at the mouth of Pryor's River
in the
Yellowstone Valley. Included is a journal kept by Major John
W. Barlow relating to the escort of the surveying party, July 27-
Oct. 1, 1872.
81 3512 AGO 1872
Correspondence and
reports of Col. David S. Stanley relating to his
escort of Northern
Pacific Railroad engineers surveying the
proposed railroad route from
Heart River, Dakota Territory, to the
mouth of Powder River, 1872.
For additional reports by Col.
Stanley, see file 3159 AGO 1873 on roll
120.
83 3699 AGO 1872 Correspondence
relating to events at the Red Cloud Agency, including
Chief Red Cloud's
refusal to move to White River and the capture by
troops from Fort
Laramie of 450 Indian ponies grazing illegally on the
south side of the
Platte River on the Fort Laramie Military Reservation,
1872.
86 4148 AGO 1872 Papers relating to the
attack by troops under Col. Ranald S.
McClellan Creek, Texas, on Sept. 29, 1873.
95 5103 AGO 1872 Correspondence
relating to the discovery of valuable mines on the Ute
Reservation in
Colorado, the extension of the deadline for the removal
of intruders on the reservation, and a dispute over pasturage between
ranchers and a
band of Ute Indians near Spanish Peaks, 1872-1873.
95 5147 AGO 1872
Correspondence
relating to the issuance of rations to Ocheo, leader of a
band of Paiute
Indians, and to the refusal of the Paiute to return to
Yainax, Oregon,
1872-1873. For additional correspondence relating to
the Paiute, see
files 3313 AGO 1873 on roll 121 and 7111 AGO 1879
on roll 536.
96 5176 AGO 1872
Correspondence
relating to the scouting expedition of Lt. Charles Morton
in Arizona
Territory, June 6-19, 1872, during which the troops fought
four battles
with a band of Tonto Apache, and to the subsequent
recommendation of the
men on the march for the Medal of Honor,
1872-1876.
108 1433 AGO 1873 Correspondence
pertaining to a communication from Col. J. Reynolds,
3rd Cavalry,
commanding at Fort McPherson, Nebraska, regarding a
talkheld with
Chiefs No Flesh and Pawnee Killer, 1873.
110 1780 AGO 1873 Correspondence
pertaining to Clarke and Bill, merchants at James River
Crossing, Minnesota, who were involved in the liquor trade with
the Indians and
complained against their arrest and the seizure of their
stock, 1873.
118 2933 AGO 1873 Correspondence and a
report of proceedings of a board of investigation
relating to the murder
of Lt. Jacob Almy by Indians in May 1873 at the
San Carlos Agency.
122 3326 AGO 1873 Correspondence
pertaining to supplies delivered to Army officers to
issue to Indians at Camps Apache and Beale's Springs and at
Mojave Reservation in Arizona
Territory, 1873-1876.
123 3383 AGO 1873 Correspondence
relating to the agreement with Cochise, chief of the
Chiricahua
Apache, negotiated by Gen. Oliver O. Howard, and to
Gen. George Crook's criticism of the agreement and his request to be
allowed to subdue
Cochise with force, 1873-1874.
126 4028 AGO 1873
Correspondence relating to Cheyenne raids in the territory between
the Kansas Pacific
Railroad and the northern frontier of Texas, 1873.
130 4477 AGO 1873 Correspondence
relating to plundering by the Mescalero Apache Indians
in southern New
Mexico and to the attack by Capt. George W.
Chilson's troops on a party
of Mescalero Apache at the western base
of the Guadalupe Mountains, New
Mexico Territory, 1873.
131 4803 AGO 1873 Correspondence
relating to a Department of Justice opinion categorizing
Alaska as
Indian country and stating that spiritous liquor could not be
introduced
there without an authorizing order from the War Department,
1873-1875.
132 4667 AGO 1873 Correspondence
relating to the proposal by the licensed Indian trader
at Fort
Benton, Montana Territory, that Indians be permitted to trade
there,
1873-1874.
133 4746 AGO 1873 Correspondence
relating to the removal of nearly 1,000 Winnebago
Indians from Wisconsin
to Nebraska, Dec. 1873-Jan. 1874.
142 554 AGO 1874
Papers relating to
requests for military aid to quell riots and murders
caused by cattle
herders and Indians in Lincoln County, New Mexico
Territory, 1874.
For more information on the Lincoln County war,
see file 1405 AGO
1878 on rolls 397-398.
143 563 AGO 1874 Correspondence
relating to increased Sioux Indian activities in the
Department of the
Platte, 1874, including the murder of Lt. Levi H.
Robinson near Laramie
Peak, Wyoming Territory, and to the request
for the establishment of a
military post to protect the Red Cloud and
Whetstone Agencies.
147 1224 AGO 1874 Correspondence
relating to disturbances at the Standing Rock Indian
Agency, Dakota
Territory, including the arrest of Chief Rain-in-the-Face
of the Hunkpapa
band of Sioux for the murder of two men on Col.
David S.
Stanley's Yellowstone expedition, and to the request for
troops to enforce the enrollment of Indians at the agency, 1874.
153 1848 AGO 1874 Correspondence
relating to the Indian situation at Camp Gaston, Calif.,
and the Hoopa
Valley Reservation, 1874.
159-164 815 AGO 1874 Papers relating to the 1874-1875 campaign against Arapahoe, Cheyenne,
Comanche, and Kiowa bands in Indian Territory (the Red River War).
167 3198 AGO 1874 Correspondence
pertaining to inspections by military officers of
flour for the Indian
Service at Milk River and Blackfeet Agencies,
Montana Territory, Fort Berthold, Dakota Territory, 1874-1875.
181 5009 AGO 1874
Correspondence
relating to reports that miners had been working in the
Black Hills
country of the Sioux Indian Reservation, 1874-1875.
185 56 AGO 1875
Correspondence
relating to permission given by the Indian agent at
Wichita Agency,
Indian Territory, for his charges to go north to hunt
and to the protest
lodged by Lt. Col. T. H. Neill, the commanding
officer at Cheyenne River
Agency, Dakota Territory, 1875.
187 546 AGO 1875 Correspondence
pertaining to military operations at Fort Stanton,
New Mexico Territory,
and to the Indians of that reservation, 1875.
193 1452 AGO 1875 Correspondence
relating to the appointment of the military commandant
as the Indian
agent for Alaska and to his imposition of restrictions on
trade,
1875-1876. Also included is Gen. Oliver O. Howard's report of a
tour
in Alaska, June 1875.
194 1504 AGO 1875 Correspondence
relating to the ouster of James E. Roberts as Indian
agent at Fort
Apache, Arizona Territory, and the removal of the Apache
Indians from
there to the San Carlos Indian Agency by San Carlos Agent
John P. Clum,
1875-1876.
195-211 1653 AGO 1875 Papers relating to raids into Texas made between 1875 and 1884 by
parties of Indians and Mexicans from the Mexican side of the Rio Grande
("Mexican Border Troubles").
221 3517 AGO 1875 Correspondence
relating to requests for military protection of the
Crow Indian Agency,
Montana Territory, from Sioux attacks, 1875. Also
included is a
report by Capt. George L. Tyler of a fight between Crow,
Grosventre, and
Nez Perce Indians and the 1,200 to 1,500 Sioux Indians
below the mouth
of the Big Horn River in June 1875.
220 3538 AGO 1875 Correspondence
relating to a letter of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs
recommending
that a small guard be furnished for duty at Cimarron
Agency, New Mexico
Territory, to prevent depredations by Indians in
that vicinity, 1875.
224 3945 AGO 1875 Correspondence
relating to a communication from the agent for the
Cherokee Nation,
Indian Territory, stating that hostile feelings existed
between rival Indian factions, 1875.
225 4228 AGO
1875
Correspondence relating to charges against Capt. John S. Poland,
commander of the U.S. Military Station at Standing Rock Indian
Agency,
Dakota Territory, of arbitrary action in assuming control of
trading and
other activities of the Indians and businessmen at the
agency, 1875-1876.
226 4354 AGO 1875 Correspondence
relating to the removal of agent William F. M. Arny
of the Navajo Indian
Agency, Fort Defiance, Arizona Territory, after
a council of the
principal chiefs of the Navajo Nation at Fort Wingate,
New Mexico
Territory, in July 1875, and to the appointment of
Alexander G. Irvine
as his successor, 1875-1876.
227 4608 AGO 1875 Correspondence
relating to telegrams from Col. Ranald MacKenzie,
commander at Fort
Sill, Indian Territory, accusing the Interior Department
of failing to
furnish supplies to the Indians, 1875.
