Enrolling as Cherokee Freedmen: Social Networks of Rejected ApplicantsMain MenuAn Introduction to the Social Networks of Cherokee Freedmen ApplicantsCherokee Freedmen History: From Slavery to FreedomSocial Networks of Cherokee Freedmen ApplicantsMigrations of Blacks Among the CherokeesMaking of Cherokee RollsDawes Enrollment CardThe Making of This BookAbout This BookHai In Jo7d25b78dfd7c5f6efafb058c26293c06da0b051aPublished by Publishing Without Walls
From Fort Smith to Fort Gibson would be around 60 miles.
12024-10-02T19:56:00+00:00Hai In Jo7d25b78dfd7c5f6efafb058c26293c06da0b051a1731plain2024-10-02T19:56:00+00:00Hai In Jo7d25b78dfd7c5f6efafb058c26293c06da0b051a
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1media/Texas Road in Indian Territory _thumb.jpg2024-09-12T23:31:09+00:00Hai In Jo7d25b78dfd7c5f6efafb058c26293c06da0b051aTexas Road in Indian Territory7Map of Cherokee Nation and its surrounding nations and statesMap of Cherokee Nation surrounded by Creek and Choctaw Nation, Kansas, Missouri, and Arkansas, showing the places and distances that Black people have migrated to and forth.media/Texas Road in Indian Territory .jpgplain2025-02-16T01:50:37+00:00The Gateway to Oklahoma HistoryHoney Springs BattlefieldHai In Jo7d25b78dfd7c5f6efafb058c26293c06da0b051a