The Treaty of Mississinewas or the Treaty of Mississinewa also called Treaty of the Wabash is an 1826 treaty between the United States and the Miami and Potawatomi Tribes regarding purchase of Indian lands in Indiana and Michigan. The signing was held at the mouth of the Mississinewa River on the Wabash, hence the name.
Contents
1Terms
2Problems
3See also
4References
Terms
After negotiations with the Potawatomi to build the Michigan Road through Indiana by James B. Ray and Lewis Cass on behalf of President John Quincy Adams, Cass negotiated a pair of treaties to purchase lands in Indiana and Michigan, collectively called the Treaty of Mississinewa. By the treaty, the Miami leadership agreed to cede to the United States the bulk of Miami reservation lands held in Indiana by previous treaties. In compensation, the families of Chief Richardville and certain other Miami notables were given estates in Indiana, with houses like the Richardville House and livestock furnished at government expense. The federal government agreed to buy out some of the estates granted by the previous Treaty of St. Mary's. Small reservations were to be carved out along the Eel and Maumee rivers.
The tribe was also to be compensated with $31,040.53, $10,000 of this in silver, the first year; and $26,259.47 in goods the next. Promises were made of a $15,000 annuity thereafter, in addition to monies provided for by other treaties. $2,000 per annum was to be set aside for the "…poor infirm persons of the Miami tribe, and for the education of the youth of the said tribe…" as long as the Congress should "…think proper…" Hunting rights would continue to be enjoyed "…so long as the same shall be the property of the United States."
Problems
Adherence to the treaty terms was difficult for both sides. White treaty makers did not necessarily understand the complexities and fluidity of Indian tribal societies, and often overestimated the nature of the authority vested in a particular chief by the band, the permanence of tribal membership and intertribal alliances, and the permanence of Indian settlements, which often shifted according to the season. Younger males were more likely than their elders to prefer the use of force against white settlers to negotiations. Mixed-race native and Canadien tribal members were more likely to support the treaty and its implementation, as they benefited more from land grants and subsidies than other tribespeople. Disagreements about the applicability of treaty terms made it more difficult to create the Michigan Road on lands that were supposed to have been ceded by the treaty.[1]
See also
Indian removals in Indiana
Wikisource has original text related to this article:
Treaty of Mississinewas
v
t
e
History of Indiana
Early history
Clovis
Adena
Hopewell
Mississippian
Beaver Wars
European contact
La Salle Expeditions
French Rule
1700–1799
Vincennes
Fort Miamis
Ouiatenon
French and Indian War
British Rule
Pontiac's War
American Revolution
George Rogers Clark
Illinois campaign
Clark's Grant
Northwest Territory
Northwest Indian War
Petit Fort
1800–1816
Indiana Territory
Buffalo Trace
Treaty of Vincennes
Johnny Appleseed
Treaty of Grouseland
Indiana Rangers
Tecumseh's War
Battle of Tippecanoe
War of 1812
Abolitionist movement
Harmony
1st Indiana Canal Company
Constitutional Convention
1817–1899
Statehood
Polly v. Lasselle
Treaty of St. Mary's
Indian Removals
Fall Creek massacre
Bank of Indiana
2nd Indiana Canal Company
Whitewater Canal
Wabash and Erie Canal
Public Works and Bankruptcy
Underground Railroad
Mexican-American War
New Constitution
Civil War
Golden Age
Eli Lilly & Company
Reno Gang
Gas boom
Black Day of the General Assembly
Indiana Pi Bill
Golden Age of Literature
1900–1999
White Caps
Elwood Haynes
Indianapolis Motor Speedway
World War I
Indianapolis strike and riots
Samuel Woodfill
Indiana Klan
Great Depression
John Dillinger
World War II
Freeman Field Mutiny
Shipp & Smith lynchings
Flood of 1937
Supreme Court Reorganization
Since 2000
Flood of 2008
By topic
Auto Racing
Battles
Disasters
Economy
Elections
General Assembly
Governors
Historic Sites
People
Historical Political Strength
Native Americans
Slavery
By city and locale
Evansville
Fort Wayne
Gary
Hartford City
Indianapolis
Lafayette
Lake Wawasee
South Bend
Terre Haute
See also: History of the United States, History of the Midwestern United States and Portal:Indiana WikiProject Indiana's History Department
References
'^Juanita Hunter, Indiana Magazine of History, Volume 83, Issue 3, "The Indians and the Michigan Road", pp 244-266; after Rollo B. Oglesbee and Albert Hale, History of Michigan City, Indiana: La Porte, Ind.,1908), 42.[1]
Clash Royale CLAN TAG #URR8PPP up vote 1 down vote favorite I'm using WordPress 4.9.8, CiviCRM to 5.5.1, I usually send email to contact by Search> Find contacts View contact details Action> Send email Send email ok, Contact received mail ok like picture But status only Email sent though contact read email or not. So, can CiviCRM can change status to Email read when contact read email? wordpress email share | improve this question asked Sep 26 at 0:12 ToanLuong 49 9 add a comment  | up vote 1 down vote favorite I'm using WordPress 4.9.8, CiviCRM to 5.5.1, I usually send email to contact by Search> Find contacts View contact details Action> Send email Send email ok, Contact received mail ok like picture But status only Email sent though contact read email or not. So, can CiviCRM can change status to Email read when contact read email? wordpress email share | improve this questi...
Clash Royale CLAN TAG #URR8PPP up vote 2 down vote favorite I am currently learning reverse engineering and am studying the flags register. I had in my mind that rflags was just another name for one of the 16 general purpose registers, for example rax or rbx . But it looks like rflags is actually an additional register. So that makes 17 registers in total... how many more could there be? I have spent at least an hour on this and found numerous different answers. The best answer so far is this, which says that there are 40 registers in total. 16 General Purpose Registers 2 Status Registers 6 Code Segment Registers 16 SSE Registers 8 FPU/MMX Registers But if I add that up, I get 48. Could anybody provide an official answer on how many registers an x86_64 CPU has (e.g. an Intel i7). Additionally, I have seen references to 'hardware' and 'architectural' registers. What are those registers and how many are there? register x86-64 share | improve this...
Clash Royale CLAN TAG #URR8PPP 1 How can I extract a single band from multi-band raster in QGIS? I have an remote sensed image which has 6 bands (including NDVI band), I want to display each band separately, but have no idea how to do. I have seen some questions similar here but none worked for me. The original image (has 6 bands) is: I want to display the band 6 which should be like this: But I tried gdal_translate, and couldn't get the correct result. What I have got is: qgis raster multi-band share | improve this question edited Mar 5 at 0:53 Summer asked Mar 4 at 6:42 Summer Summer 23 6 Is this any help gis.stackexchange.com/questions/220658/… ? if not gis.stackexchange.com/questions/62133/… might help. – Michael Stimson Mar 4 at 6:46 Thanks for answering but when I used gdal_translate, qgis showed that 'Error 4: Kayena.tif: No such file or directory". Would you know how to fi...