228 4720 AGO 1875 Correspondence
pertaining to a threatened general Indian outbreak in
eastern Nevada and
measures to prevent it, 1875.
233 5650 AGO 1875 Correspondence
relating to the fight between Company H, 5th Cavalry,
and a band of 60
warriors of the Northern Arapahoe south of the buffalo
station on the
Kansas Pacific Railway on October 28, 1875.
238 6160 AGO 1875 Papers relating to
military expeditions against the Sioux Indians in the
Big Horn, Powder
and Yellowstone Rivers areas, November 1875-
July 1876.
247 265 AGO 1876 Correspondence
relating to proposals to sell liquor in the Cherokee
Nation, Indian
Territory, 1876-1878.
259 1929 AGO 1876 Correspondence
relating to the total number of Indian scouts authorized
to be employed by the Army and to requests for permission to enlist
scouts in various
departments, 1876-1878.
264 2440 AGO 1876 Papers relating to
Gen. George Crook's charge that Col. Joseph J.
Reynolds and Capt.
Alexander Moore failed to carry out orders in an
attack on the village
of Chief Crazy Horse near Powder River, Montana
Territory, in March
1876, and the subsequent general courts-martial of
Reynolds and Moore.
265 2576 AGO 1876 Correspondence
relating to the removal of the Chiricahua Apache
Indians to the San
Carlos Indian Agency, Arizona Territory, 1876-1877.
271 3570 AGO 1876
Correspondence
relating to Gen. George Crook's battle with the
Sioux and Cheyenne
Indians under Chief Crazy Horse at Rosebud
Creek, Montana Territory,
June 1876.
271 3597 AGO 1876 Correspondence
relating to the claim of Young Joseph and his
band of Nez Perce Indians
to the Wallowa Valley, Oregon; the
appointment of a commission to
negotiate with Young Joseph; and
the removal of the Indians to the
reservation at Boise, Idaho Territory,
1876-1877.
273 3770 AGO 1876 Papers relating to the
defeat of Gen. George A. Custer and his whole
command by Sitting Bull's
band of Sioux Indians in the battle on the
Little Big Horn River,
Montana Territory, June 25-26, 1876.
274 3820 AGO 1876 Correspondence
pertaining to the offer of volunteer military service by
Montana
citizens in response to the Custer defeat, 1876.
277-292 4163 AGO 1876 Papers relating to military operations in the Departments of the
Platte
and Dakota against the Sioux Indians ("Sioux War Papers"),
1876-1896.
294 4408 AGO 1876 Correspondence
relating to the proposed prohibition of the sale
of arms and ammunition
to Indians by traders, 1876-1878.
321 1281 AGO
1877
Correspondence pertaining to the message of the Governor of Arizona
concerning Indian depredations and his request for the removal of the
commanding general of the Department of Arizona, 1877.
322 1322 AGO
1877
Correspondence, reports of surveys, and maps of the three
wagon roads
through the Sioux Reservation in Dakota Territory provided
for by the
agreement in 1876 with the Sioux. The three routes were from
Bismarck to Deadwood City, from Fort Pierre to Deadwood City, and
from
Fort Niobrara, Nebraska, to Custer City.
323 1469 AGO
1877
Correspondence relating to timber cutting by whites on the Sioux
Reservations in Dakota Territory, 1877-1880.
326 1927 AGO
1877
Correspondence relating to the arrest and removal of Geronimo's
band of
renegade Chiricahua Apache Indians from Ojo Caliente,
New Mexico
Territory, to the San Carlos Indian Agency, Arizona
Territory, 1877.
330 2526 AGO
1877
Correspondence relating to the appointment of military officers to
witness deliveries by contractors at Indian agencies. Also
included
are reports of the appointed officers, 1877.
335 3369 AGO
1877
Correspondence pertaining to a report from the commanding officer
at Fort Reno, Wyoming Territory, alleging a deficiency of Indian
supplies at the Cheyenne and Arapahoe Agency and starvation among
the
Indians, 1876-1878.
336-340 3464 AGO 1877 Correspondence relating to the war with the Nez Perce Indians in
1877,
including the battle at Bear Paw Mountain, Montana Territory.
345 3897 AGO
1877
Correspondence relating to intruders on the Klamath Indian Reservation,
Oregon, and the possible necessity of removing the Indians, 1877-1886.
361 4966 AGO
1877
Correspondence pertaining to troop operations commanded by Lt. J. W.
Summerhayes to recover stock from Pima Indians in
Arizona and to
charges by Gen. A. V. Kautz, commanding the Department of
Arizona,
that the agent for the Pima, Maricopa, and Papago tribes was
inattentive
to his responsibilities.
362 4976 AGO
1877
Correspondence relating to the Indians in the area of Fort Benton,
Montana Territory, including such matters as the sustenance of a band of
Assiniboin and a band of Grosventre Indians and the expulsion of a group
of Canadian mixed-blood Indians who had settled on the Milk River,
1877-1879.
366 5705 AGO
1877 Correspondence relating to military operations
against the Warm
Springs Indians who fled from the San Carlos Indian Agency,
Arizona Territory, 1877-1879.
377-379 7316 AGO 1877 Correspondence relating to the war with the Bannock Indians and
associated tribes, the Paiute, Klamath, and Umatilla, 1877-1879.
381 7441 AGO
1877 Correspondence relating to requests for a military post in the Black
Hills
to protect settlers and the subsequent selection of a site for a
military
reservation at Bear Butte, Dakota Territory, 1877-1878.
389 125 AGO
1878
Correspondence and reports relating to the inspection of beef cattle at
the Kiowa and Comanche Agency, Indian Territory, 1878.
392 710 AGO
1878
Correspondence pertaining to the detailing of Army officers as acting
Indian Agents at the Yankton, Crow Creek, Lower Brule, and Cheyenne
River Agencies, Dakota Territory, 1878-1884.
394 1036 AGO
1878 Correspondence pertaining to affairs at Standing Rock Agency,
Dakota
Territory, including the butchering of hogs and the cutting
of timber,
1878.
395 1089 AGO
1878 Correspondence relating to the Ute Indians of Colorado and to the
November 1878 agreement under which they relinquished their rights
to 12
million acres of land.
397-398 1405 AGO 1878
Papers relating to the use of U.S. troops to suppress lawlessness in
Lincoln County, New Mexico Territory ("Lincoln County War"),
1878-1881.
For earlier correspondence, see file 554 AGO 1874
on roll 142.
400 1499 AGO
1878
Correspondence and claims for compensation, 1878-1896, for losses
sustained during the Nez Perce Indian War in Idaho in the summer
of 1877.
401 1620 AGO
1878 Correspondence concerning the removal of Ute and Apache Indians
from the
Cimarron Agency, New Mexico Territory, to the Southern
Ute Agency Colorado, and the Mescalero Agency, New Mexico
Territory, 1878.
406 3042 AGO
1878
Correspondence about Maj. Gen. Philip H. Sheridan's contention that
Indian raids along the Rio Grande were committed by Indians from the
Fort Stanton Reservation, New Mexico Territory, and his proposal to
give the Army exclusive control over them, 1878.
414 3930 AGO
1878
Correspondence pertaining to a complaint by Col. Elias C. Boudinot,
Cherokee Nation, Indian Territory, against the seizure of his hotel by
the
Fort Gibson post trader and his request for War Department
intervention
on his behalf, 1878-1884.
419 4613 AGO
1878
Reports from division and department commanders to the Joint
Congressional Committee on the Indian Bureau Transfer, showing the
number of troops at Indian agencies in each division or department and
the estimated cost for maintaining these troops, 1878.
423 5641 AGO
1878
Correspondence relating to the Sept. 1878 consolidation of the Kiowa
and
Comanche Indian Agency with the Wichita Agency, Indian Territory,
and to
subsequent reports of dissatisfaction and unrest, 1878, 1879, and 1881.
425 5900 AGO
1878
Correspondence relating to the request of the Commissioner of
Indian
ffairs for 15 to 20 cavalrymen to be stationed at Tularosa, New
Mexico
Territory, to deal with Indian stragglers and to stop the liquor
traffic in the
vicinity, 1878.
427 6310 AGO
1878
Correspondence relating to the arrest of Chief Moses and the attempts to
relocate his band of Indians on the Yakima Reservation, 1878-1879.
428-430 6470 AGO 1878 Papers relating to military operations against the Northern
Cheyenne,
1878-1879. Included is a report by a board of officers on
the arrest and
confinement of a number of Cheyenne Indians in the
vicinity of Fort
Robinson, Nebraska.
