In the midst of the Northwest Indian War, the former surveyor John Adlum\u27s operations as a land agent and his dealings with Cornplanter and other Allegany Senecas helped place a large portion of northwestern Pennsylvania in the hands of wealthy speculators. This article describes the complexity of the postrevolutionary clashes over land between governments, settlers, speculators, and Native Americans. It also demonstrates the critical role of surveyors in land speculation and settlement
On November 12, 1756, during a treaty council in Easton, Pennsylvania, Governor William Denny asked ...
Relations between European Americans (via the Federal government) and Native American tribes have be...
On November 19 th , 1980 the Cayuga Nation of New York filed suit against thousands of property own...
This paper examines the influence of the Northwest Indian War on the development of the early United...
The expansion of the United States at the expense of Native Americans during the nineteenth century ...
By the end of the seventeenth century, Anglo-Americans on both sides of the Atlantic accepted the im...
As white Americans struggled to organize the United States after gaining independence from Great Bri...
If one were to draw a map of Pennsylvania in 1776, its boundaries would look far different from thos...
textThis study explores the varied Citizen Potawatomi responses to federal assimilation and land pol...
Review of: "The Relentless Business of Treaties: How Indigenous Land Became U.S. Property," by Marti...
With the victory of the Americans over the British in the Revolutionary War came a large amount of t...
Ambiguous Alliances examines the revolutionary era in the Ohio Valley from a Native American perspe...
Michael John Witgen concludes that the geographical expansion of the United States, especially in t...
“Louisiana Purchases” challenges the common reduction of the US-Indian treaty system to a cycle of c...
This paper offers a critical reflection on the appropriateness of ‘settler colonialism’ as an analyt...
On November 12, 1756, during a treaty council in Easton, Pennsylvania, Governor William Denny asked ...
Relations between European Americans (via the Federal government) and Native American tribes have be...
On November 19 th , 1980 the Cayuga Nation of New York filed suit against thousands of property own...
This paper examines the influence of the Northwest Indian War on the development of the early United...
The expansion of the United States at the expense of Native Americans during the nineteenth century ...
By the end of the seventeenth century, Anglo-Americans on both sides of the Atlantic accepted the im...
As white Americans struggled to organize the United States after gaining independence from Great Bri...
If one were to draw a map of Pennsylvania in 1776, its boundaries would look far different from thos...
textThis study explores the varied Citizen Potawatomi responses to federal assimilation and land pol...
Review of: "The Relentless Business of Treaties: How Indigenous Land Became U.S. Property," by Marti...
With the victory of the Americans over the British in the Revolutionary War came a large amount of t...
Ambiguous Alliances examines the revolutionary era in the Ohio Valley from a Native American perspe...
Michael John Witgen concludes that the geographical expansion of the United States, especially in t...
“Louisiana Purchases” challenges the common reduction of the US-Indian treaty system to a cycle of c...
This paper offers a critical reflection on the appropriateness of ‘settler colonialism’ as an analyt...
On November 12, 1756, during a treaty council in Easton, Pennsylvania, Governor William Denny asked ...
Relations between European Americans (via the Federal government) and Native American tribes have be...
On November 19 th , 1980 the Cayuga Nation of New York filed suit against thousands of property own...