Kanzas and Nebraska: The History, Geographical and Physical Characteristics, and Political Position of These Terretories : an Account of the Emigrant Aid Companies, and Directions to EmigrantsPhillips, Sampson, 1854 - 256 Seiten |
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Seite 11
... hundred miles back . On the map , to the west- ward , are the names of several tribes . Of these the Pana and Paniassa are probably our Pawnees ; the Ouemessourit are the Missouri ; the Ouchage , the Osages ; the Tontanta , our Tetons ...
... hundred miles back . On the map , to the west- ward , are the names of several tribes . Of these the Pana and Paniassa are probably our Pawnees ; the Ouemessourit are the Missouri ; the Ouchage , the Osages ; the Tontanta , our Tetons ...
Seite 12
... hundred leagues , although it receives some large rivers , the water of which is very beautiful , and which are almost as large as the Missis- sippi . " * In 1687 , La Salle attempted to cross , with a party of sixteen men , from his ...
... hundred leagues , although it receives some large rivers , the water of which is very beautiful , and which are almost as large as the Missis- sippi . " * In 1687 , La Salle attempted to cross , with a party of sixteen men , from his ...
Seite 13
... hundred cabins ; the Paneassa , the Pana , the Paneloga , and the Matotantes , each of which , separately , is not inferior to the Panimaha . They include also the Osages , who have seventeen villages on a river of their name , which ...
... hundred cabins ; the Paneassa , the Pana , the Paneloga , and the Matotantes , each of which , separately , is not inferior to the Panimaha . They include also the Osages , who have seventeen villages on a river of their name , which ...
Seite 14
... hundred miles west of its mouth , and above the mouth of the Osage river , where , he says , he burned an Indian village . Not long after , the French establishment at St. Louis was founded . At home the valley of the Mississippi be ...
... hundred miles west of its mouth , and above the mouth of the Osage river , where , he says , he burned an Indian village . Not long after , the French establishment at St. Louis was founded . At home the valley of the Mississippi be ...
Seite 15
... hundred and thirty cabins , and two hundred and fifty warriors each , who owned nearly three hundred horses . They were not civilized , he says , but readily accessible on receiving a few presents . Fifteen days more westward marching ...
... hundred and thirty cabins , and two hundred and fifty warriors each , who owned nearly three hundred horses . They were not civilized , he says , but readily accessible on receiving a few presents . Fifteen days more westward marching ...
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appointed Arkansas river beautiful Bent's Fort bill bluffs boundary Bridger's Pass buffalo Capt Congress cotton-wood court Creek crossed Dahcotah described district dollars east eastern Eli Thayer Emigrant Aid Company encamped fertile Fort Kearney Fort Laramie Fort Leavenworth Fort Riley Fremont further enacted governor grass groves hills House hundred and fifty hundred miles Indian tribes Iowa Kanzas and Nebraska Kanzas river Kearney land Laramie latitude Leavenworth legislative assembly limestone Mandans Mississippi Missouri Compromise Missouri river mouth Nebraska and Kanzas Nebraska river northern officers Osage Osage river Pacific Pawnees pines plains Platte prairie railroad region ridge road Rocky Mountains route sandy Santa Fé Senate settlement settlers Shawnees side slavery slaves soil souri southern stream summit territory of Kanzas territory of Nebraska thence thousand three hundred timber tion treaties tributaries United valley village vote western westward wood Wyandots