449 8705 AGO
1878
Correspondence relating to the confinement of nearly 150 Northern
Cheyenne at Fort Robinson, Nebraska, their refusal to return to the
Indian Territory, their escape from the fort, and the attack by Capt.
Henry W. Wessell's Company, 1878-1879.
454 71 AGO
1879
Papers pertaining to the inspection of flour and beef cattle at the
Kiowa
and Comanche Agency, Indian Territory, 1879.
471-488 2653 AGO 1879 Papers relating to the intrusion by unauthorized persons or
"boomers"
into Indian Territory, including Oklahoma, the Cherokee
Outlet, and
the part of the territory known as Greer County, Texas,
1879-1893.
493 3417 AGO
1879 Correspondence relating to a request by a U.S. marshal for
military
assistance in arresting white outlaws in the Choctaw Nation,
Indian
Territory, 1879.
513-517 4278 AGO 1879 Papers relating to the Ute Indian uprising of 1879 at the White
River
Agency, Colorado, and the subsequent military operations and
reprisals,
1879-1883.
522 5141 AGO
1879
Correspondence relating to the 1879 war with the bands of Indians in
central Idaho known as the Sheepeaters ("Sheepeaters' War").
526 -528 6058 AGO 1879 Papers relating to military operations against Chief Victorio's band
of
Mescalero Apache in southern New Mexico, 1879-1881, and one letter
dated March 13, 1886.
535 7076 AGO
1879
Correspondence relating to charges of illegal trading with Indians
against
the post trader at Fort Yates, Dakota Territory, 1879-1881.
536 7111 AGO
1879
Correspondence pertaining to complaints by citizens and miners of
harassment by roving Paiute bands, 1878-1880.
560 2608 AGO
1880 Correspondence relating to dissatisfaction among Indians of the Navajo
Agency, Arizona Territory, with their agent, Galen Eastman; the
assumption of military control by Capt. Frank T. Bennett, 9th U.S.
Cavalry, both there and at Moqui Pueblo Agency; and the eventual
reassignment of both agencies to Eastman, 1880.
565 3153 AGO
1880
Correspondence pertaining to complaints of the Sioux Indians at
Standing
Rock Agency, Dakota Territory, about the number of troops
at
the reservation, the amount of timber cut there, and the cattle still
due them for the seizure of their ponies by the Army, 1880-1883.
568 3619 AGO
1880
Correspondence relating to unauthorized white settlement on the
Sioux
Reservation at Fort Pierre, Dakota Territory, 1880. |
123 rolls |
|
M668 |
Ratified
Indian treaties, 1722-1869.
(in Microfilm Drawer 6.10 in the
Delaney Library) "This microfilm publication
reproduces ratified Indian treaties, 1722-1869, with related papers;
eight unperfected treaties, 1854-1855; a chronological list of the
treaties; and indexes by place and
by tribe. The list and indexes
include a few entries dated as late as 1883. These documents are
contained in General Records of the U.S. Government,
Record Group 11. This series of Indian
treaties and related papers is arranged
chronologically by the date of the signing of the treaty, and
the
treaties are numbered in that order. On the envelope containing each
treaty is a label giving the
name of tribe, the date, the date of
ratification, the place of treaty, and, occasionally, added
information. Each envelope is shown on the film before the treaty and other records
it contains.
The first seven treaties are copies. The first original
treaty is that of September 17, 1778, with the
Delaware Indians. Usually
the accompanying papers consist of the Presidential proclamation of
the
treaty (with which the treaty is often fastened in order to incorporate
it as part of the
proclamation), the resolution of consent to
ratification by the Senate, and printed copies of the
treaty (duplicates
have not been filmed). Sometimes there are copies of messages from the
President to the Senate, copies of messages or letters of instruction to
the treaty commissioners,
and journals and correspondence concerning the
treaty. In a few cases, the original treaty is missing.
Envelope 247-A,
on roll 10, contains eight unperfected treaties dated 1854-1855."
Contents
Dates
1 Chronological list, index by place, and index by tribe, 1722-1883
Numbered treaties and inclusive dates:
2 1-30 Aug. 14, 1772-Oct. 24, 1801
3 31-40 Dec. 27, 1801-July 22, 1814
4 61-95 Aug. 9, 1814-June 22, 1818
5 96-143 Aug. 24, 1818-Nov. 7, 1825
6 144-170 Jan. 24, 1826-Sept. 21, 1832
7 171-196 Oct. 11, 1832-Dec. 17, 1834
8 197-229 July 1, 1835-Nov. 23, 1837
9 230-252 Jan. 15, 1838-Aug. 6, 1848
10 253-276 Oct. 14, 1848-Nov. 4, 1854
11 277-300 Nov. 15, 1854-Dec. 21, 1855
12 301-320 Feb. 5, 1856-June 24, 1862
13 321-338 June 28, 1862 Sept. 29, 1865
14 339-354 Oct. 10, 1865-Apr. 7, 1866
15 355-363 Apr. 28, 1866-Mar. 19, 1867
16 364-374 Oct. 21, 1867-Aug. 13, 1868 |
16
rolls |
|
M685 |
Records relating to enrollment of the Eastern Cherokee by Guion Miller,
1908-1910. This publication includes Guion Miller's report and his
supplemental report as well as the roll of
Eastern Cherokee. In
certifying the eligibility of the Cherokee, Miller used earlier census
lists and
rolls that had been made of the Cherokee between 1835 and
1884. Copies of the Chapman,
Drennen, and Old Settler rolls of 1851 and
the Hester roll of 1884, with the appropriate indexes,
are reproduced as
the final roll of this publication.
Roll Contents
1 General index to Eastern Cherokee Applications, vols. 1 and 2
Report submitted by Guion Miller, Special Commissioner, May 28, 1909:
2 Vols. 1 and 2, applications 1-6000
3 Vols. 3 and 4, applications 6001-16000
4 Vols. 5-7, applications 16001-31000
5 Vols. 8-10, applications 31001-45857
6 Roll of Eastern Cherokee, May 28, 1909, and report on exceptions, with supplemental
roll, Jan. 5, 1910; and miscellaneous testimony taken before special
commissioners, Feb. 1908-Mar. 1909:
7 Vols. 1 and 2
8 Vols. 3 and 4
9 Vols. 5 and 6
10 Vols. 7 and 8
11 Vols. 9 and 10
12 Indexes and rolls of Eastern Cherokee Indians, 1850, 1851, and 1884, and
miscellaneous notes and drafts
|
12
rolls |
|
M689 |
Letters
received by the Office of the Adjutant General (Main Series), 1881-1889.
The Center
of Southwest Studies only has 101 of the 740 rolls in this publication.
(See prior description of this Office.)
"The following rolls contain consolidated files relating to Indians
that were identified during the
preparation of the publications."
Roll File
Description
9 1504 AGO 1861 Papers relating
to the mortal wounding of a Navajo Indian in
Farmington, New Mexico
Territory, by Frank Meyers and the
subsequent investigation by Army
officers that disclosed an absence
of law and order in the vicinity because of the outlaw bands, Jan.-May
1881.
1528 AGO 1861 Correspondence
pertaining to important mines discovered at Cataract
Creek, Arizona
Territory, on the Havasupai Indian Reservation and the
difficulties
occasioned by the invasion of white miners. Also included are
papers pertaining to the survey of Havasupai lands.
36-39 4327 AGO 1881 Papers relating to the battle between
the command of Col. Eugene A. Carr,
6th Cavalry, and Apache Indians at Cibecue Creek, Arizona Territory, in
Aug. 1881 and a court of inquiry at
Fort Grant, Arizona Territory, to
investigate charges of negligence against Colonel Carr, 1881-1883.
41 4414 AGO 1881 Papers relating to aid for destitute Walapai and Navajo Indians, July
1881-
Aug. 1891.
44 4746 AGO 1881
Correspondence and reports mainly concerning efforts to capture hostile
Apache Indians who were terrorizing the border region of the District of
New Mexico, July-Dec. 1881.
48 5200 AGO 1881
Correspondence relating to a request from the Department of the Interior
that the War Department help move Little Chief and certain members of
his band of Northern Cheyenne from the Cheyenne and Arapahoe
Agency, Indian Territory, to the Pine Ridge Agency, Dakota Territory,
Aug. 1881-Aug. 1883.
51 5517 AGO 1881 Correspondence
relating to the intrusion of miners and ranchers on Chief
Moses's
reservation in Washington Territory, Sept. 1881-Feb. 1884.
54 5957 AGO 1881 Papers relating
to engagements against Indians in Texas and New Mexico
from 1850 to 1856
compiled in reply to a pension claim filed by the
widow of William R.
