The Narrative of the Cherokee Nation. Charles C. Royce
rel="nofollow" href="#u5bf414d2-abb4-56be-9eb8-4dbc33d1e434">Treaty Concluded January 7, 1806
Treaty Concluded September 11, 1807
Controversy Concerning Boundaries
Treaty Concluded March 22, 1816
Treaty Concluded March 22, 1816172
Colonel Earle's Negotiations for the Purchase of Iron-Ore Tract
Tennessee Fails to Conclude a Treaty with the Cherokees
Removal of Cherokees to the West of the Mississippi Proposed
Efforts of South Carolina to Extinguish Cherokee Title
Boundary Between Cherokees, Creeks, Choctaws, and Chickasaws
Roads Through the Cherokee Country
Treaty Concluded September 14, 1816
Further Purchase of Cherokee Lands
Policy of Removing Indian Tribes to the West of the Mississippi River
Further Cession of Territory by the Cherokees
Treaty Concluded February 27, 1819
Cherokees West of the Mississippi—Their Wants and Condition
Disputes Among Cherokees Concerning Emigration
Public Sentiment in Tennessee and Georgia Concerning Cherokee Removal
Treaty Concluded for Further Cession of Land
Return J. Meigs and the Cherokees
Tennessee Denies the Validity of Cherokee Reservations
United States Agree to Extinguish Indian Title in Georgia
Cherokee Progress in Civilization
Failure of Negotiations for Further Cession of Lands
The Cherokee Nation Adopts a Constitution
Cherokee Affairs West of the Mississippi
Treaty Concluded February 14, 1833
Conflicting Land Claims of Creeks and Cherokees West of the Mississippi
Purchase of Osage Half-breed Reserves
President Jackson Refuses to Approve the Treaty of 1834
Treaty Concluded December 29, 1835
Supplementary Articles to Foregoing Treaty, Concluded March 1, 1836