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
Many freedpeople returning from Arkansas settled in the Sequoyah District.
12025-02-19T03:09:19+00:00Hai In Jo7d25b78dfd7c5f6efafb058c26293c06da0b051a1731plain2025-02-19T03:09:19+00:00Hai In Jo7d25b78dfd7c5f6efafb058c26293c06da0b051a
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1media/Map 46_Goins_Goble HISTORICAL ATLAS OF OK_thumb.jpg2025-02-17T20:54:24+00:00Cadence Cordelld5e2e46b6dbcfec25f34b246799cbf6dff08d220Cherokee Nation, 18893Map of Cherokee Nation in 1889Map of Cherokee Nation's district boundaries and major settlements to assist the readers locating places mentioned in the application material.media/Map 46_Goins_Goble HISTORICAL ATLAS OF OK.jpgplain2025-02-27T16:36:53+00:00Charles R. Goins and Danney Goble. Historical Atlas of Oklahoma, 4th Ed. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2006. Map 46 "Cherokee Nation, 1889".Copyright 2006 University of Oklahoma Press. Reprinted by permission of the publisher. All rights reserved.Cadence Cordelld5e2e46b6dbcfec25f34b246799cbf6dff08d220