Talbot, Company G. 2d Dragoons. Included are
evaluations as to whether the fighting constituted a war and efforts to
define the limits of
the areas involved, Sept. 1881-Dec. 1898.
56 6067 AGO 1881 Correspondence
pertaining to the Paiute Indians in California, Nevada,
Oregon, and the
Territory of Washington, including their migration from
the Yakima
Agency, Washington Territory, to reservations at Malheur
River in Oregon and Fort McDermitt and Pyramid Lake in Nevada.
A number of the
documents deal with the destitute condition of Indians,
1881-1888.
77 364 AGO 1882 Papers and a
report of Mar. 4, 1882, from the Secretary of War relating
to a statement of expenditures for Indian wars and for the observation
and control of Indians from July 1, 1871-June 20, 1882.
78 442 AGO 1882
Report by the Secretary of War and other papers relating to the status
of Indian
prisoners held under War Department orders, Jan.-Feb. 1882.
81 663 AGO 1882 Papers relating
to the Frelinghuysen-Romero Agreement of July 29, 1882,
providing for
reciprocal crossings of the international boundary by troops
of the
United States and Mexico in pursuit of hostile Indians, Feb. 1862-
June
1867.
85 1076 AGO 1882 Papers
pertaining to actions taken by the sheriff of Chouteau County,
Montana
Territory, and special deputy U.S. marshals in collecting taxes
and
fines from Indians and Canadian mixed-blood persons and in driving
the mixed-bloods back to Canada, 1882.
88 1280 AGO 1862 Correspondence
relating to a planned reduction of beef rations for the
Arapahoe and
Cheyenne, Comanche, and Kiowa Agencies; the fears
of Army officers,
particularly of Capt. G. M. Randall, commander at
Fort Reno, Indian
Territory, that such a reduction would lead to an
outbreak of violence;
and the subsequent efforts of some officers to
obtain a satisfactory
quantity of beef for the Indians to avoid endangering
the entire
frontier with an uprising, Mar.-Sept. 1882.
92 1513 AGO 1882
Correspondence and reports relating to unrest among the Indians of the
Navajo Reservation, Arizona Territory, including the recommendation
that
Indian Agent Galen Eastman be replaced because of his inability to
deal
with the situation. The file also includes information about
Navajo
Indians who had gone to the San Juan River Valley, New Mexico
Territory, and the efforts of the Army to return them to the
reservation,
Apr.-Nov. 1882.
96-97 1749 AGO 1882 Papers relating to outbreaks
of violence, including several murders in
New Mexico and Arizona by Chiricahua Apache who escaped from
the San Carlos Reservation, Arizona
Territory, and to their pacification.
101 2180 AGO 1882 Papers
concerning the threatened starvation of Indians on the Mescalero
Apache
Reservation, New Mexico Territory, after Congress failed to
appropriate
funds for rations and the subsequent efforts by Army officers
and the
Department of the Interior to obtain rations, May 1882-Aug.
1884.
108 2809 AGO 1882 Papers and
reports relating to surveys of the boundaries of the White
Mountain
Reservation in Arizona Territory and of the Mescalero Apache
Reservation
in New Mexico Territory and to an Executive order reducing
the area of
the latter, June 1882-Dec. 1884.
123 3875 AGO 1882 Papers relating
to a potential Piegan Indian outbreak at the Blackfeet
Agency, Montana
Territory, due to insufficient food rations, 1862-1883.
138 5171 AGO 1882 Correspondence
relating to the illegal sale of liquor in Indian Territory,
1882-1883.
147 5942 AGO 1882 Correspondence
relating to disorders near Okmulgee, Indian Territory,
among the Creek
Indians who rebelled against their leaders and to efforts
of the Army to
restore order, Dec. 1882-Nov. 1883.
173-202 1066 AGO 1883 Papers relating to the
uprising of the Chiricahua Apache under Geronimo,
Chatto, and Natchez
and to their subsequent surrender and imprisonment
in the East,
1883-1906. Included are records pertaining to the disposition
of
surrendered Chiricahua, Sept. 19, 1885-Apr. 8, 1886; the movement
of
U.S. troops into Mexico; and the death of Capt. Emmet Crawford from
wounds received from Mexican troops. For other papers relating to
Capt.
Crawford, see file 4061 AGO 1883 on roll 231.
204 1181 AGO 1883 Correspondence
relating to Chief Moses's trip to Washington, D.C., to
confer with the Secretary of War and other officials over a dispute
between farmers and
Colville, Moses, and Okinagan Indians in
Washington Territory, May-Sept.
1883.
205 1233 AGO 1883 Papers
pertaining to fighting between war parties of Cree Indians from
Canada
and herders in Montana Territory, 1883.
224 3111 AGO 1883
Correspondence relating to the plan to visit Indians in Montana and
Dakota
by members of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs and to the
request
of Sen. H. L. Davis that the Army provide transportation and
other
necessary aid during their tour, July 1883 May 1885.
271 1759 AGO 1884 Papers relating
to reports from post officers of attempts by white men to
dispossess non-reservation Indians settled along the Columbia River and
other places
within the Military District of the Columbia and to an Interior
Department order, May 31, 1884, to U.S. land offices, instructing land
agents to refuse to file all entries by whites for lands then settled by
Indians, Apr. 1884-Mar. 1885.
273 1882 AGO 1884 Papers
pertaining to Indian depredations near Mitchell's ranch, New
Mexico
Territory, and measures taken to suppress them, 1884.
275 2016 AGO 1884 Correspondence
relating to the death of Running Buffalo, a Cheyenne
Indian, killed by a herder named Horton near Fort Supply, Indian
Territory, in May 1884; the
resulting conflict with the Indians; and
the propriety of granting
leases to cattlemen to drive livestock herds
through Indian lands, May
1884-Feb. 1885.
279 2487 AGO 1884 Correspondence
relating to the May 1884 killing of Sioux Chief White
Thunder by Thunder
Hawk and Spotted Tail at the Rosebud Agency,
Dakota Territory, as a
result of an old feud, June-Oct. 1884. Includes
correspondence
relating to disturbances at the Pine Ridge Agency,
Dakota Territory,
resulting from the arrival of T. A. Bland, publisher of
the magazine
Council Fire.
331 127 AGO 1885 Report of Lt. H.
T. Allen's reconnaissance voyage to Alaska Territory,
Oct.-Dec. 1884,
and papers relating to an expedition by Lt. Allen and
his party to the
district of the Copper and Tanana Rivers to investigate
the character
and disposition of the natives, Dec. 1884-May 1885.
Included are
copies of Lt. Allen's reports of March and April 1885.
336 722 AGO 1885 Papers
pertaining to an investigation into the shooting of an Indian by a
white
person at an Indian camp in Grant County, Oregon, 1865.
341 1153 AGO 1885 Correspondence
and several reports relating to a suspected outbreak
of intertribal
warfare, reported by Joseph Terrill, who lived near Fort
McKinney,
Wyoming Territory, involving Arapahoe, Blackfeet,
Cheyenne, Crow, Piegan,
Shoshoni, and Sioux Indians in Wyoming
and Montana, Feb.-May 1665.
362-363 3140 AGO 1885 Correspondence relating to
disturbances caused by Indians of the
Cheyenne and Arapahoe Agency,
Indian Territory, June 1885-Sept.
1886, and Lt. Gen. Philip H.
Sheridan's report, July 24, 1885.
402 7125 AGO 1885 Papers relating
to a recommendation by Gen. F. C. Armstrong, U.S.
Indian Inspector, that
troops be sent to preserve order among Northern
Cheyenne Indians at
Tongue River, Montana Territory, and papers
relating to attacks by
Rosebud Indians in the Tongue River area against
their agency, Nov.-Dec.
1885.
446 2104 AGO 1886 Papers
pertaining to the appointment of Capt. J. M. Bell as temporary
Indian
Agent at Pine Ridge Agency, Dakota Territory, 1886.
452 2458 AGO 1886
Correspondence and reports relating to the condition of the Chief Moses
and Joseph Indians in the Department of the Columbia, including a
request that the Department of the Interior supply agricultural
implements to them, May 1886-May 1887.
466 3395 AGO 1886
Papers relating to Richard Fitzpatrick's claim for damages caused by
Indian depredations during the Seminole War and for losses sustained
because of U.S. troops quartered on his plantation in southern Florida
from
1838-42. Included are copies of reports and correspondence
concerning military operations in Florida in 1838 and military maps of
Florida. The papers are dated July 1886-Feb.1887.
483 5269 AGO 1886 Report by Lt. J.
