The Indian tribes of the upper Mississippi Valley and region of the Great Lakes as described by Nicolas Perrot, French commandant in the Northwest; Bacquevile de la Potherie, French royal commissioner to Canada; Morrell Marston, American Army officer; and Thomas Forsyth, United States agent at Fort Armstrong /
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Language: | English French |
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Cleveland, Ohio :
The Arthur H. Clark Company,
1911.
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Table of Contents:
- v. 1. Memoir on the manners, customs, and religion of the savages of North America. By Nicolas Perrot. Ed. and pub. (in French) for the first time (Leipzig and Paris, 1864) by the Reverend Jules Tailhan
- History of the savage peoples who are allies of New France, by Claude Charles Le Roy, Bacqueville de la Potherie (from his Histoire de l'Amérique septentrionale (Paris, 1753) tome II and IV)
- v. 2. History of the savage peoples who are allies of New France, by Claude Charles Le Roy, Bacqueville de la Potherie <from his Histoire de l'Ameérique septentrionale (Paris, 1753), tome II and IV> Continued and completed from vol. I;
- Memoirs relating to the Sauk and Foxes, letter to Reverend Dr. Jedidiah Morse, by Major Morrell Marston, U.S,A., commanding at Forℓ Armstrong, Ill., November, 1820. From original manuscript in the library of the Wisconsin Historical Society;
- "Account of the manners and customs of the Sauk and Fox nations of Indian traditions."
- A report on this subject, sent to General William Clarks, superintendent of Indian affairs, by Thomas Forsyth, Indian agent for the U.S. Government, St. Louis, January 15, 1827. From the original and hitherto unpublished manuscript in the library of the Wisconsin Historical Society;
- Appendices: A. Biographical sketch of Nicolas Perrot, condensed from the notes of Father Tailhan