T. Haines, 5th Cavalry, and copies of correspondence
from the Department of the Interior relating to efforts to bring back
Indians who left the
Sac and Fox Indian Agency, Indian Territory,
Sept. 1886-Jan. 1887.
483 5304 AGO 1886 Papers relating
to intertribal hostilities among the Blood, Piegan,
Grosventre,
and Crow
Indians in the border region of the Department
of Dakota, Oct. 1886-Aug.
1887.
489 5939 AGO 1886 Reports,
recommendations, and other papers relating to efforts by the
Army and the Department of the Interior to return Jicarilla Apache
Indians, camped near Espanola, New Mexico Territory, to the
Mescalero Reservation
and to adjust their grievances, Oct. 1886-
June 1888.
513 477 AGO 1887
Papers relating to the protection of the Klamath Indian Reservation,
Oregon, against
poachers, cattlemen, and settlers. Reports and
correspondence from
the Department of the Interior are included,
Jan. 1887-Dec. 1888.
517 827 AGO 1887
Correspondence and reports relating to problems caused by white
settlers in the San
Juan River country on the Navajo Reservation
in the District of New
Mexico, Feb.-Nov. 1887.
526 880 AGO 1887 Reports from
officers in the Department of California and from officials of
the
Interior Department relating to the encroachment of white settlers and
cattlemen on the Round Valley Indian Reservation, Calif.,
Apr.-Dec. 1887.
533 2889 AGO 1887 Papers and
copies of reports relating to white intruders on the Coeur
d'Alene Reservation, Idaho. Included is a transcript of the field
notes by
Darius F. Baker, U.S. Deputy Surveyor, on the survey
of the boundary
lines of the reservation.
536 3264 AGO 1887 Reports of Gen.
Nelson A. Miles and other persons concerning operations
in Arizona
against renegade Apache from the San Carlos Reservation and
the
condition of the tribes there, June 1887-May 1889. Included is a
letter
from Maj. Gen. George Crook giving his views on the management of
the
Mohave, Yuma, and Tonto Apache.
537 3324 AGO 1887 Papers relating
to the removal of Pine Ridge Cheyenne from the Tongue
River Agency in
Montana, where they had traveled to hold a sun dance,
June-Oct. 1887.
For additional records on this subject, see file 2493
AGO 1889 on roll
683.
538 3470 AGO 1887 Papers
pertaining to an anticipated visit of Sioux Indians at the Crow
Agency,
Montana Territory, and a request by the Commissioner of Indian
Affairs
that they be intercepted, 1887.
548 4668 AGO 1887 Papers
pertaining to a party of Comanche Indians from Indian Territory
who
visited the Mescalero Reservation in New Mexico. Other
documents deal
with general policies of allowing Indians to leave their
reservations for visits, 1887.
549 4686 AGO 1867 Report of 1st
Lt. George R. Burnett, 9th Cavalry, Sept. 10, 1887, and
other
correspondence concerning trouble between the Colorado militia
and
Colorado ("Colorow"), chief of the Ute Indians, and efforts of U.S.
troops to bring the Ute back to the Uintah and Ouray Reservation,
Aug.-Sept. 1887.
554 5199 AGO 1887 Papers relating
to the protection of the Indians who accepted allotments
of land in
severalty on the Yankton Reservation, Dakota Territory, and
to the
removal of intruders on the Pipestone Reservation, Minnesota,
Sept.-Oct.
1887.
557 5681 AGO 1887 Papers relating
to the Crow Indian outbreak led by Deaf Bull in the vicinity
of the Crow
Agency, Montana, and to the subsequent investigation and
imprisonment of the
Indians involved, Oct. 1887-June 1890.
567 6839 AGO 1867 Papers relating
to the death of Mary Wagnor, allegedly killed by Indians
in the Rogue
River Valley, Oregon Territory, in 1856. Included are 42
reports and
enclosures filed by Lt. Col. R. C. Buchanan concerning his
operations in
the area during the Rogue River Indian War, 1855-56.
569 7007 AGO 1887 Correspondence,
Dec. 1887 Dec. 1889, relating to Senate resolutions of
Dec. 20, 1887,
and Jan. 29, 1889, directing the Secretary of War to
supply all records
pertaining to Capt. Lawrence Hall's Company of
Oregon Volunteers, which
participated in the Cayuse Indian War of 1848
in the Oregon Territory.
The requested information was furnished Dec. 7,
1889, and published as
"Letter From the Secretary of War Transmitting
Report of Capt. W. E. Birkhimer," Senate Executive Document 6, 51st
Congress, 1st session.
634 3089 AGO 1888 Papers
pertaining to Indian problems in the Departments of the Platte and
Dakota. Included are documents concerning citizens' protests
against
troop removals, Indians under Lost Bull who left the Tongue
River
Agency in Montana, and Sioux from Pine Ridge Agency, Dakota
Territory, who left for Tongue River to participate in a sun dance,
1888.
636 3340 AGO 1888 Report of Lt.
Col. Simon Snyder, 10th Infantry, July 30, 1888, and related
correspondence and telegrams concerning disturbances caused by Indians
in the vicinity of the San Carlos Reservation, Arizona Territory,
July-Sept.
1888.
663 7 AGO 1889
Correspondence and a printed report of the Secretary of War relating to
the
service of volunteers from Washington and Idaho Territories in the
Nez
Perce War of 1877.
665 281 AGO 1889 Correspondence
of the acting Indian agent of Hoopa Valley Agency
regarding the Lower
Klamath Indians and land speculators and the
request of the
Commissioner
of Indian Affairs for the removal of
intruders from Indian land, 1889.
665 299 AGO 1889 Papers
relating to attempts by the Army to remove the heirs of Henry
Harris, a
white settler and U.S. citizen, from the Cherokee Nation,
Indian Territory, Jan.-Mar. 1889.
667 567 AGO 1889 Correspondence relating to the attempted removal of cattlemen and their
herds from Indian Territory and the problem of opening Oklahoma for
public settlement, Feb. 1869.
676 1253 AGO 1889
Correspondence relating to the encroachment of white settlers on the
Sioux
Reservation.
698 3551 AGO 1889 Papers
pertaining to the Flathead Indians in Montana and their strained
relations with local authorities and citizens. Documents also
relate to the
activities of the troops sent to investigate the problem.
See also file 5435
AGO 1889 on roll 716.
701 4310 AGO 1889 Reports of Capt. Quinton Williams,
Inspector of Indian Supplies, on the
destitute condition of Indians of
the Shoshone (Wind River) Reservation,
Wyoming Territory, and copies of
correspondence from the Department
of the Interior relating to this
matter, July-Sept. 1889. |
101 rolls |
|
M734 |
Office of
Indian Affairs records of the Arizona Superintendency, 1863-1873.
Roll
Description
1 Registers of letters received, 1868-1872; and letters received,
1863-1866
2 1867-1868
3 1869
4 1870
5 1871
6 1872
7 1873
6 Letter book of Charles D. Poston, 1863-1864; and letters sent,
1865-1873 |
8
rolls |
|
M834 |
Office of
Indian Affairs records of the
Utah Superintendency, 1853-1870.
Roll Description
1 Letters received, 1858-1870; letters sent, 1857, 1859-1864, and
1866-1867
2 Miscellaneous records, 1853 and 1855-1870 |
2
rolls |
|
M856 |
Central
Superintendency of Indian Affairs records, 1813-1878.
Roll
Description
1 Registers of correspondence with the Commissioner of Indian
Affairs, vols. 1 and 2, 1847-1866;
and registers of letters received
from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, vols. 1 and 2,
1866-1878
2 Records of the St. Louis Superintendency, 1813-1850
3 Contracts, records concerning accounts, letters received from the
Commissioner of Indian Affairs,
records relating to agencies,
and miscellaneous records, 1851-1857
4 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1858
5 Records relating to agencies, miscellaneous letters received,
contract bids, contracts, and records
concerning accounts, 1858
6 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1859
7 Records relating to agencies, miscellaneous letters received,
contracts, and records concerning
accounts, 1859
8 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1860
9 Records relating to agencies, miscellaneous letters received, and
letters received relating to
surveys of lands in Kansas, 1860
10 Contract bids, contracts, and records concerning accounts, 1860
11 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1861
12 Letters received relating to agencies, 1861
13 Miscellaneous letters received, letters received relating to
surveys of lands in Kansas contract
bids, and records concerning
accounts, 1861
14 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1862
15 Letters received relating to agencies, miscellaneous letters
received, and records concerning
accounts, 1862
16 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, letters
received relating to agencies,
miscellaneous letters received, and
records concerning accounts, 1863
17 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, letters
received relating to agencies,
miscellaneous letters received, and
records concerning accounts, 1864
18 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, letters
received relating to agencies,
miscellaneous letters received,
and correspondence relating to councils with the Upper
Arkansas Indians,
1865
19 Records concerning accounts
20 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1866
21 Letters received relating to agencies and from special agents,
miscellaneous letters received,
contract bids, and records concerning
accounts, 1866
22 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs and
letters received relating to
agencies, 1867
23 Miscellaneous letters received, statistics, contract bids,
and records concerning accounts, 1867
24 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1868
25 Letters received relating to agencies, miscellaneous letters
received, and records concerning
accounts, 1868
26 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1869
27 Letters received relating to agencies, miscellaneous letters
received, and records concerning
accounts, 1869
28 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1870
29 Letters received relating to the Cherokee, Creek, Delaware, Kansas
(Kaw), Kickapoo,
Kiowa, and Neosho (Indian Territory and Kansas)
Agencies, 1870
30 Letters received relating to the Osage River, Pawnee, Potawatomi,
Sac and Pox, Seminole,
Shawnee, Upper Arkansas, and Wichita Agencies,
and records relating to an investigation
of the Ottawa University, 1870
31 Miscellaneous letters received, records of the General Council of
the Indian Territory, letters
received from Army field commands,
contracts, and records concerning accounts, 1870
32 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs
(Jan.-June), 1871
33 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs 1871
July-Dec.
34 Letters received relating to the Cherokee, Choctaw and Chickasaw,
Creek, Kansas (Kaw),
Kickapoo, Kiowa, and Neosho (Indian Territory and
Kansas) Agencies, 1871
35 Letters received relating to the Osage River, Potawatomi, Quapaw,
Sac and Fox, Shawnee,
Upper Arkansas, and Wichita Agencies, 1871
36 Miscellaneous letters received, 1871 Jan.-June
37 Miscellaneous letters received, letters received relating to
the General Council of the Indian
Territory, and letters received from
Army field commands, 1871 July-Dec.
38 Contracts and records concerning accounts, 1871
39 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian,
Affairs, 1872 Jan.-June
40 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1872
July-Dec.
41 Letters received relating to the Cherokee, Choctaw and Chickasaw,
Creek, Kansas (Kaw),
Kickapoo, Kiowa, Neosho (Osage), and Potawatomi
Agencies, 1872
42 Letters received relating to the Quapaw, Sac and Fox, Seminole,
Shawnee, Upper Arkansas,
and Wichita Agencies, 1872
43 Miscellaneous letters received, 1872 Jan.-June
44 Miscellaneous letters received (July-Dec.), letters received from
Army field commands,
contract bids, and records concerning
accounts, 1872
45 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1873
Jan.-June
46 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1873
July-Dec.
47 Letters received relating to the Cherokee, Choctaw and Chickasaw,
Creek, Kansas (Kaw),
Kickapoo, and Kiowa Agencies, 1873
48 Letters received relating to the Neosho (Osage), Potawatomi, Quapaw,
and Sac and Fox
Agencies, 1873
49 Letters received relating to the Seminole, Upper Arkansas, and
Wichita Agencies, 1873
50 Miscellaneous letters received, 1873 Jan.-June
51 Miscellaneous letters received (July-Dec.), telegrams received and
sent, and letters received
from Army field commands, 1873
52 Contract bids, contracts, and records concerning accounts, 1873
53 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1874
Jan.-June
54 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1874
July-Dec.
55 Letters received relating to the Cherokee, Consolidated Five
Civilized Tribes, Kaw,
Kickapoo, Kiowa, and Mexican Kickapoo Agencies,
1874
56 Letters received relating to the Neosho (Osage), Potawatomi, and
Quapaw Agencies;
and records relating to Osage Indians killed by the
Kansas State Militia on Aug. 7, 1874
57 Letters received relating to the Sac and Fox, Seminole, Upper
Arkansas, and Wichita
Agencies, 1874
58 Miscellaneous letters received, 1874 Jan.-June
59 Miscellaneous letters received (July-Dec.), letters received from
Army field commands,
contracts, and records concerning accounts,
1874
60 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1875
61 Letters received relating to the "Agency of the Captive Indians of
the Indian Territory"
and to the Cheyenne and Arapahoe Agency, 1875
62 Letters received relating to the Agency for Indians in Kansas (Potawatomi
Agency) and
the Kiowa Agency, 1875
63 Letters received relating to the Osage Agency, 1875
64 Letters received relating to the Quapaw and the Sac and Fox
Agencies, 1875
65 Letters received relating to the Union and the Wichita Agencies,
1875
66 Miscellaneous letters received, 1875 Jan.-June
67 Miscellaneous letters received (July-Dec.), letters received from
Army field commands,
contract bids, and contracts, 1875
68 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1876
Jan.-June
69 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1876
July-Dec.
70 Letters received relating to the "Agency of the Captive Indians of
the Indian Territory"
and to the Cheyenne and Arapahoe Agency, 1876
71 Letters received relating to the Agency for Indians in Kansas (Potawatomi
Agency)
and the Kiowa Agency, 1876
72 Letters received relating to the Osage and Kaw Agencies, 1876
73 Letters received relating to the Pawnee and the Quapaw Agencies,
1876
74 Letters received relating to the Sac and Fox and the Union
Agencies, 1876
75 Letters received relating to the Wichita Agency, 1876
76 Miscellaneous letters received, letters received from Army field
commands, contract bids,
contracts, and records concerning
accounts, 1876
77 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1877
Jan.-June
78 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1877
July-Dec.
79 Letters received relating to the Cheyenne and Arapahoe Agency and
the Agency for
Indians in Kansas (Potawatomi Agency), 1877
80 Letters received relating to the Kiowa Agency, 1877
81 Letters received relating to the Osage and Kaw Agencies, 1877
82 Letters received relating to the Pawnee and the Ponca Agencies,
1877
83 Letters received relating to the Quapaw and the Sac and Fox
Agencies, 1877
84 Letters received relating to the Union and the Wichita Agencies,
1877
85 Miscellaneous letters received, 1877 Jan.-June
86 Miscellaneous letters received (July-Dec.), and letters received
from Army field
commands, 1877
87 Contract bids, contracts, and records concerning accounts, 1877
88 Vouchers and receipts, 1877
89 Supply reports, 1877; letters received and related records, 1878;
and miscellaneous
records relating to Indian lands in Kansas, ca.
1866-1875
90 Registers of letters and endorsements sent to the Commissioner of
Indian Affairs,
vols. 1-3, 1866 Feb. 1 - 1878 Jan. 12
91 Letters sent to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs (handwritten
copies), vols. 1 and 2,
1855 May 23 - 1863 Feb. 5
92 Letters sent to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs (handwritten
copies), vols. 3 and 4,
1863 Feb. 14 - 1871 Apr. 10
93 Letters sent to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs (handwritten
copies), vol. 5,
1871 Apr. 12 - 1874 Feb. 21
94 Letters sent to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs (handwritten
copies), vols. 6 and 7,
1874 Feb. 21 - 1876 Jan. 31
95 Letters sent to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs (press copies),
vols. 1 and 2,
1875 Sept. 25 - 1876 June 30
96 Letters sent to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs (press copies),
vols. 3 and 4,
1876 July 3 - 1877 Apr. 17
97 Letters sent to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs (press copies),
vols. 5 and 6,
1877 Apr. 17 - 1878 Jan. 15
98 Letters sent to agents (handwritten copies), vols. 1 and 2,
1858
Oct. 4 - 1871 Aug. 22
99 Letters sent to agents (press copies), vols. 1 and 2, 1873 June 28
- 1873 Dec. 25 and
1875 Sept. 4 - 1876 Jan. 31; and registers of letters
sent to agents, vols. 1-3,
1876 Feb. 1 - 1878 Jan. 8
100 Letters sent to agents (press copies), vols. 3 and 4, 1876 Feb. 1 -
1877 Mar. 3
101 Letters sent to agents (press copies), vols. 5-7, 1877 Mar. 3 -
1878 Jan. 8
102 Miscellaneous letters sent (handwritten copies), vols. 1 and
2, 1853 July 25 - 1871 July 11
103 Miscellaneous letters sent (press copies), vol. 1, 1876 Feb.
1 - 1877 Mar. 16
104 Miscellaneous letters sent (press copies), vols. 2 and
3, 1877 Mar. 16 - 1878 Jan. 12;
unbound drafts and copies of letters sent,
1866, 1868, and 1875; and Superintendent's
reports, 1874-1878
105 Statements of funds received, and other statements, 1868-1878;
tabular statements of
funds remitted, 1876-1877; statements of receipts
and disbursements, vols. 1 and 2,
1872-1878; and ledger for receipts
and disbursements, 1874-1878
106 Abstracts of disbursements, vols. 1-3, 1849-1876
107 Statements of account current, 1849-1867; statements of account
current and property
returns, vols. 1 and 2, 1853-1865; and property
returns, 1865-76
108 Letters sent by the disbursing agent at St. Louis, vols. 1-3, 1834
Aug. 1 - 1840 May 5 |
108
rolls |
|
M941 |
Office of
Indian Affairs miscellaneous
letters sent by the Pueblo Indian Agency, 1874-1891.
Roll
Dates
1 Dec. 1, 1874-June 18, 1877
2 June 18, 1877-Dec. 21, 1878
3 Dec. 24, 1878-June 3, 1880
4 June 3, 1880-Apr. 2, 1881
5 Apr. 30, 1881-June 29, 1882
6 July 3, 1882-Aug. 10, 1883
7 Aug. 10, 1883-Nov. 22, 1884
8 Nov. 22, 1884-Aug. 17, 1886
9 Aug. 17, 1886-May 10, 1890
10 May 12, 1890-Oct. 9, 1891 |
10
rolls |
|
M983 |
Reports and
correspondence relating to the Army investigations of the Battle at
Wounded Knee and to the Sioux Campaign of 1890-1891."The Battle
at Wounded Knee Creek, South Dakota, took place on December 29, 1890.
A
band of Sioux Indians in the custody of the 7th U.S. Cavalry was being
disarmed when a fight
broke out, resulting in numerous white and Indian
casualties. Many of the Sioux casualties were
women and children. Beyond these basic facts, the course of events
at Wounded Knee and the
ultimate responsibility for them have always been subjects for debate.
The investigative reports
and accompanying papers included in this microfilm publication record
much of the earliest phase
of that debate. They represent efforts of the Army to determine
the circumstances surrounding
the events at Wounded Knee and any possible misconduct on the part of
the 7th Cavalry."
Roll Contents
1 Name and Subject Index.
"Sioux Campaign, 1890-1891," pages 1-650
"Sioux Campaign, 1890-1891," pages 651-975
2 "Sioux Campaign, 1890-1891," pages 976-1793
Headquarters, Department of California, Report of Operations
Relative to the Sioux Indians in
1890 and 1891 in the Department of
Dakota, pages 1794-2006
Senate Executive Document No. 9, 51st Congress, 2d
session, pages 2007-2057,
Reports of Brig. Gen. James W. Forsyth to Secretary of War
Daniel S. Lamont |
2 rolls |
|
M1016 |
Office of
Indian Affairs records of the Dakota Superintendency, 1861-1870 and
1877-1878,
and the Wyoming Superintendency, 1870.
Roll
Description and dates
Dakota Superintendency:
1 Letters received and accounts, 1861-1863
2 Letters received and accounts, 1864-1865
3 Letters received and accounts, 1866
4 Letters received and accounts, 1867
5 Letters received, 1868
6 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs and from
the Cheyenne River,
Crow Creek (Upper Missouri), Fort Berthold, and
Grand River Agents, 1869
7 Letters received from the Ponca, Whetstone, and Yankton Agents;
miscellaneous letters
received; monthly statements of letters received;
tabular statements of funds remitted
to the Superintendent, 1869
8 Letters received from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs and from
the Cheyenne River,
Crow Creek (Upper Missouri), Fort Berthold, and
Grand River Agents, 1870
9 Letters received from the Ponca, Whetstone, and Yankton
Agents; miscellaneous letters
received; tabular statements of funds
remitted to the Superintendent, 1869
10 Miscellaneous records relating to Indian matters in Dakota, 1873
and 1876; letters
received from the Commissioner of Indian
Affairs,1877-1878; and accounts, 1877-1878
11 Unbound copies of letters sent, 1861-1866
12 Letters sent, 1865-1870
13 Letters sent, 1877-1878
Wyoming Superintendency:
Letters sent and endorsements, 1870 |
13
rolls |
|
M1070 |
Reports of
inspection of the field jurisdictions of the Office of Indian Affairs,
1873-1900. "Inspectors for the
Indian Service were first appointed July 1, 1873, under the provision of
an act of
February 14, 1873 (17 Stat. 463). Until March 25, 1880,
inspectors were responsible to the
Commissioner of Indian Affairs. After
that date, inspectors came under the supervision of the Secretary
of the
Interior. This procedural change was necessary because the 1873 act
required inspectors to
report to the President. Reporting to the
Secretary of the Interior was, in effect, the same as reporting
to the
President.
"The 1873 act also provided for the
appointment of five Indian inspectors, one for each of five
geographical
inspection divisions. The inspectors examined matters pertaining to the
conditions
of the Indians. They also examined the extent to which the
Indians adopted white civilization,
reservation boundaries, the use of
reservation lands, the state of industry (usually the percentage
of
farming and cattle grazing by government employees and Indians), the
character and abilities
of the agent and other employees, school
conditions, the status of agency fiscal records, and
enforcement or
violation of the law.
"During the 1890s, many inspection
reports were submitted on printed forms showing the names
and titles of
employees at the agency; their residence, age, sex, and rate of
compensation; the
nature and extent of services performed; and comments
on character, education, personal habits,
and qualifications or fitness
for the position. Other topics covered in the written reports include
the
health of the Indians; the receipt of rations; the removal and
treatment of Indians by agents and
other officials; traders' dealings
with Indians; Indian courts; building repairs; conditions of
dormitories,
kitchens, and dining rooms; water supply; fire protection;
and sanitation and drainage.
"Special reports, responding to
directives from the Secretary of the Interior were not uncommon.
These
reports concerned a wide variety of subjects but were generally related
to charges or claims
made by individuals against agents or employees, or
changes in personnel at agencies. Inspectors
could suspend
superintendents, agents, or other employees and designate a temporary
replacement
subject to approval by the President. Inspectors also were
authorized to examine all agency books,
papers, and vouchers and to
administer oaths for taking testimony from agency employees. Often
the
inspector wrote a separate report for an agency and for each of its day
schools and mailed them
as one unit to the Secretary. When the reports
were received, clerks at the Interior Department
registered each one as
a separate item.
"The Office of Indian Affairs maintained
the reports for 1873-1880 in a separate collection that is now
part of
Record Group 75, the Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Reports
from 1881-1900,
however, were generally filed with letters received in
the Indian division and are part of
Record Group
48, Records of the
Office of the Secretary of the Interior. To make this publication easier
to use, these
two groups of reports have been consolidated. They are
arranged alphabetically by Indian agency,
superintendency, or school and
thereunder chronologically by the date of the document.
"The descriptive pamphlet includes a list
of inspectors and their periods of service and a list of inspection
reports that gives the name of the field office in alphabetical order,
the date and number of the report,
and the name of the inspector."
Click here
for an alphabetical list of the names of the inspectors.
Roll Contents
1 Albuquerque School, Arizona Superintendency
2 Arizona Superintendency, Blackfeet Agency
3 Blackfeet Agency, California Superintendency, Carlisle School, Carson School, Central
Superintendency, Cherokee Agency, Cheyenne Agency, Cheyenne and
Arapahoe Agency
4 Cheyenne and Arapahoe Agency
5 Cheyenne River Agency
6 Chilocco School, Chippewa Agency, Colorado River Agency
7 Colorado Superintendency, Colville Agency
8 Crow Agency
9 Crow Agency, Crow Creek Agency
10 Dakota Superintendency, Devils Lake Agency
11 East Division, Eastern Cherokee Agency, Flandreau School, Flathead Agency
12 Forest Grove School, Fort Apache Agency, Fort Belknap Agency
13 Fort Berthold Agency, Fort Hall Agency
14 Fort Hall Agency, Fort Lapwai School, Fort Lewis School,
14 Fort Mohave (Mojave) School, Fort Peck Agency
15 Fort Peck Agency
16 Fort Shaw School, Fort Stevenson School, Fort Totten School, Fort Yuma School, Genoa School
17 Genoa School, Grand Junction School, Grand River Agency, Grand Ronde Agency
18 Grand Ronde Agency, Great Nemaha Agency, Green Bay Agency
19 Green Bay Agency, Greenville School, Hampton Institute, Haskell Institute, Hoopa Valley School
20 Hope School, Hualapai School, Idaho Superintendency, Kickapoo School, Kiowa Agency,
Kiowa, Comanche, and Wichita Agency
21 Kiowa, Comanche, and Wichita Agency, Klamath Agency
22 Klamath Agency, La Pointe Agency
23 La Pointe Agency
24 La Pointe Agency, Leech Lake Agency, Lemhi Agency Lincoln Institution, Lower Brule Agency,
Mackinac Agency, Mdewakanton Sioux
25 Mescalero and Jicarilla Agency
26 Miscellaneous, Mission Agency, Montana Superintendency
27 Moqui Agency, Morris School, Mount Pleasant School, Navajo Agency
28 Navajo Agency, Neah Bay Agency
29 Nebraska Agencies, Nevada Superintendency, New Mexico Superintendency
30 New Mexico Superintendency, New York Agency, Nez Perce Agency
31 Nez Perce Agency, Nisqualli (Nisqually), Skokomish, and Puyallup Agency, North District,
Omaha Agency, Omaha and Winnebago Agency
32 Omaha and Winnebago Agency
33 Oneida School, Oregon Superintendency, Osage Agency
34 Osage Agency, Oto (Otoe) Agency, Ouray Agency
35 Pacific District, Pawnee Agency, Perris School, Phoenix School, Pierre School, Pima,
Maricopa, and Papago Agency
36 Pima, Maricopa, and Papago Agency, Pine Ridge Agency
37 Pine Ridge Agency, Pipestone School, Ponca Agency
38 Ponca, Pawnee, and Oto (Otoe) Agency
39 Ponca, Pawnee, and Oto (Otoe) Agency
40 Potawatomi Agency, Potawatomi and Great Nemaha Agency
41 Pueblo and Jicarilla Agency, Quapaw Agency
42 Quapaw Agency, Quinaielt Agency, Rapid City School, Red Cloud Agency
43 Rosebud Agency, Round Valley Agency
44 Round Valley Agency, Rushville Station, Sac and Fox Agency, Indian Territory
45 Sac and Fox Agency, Indian Territory, Sac and Fox Agency, Iowa, San Carlos Agency
46 San Carlos Agency, Santa Fe School
47 Santee Agency, Santee and Flandreau Agency
48 Seger Colony School, Seminole Agency, Seneca School, Shoshoni (Shoshone) Agency
49 Shoshoni (Shoshone) Agency, Siletz Agency, Sisseton Agency
50 Sisseton Agency
51 South District, Southern Ute Agency, Spotted Tail Agency
52 Standing Rock Agency
53 Standing Rock Agency, Tomah School, Tongue River Agency, Tonkawa Special Agency,
Tulalip Agency, Tule River Agency
54 Uintah Agency, Uintah and Ouray Agency, Umatilla Agency
55 Umatilla Agency, Union Agency, Upper Missouri Agency, Utah Superintendency,
Warm Springs Agency
56 Washington Superintendency, Western Shoshoni (Shoshone) Agency
57 Whetstone Agency, White Earth Agency
58 White Earth Agency, Wichita Agency, Winnebago Agency, Wittenberg School,
Wyoming Superintendency, Yakima Agency
59 Yakima Agency, Yankton Agency
60 Yankton Agency
|
60
rolls |
|
M1072 |
New Mexico and the 9th
Military Department letters sent by the 9th Military Department,
the
Department of New Mexico, and the District of New Mexico, 1849-1890.
Roll Contents and dates
1 Letters sent, Oct. 1849-Aug. 1856; and name index, July
1851-May 1856
2 Letters sent, Aug. 1856-Sept. 1862
3 Letters sent, Aug. 1862-Oct. 1866
4 Letters sent, Nov. 1866-Oct. 1872; and subject index, Sept.
1870-Oct. 1872
5 Name and subject indexes, 1872-1876; and letters sent, Oct.
1872-Dec. 1877
6 Name and subject indexes, 1878-1881; and letters sent, Jan.
1878-Aug. 1881
7 Name and subject indexes, 1881-1883; and
letters sent, Aug. 1881-Sept. 1890
|
7 rolls |
|
M1088 |
New Mexico and the 9th
Military Department letters received by Headquarters,
District of New
Mexico,
September 1865-August 1890.Roll Dates
1 Sept.-Dec. 1865
2 1866
3 1866
4 1866
5 1867
6 1867
7 1867
8 1867
9 1867
10 1868
11 1869-1870
12 1871
13 1871
14 1871
15 1872
16 1872
17 1873
18 1873
19 1873
20 1873
21 1874
22 1874
23 1874
24 1875
25 1875
26 1875
27 1876
28 1876
29 1877
30 1877
31 1877
32 Jan.-Apr. 1878
33 May-June 1878
34 July-Aug. 1878
35 Sept.-Dec. 1878
36 Jan.-Mar. 1879
37 Apr.-June 1879
38 July-Sept. 1879
39 Oct.-Dec. 1879
40 Jan.-June 1880
41 July-Dec. 1880
42 Jan.-Apr. 1881
43 May-Oct. 1881
44 Nov.-Dec. 1881
45 Jan.-Feb. 1882
46 Mar.-Apr. 1882
47 May-Sept. 1882
48 Oct.-Dec. 1882
49 Jan.-Mar. 1883
50 Apr.-June 1883
51 July-Sept. 1883
52 Oct.-Dec. 1883
53 Jan.-Apr. 1884
54 May-July 1884
55 Aug.-Dec. 1884
56 Jan.-June 1885
57 July-Aug. 1885
58 Sept.-Oct. 1885
59 Nov.-Dec. 1885
60 Jan.-Mar. 1886
61 Apr.-Dec. 1886
62 Jan.-June 1887
63 July-Dec. 1887
64 Jan.-Dec. 1888
65 Jan.-Dec. 1889 and Jan.-Aug. 1890 |
65 rolls |
|
M1097 |
New Mexico and
the 9th Military Department / District of New Mexico registers of
letters received, 1865‑1890. |
11 rolls |
|
M1102 |
New Mexico and
the 9th Military Department register of letters received, and
letters
received by Headquarters, 9th Military Department, 1848-1853.
Roll Description
1 Register, 1851-1853
Letters
received, 1848-1849
2 Letters received,
1850
3 Letters received,
Jan.-July, 1851
4 Letters received,
Aug.-Dec. 1851
Letters received, 1852, A-C
5 Letters received,
1852, D-S
6 Letters received, 1852, T-W
Letters received, 1853,
A-H
7 Letters received,
1853, J-W |
7 rolls |
|
M1120 |
New Mexico and
the 9th Military Department registers of letters received, and
letters
received, Department of New Mexico, 1854-1865.Roll
Description Dates
1 Register, vol. 1 1854-1857
Register, vol. 2 1858-1861
Register, vol. 3 Jan.-Nov. 1862
2 Register, vol. 4 Nov. 1862-Apr. 1864
Register, vol. 5 Apr.-Dec. 1864
Register, vol. 6 Jan.-Sept. 1665
3 Letters received 1854
4 Letters received 1855
5 Letters received 1856
6 Letters received 1857
7 Letters received, A-M 1858
8 Letters received, N-Z 1858
9 Letters received, A-K 1859
10 Letters received, L-Z 1859
11 Letters received, A-M 1860
12 Letters received, N-Z 1860
13 Letters received, A-L 1861
14 Letters received, M-Z 1861
15 Letters received, A-D 1862
16 Letters received, E-L 1862
17 Letters received, M-Z 1862
18 Letters received, A-E 1863
19 Letters received, F-P 1863
20 Letters received, Q-V 1883
21 Letters received, W-Z 1863
22 Letters received, A-B 1864
23 Letters received, C-F 1864
24 Letters received, G-Q 1884
25 Letters received, R-Z 1864
26 Letters received, A-F 1865
27 Letters received, G-Z 1865
28 Unregistered letters received, 1854-1861
29 Unregistered letters received, 1862-1863
30 Unregistered letters received, 1864-1865 |
30 rolls |
|
M1145 |
Bureau of Reclamation
irrigation projects photographs (U.S. federal
Record Group 115).
Bureau of Rec. records were organized and microfilmed in two records
series. (The first series is project histories and reports of
Reclamation Bureau projects, 1905-1925, which is NARA publication
M96.) This second series is photographs of
irrigation projects of the Bureau of Reclamation, 1902-1938, on roll #s
1-21, which includes roll #s 18A, 20A and 21A. |
24 rolls |
|
M1304 |
Pueblo Indian Agency
records (U.S. federal
Record Group 75), 1874-1900
Includes miscellaneous letters sent by the Pueblo Indian Agency,
1874-1891 (M941, 10 rolls) and
records created by Bureau of Indian
Affairs field agencies having jurisdiction over the Pueblo records,
1874-1900 (M1304, 32 rolls, with printed guide in the Center's
collection M 129). |
42 rolls |
I
080 |