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Native American Indian Genealogy W/ Dawes Rolls

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  • Subject: Indian Rolls and Information

    Description

    NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN INFORMATION
    19 of the most sought after Native American Indian
    Rolls and Databases With Over 500,000 Names
    1832 CREEK CENSUS
    *
    1924 BAKER ROLL
    **
    1954 PROPOSED UTE ROLLS
    **
    1971 CREEK CENSUS
    *
    CAMPBELLS ABSTRACT CREEK
    *
    CAMPBELLS ABSTRACT CREEK FREEDMEN
    *
    CHAPMAN ROLL
    **
    COOPER ROLL
    **
    DAWES ENROLLMENT APPLICATIONS
    **
    DAWES ROLLS INDEX
    *
    DAWES FINAL ROLL
    (w/amendment 1914)  *
    GUION-MILLER ROLL
    *
    KERN-CLIFTON ROLL
    *
    MCKENNON ROLL
    **
    OLD SETTLERS ROLL
    **
    RESERVATION ROLL APPLICANT INDEX
    **
    SILER ROLL
    **
    TRAIL OF TEARS ROLLS
    **
    WALLACE ROLL
    *
    **  TEXT SEARCHABLE                             *  DIGITAL IMAGE
    ~ Click on the any of the Above Rolls to see a sample image of each ~
    All files are in .pdf Format (FoxIt PDF Reader included)
    This CD has an easy to use interface, just CLICK and VIEW
    Click Here For a CD Menu Image
    ROLL INFORMATION
    1832 Creek Census
    ~  By a treaty of March 24, 1832, the Creek Indians ceded to the United States all of their land east of the Mississippi River. Heads of families were entitled to tracts of land, which, if possible, were to include their improvements. In 1833 Benjamin S. Parsons and Thomas J. Abbott prepared a census of Creek Indian heads of families, which gave their names and the number of males, females, and slaves in each family. The entries were arranged by town and numbered; these numbers were used for identification in later records.
    1924 Baker Roll
    ~ 1924
    History  Cherokee Indians
    This was supposed to be the final roll of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians.  The land was to be allotted and all were to become regular citizens of the United States.  Fortunately the Eastern Band of Cherokee avoided the termination procedures, unlike their brothers of the western nation.  The Baker Roll "Revised" is the current membership roll of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians of North Carolina.
    1954 Proposed UTE Rolls
    ~ Last Name, First Name, Roll #, Sex, Age and Date Of Birth  ~  Full Blood Roll and the Mixed Blood Roll of the Ute Tribe of Uintah and Ouray Reservation in Utah. These are the PROPOSED rolls, and do not signify that the individuals listed upon it actually received any distribution under Title 25, Chapter 14, Subchapter 28, U.S. Code.
    1971 Creek Census
    ~ 1971 Census of the western Creek's who were on roll with the Muscogee (Creek) Nation as of 1971 and applied to receive Per Capita money as a settlement with the government. The Census is not all-inclusive of everyone on roll, it only lists those who applied for the entitlement. The number of applicant's exceeds 50,000.
    Campbell's Abstract of Creek and Creek Freedmen
    ~ These records presented are the first effort at cross-indexing, the purpose being to locate the different members of any particular family. The indexing has been made with great care, and we have not been content with indexing under the name as spelled on the card, but have, in many instances, indexed under two, three and even four different spellings. An examination of the card itself will show the necessity for this. The same names have on these records been spelled many different ways, in fact, in many cases the same name appearing twice on the same card will be spelled differently, and we have sought by this index to cover all such discrepancies, and in cases where doubt may exist, we have indexed so as to cover both ends of the doubt. Where different members of families spell their names differently, we have likewise covered both ways of spelling.
    Chapman Roll
    ~ 1851  History
    Cherokee Indians
    Prepared by Albert Chapman as a listing of those Cherokee actually receiving payment based on the Siler Census.
    Cooper Roll
    ~ 1855
    History
    Choctaw Indians
    Census Roll of Choctaw Families residing East of the Mississippi River and in the States of Mississippi, Louisiana and Alabama made by Douglas H. Cooper, US Agent for Choctaws, in conformity with Order of Commissioner of Indian Affairs dated May the 23rd, 1855.
    Dawes Rolls
    1889-1906 ~ Amended 1914
    ~  By an Act of Congress, March 3, 1893, a commission was appointed to negotiate with the Five Tribes for the extinguishments of their tribal title to lands by allotment, and division of the same among the members of the tribes. This commission to the Five Civilized Tribes became known as the Dawes Commission, after Senator Henry L. Dawes, who was largely responsible for the legislation that brought it into being. their main task was to make an equitable division of nearly twenty million acres of land among more that 100,000 Indians. Several years of negotiation and pressure on the Indians were required to secure their assent to this proposal. Surveys and allotments were made to permit each Indian or Freedman to include their improvements in the allotment.
    ~ Dawes is a list of those members of the Five Civilized Tribes who were removed to Indian Territory (Oklahoma) during the 1800's.
    ~ IF YOUR ANCESTOR WAS NOT LIVING IN INDIAN TERRITORY DURING 1896-1914 THEY WILL NOT BE LISTED ON DAWES!!
    ~ Only those Indians who RECEIVED LAND under the provisions of the Dawes Act are listed. It also lists those Freedmen who received land    allotments as provided for in the Dawes Act. These pages can be searched to discover the enrollee's name, age, sex, blood degree, type, census card    number and roll number. Check the headings in each column. Type denotes whether the record is from a Dawes card.
    ~ Database fields include:
    Tribe. The tribe of the person.
    Type. The type of card. This is either a "By Blood", "Doubtful", "Minor, "Newborn", or "Rejected" card.
    "MCR" refers to a Mississippi Choctaw Rejected card. "P" means the person is listed as a parent on the Dawes cards.
    Last, First, and Middle Names.
    Age and Sex.
    Card. This is the Dawes cards number, not the roll number.
    Roll. This is the Dawes roll number.
    Misc. Sometimes the Post Office or Residence. You need to see the actual card to determine which.
    ~ applied number of people  328,400
    Dawes Rolls Applications
    Same as above but with all 328,000 applicants    The letters stand for the type of application as follows
    A - Adopted
    AD - Adopted Delaware
    B or BB - by blood
    C - Canceled (This is only found on some of the Chickasaw Applications)
    D - Doubtful or denied
    F - Freedman (slaves)
    FD - Freedman, doubtful or denied
    FM - Freedman, minor
    FRR - Freedman, rejected
    IW - Intermarried White
    W - White
    MCR - Mississippi Choctaw Rejected
    NR - Not Registered, Non Resident
    O - Owner*
    OS - Old Series** Old Settler
    P - Parent
    R - rejected
    Index
    Dawes Final Roll
    Guion-Miller Roll
    ~ includes the names of all persons applying for compensation arising from the judgment of the United States Court of Claims on May 28, 1906, for the Eastern Cherokee tribe. While numerous individuals applied, not all the claims were allowed. The information included on the index is the application number, the name of the applicant, and the State or Territory in which the individual resided at the time the application was filed. The name being there does not mean the person was admitted
    Kern Clifton Roll
    ~ 1897 History
    Cherokee Freedmen
    Census of the Freedmen and their descendants of the Cherokee Nation taken by the Commission appointed in the case of Moses Whitmire, Trustee of the Freedmen of the Cherokee Nation versus the Cherokee Nation and the United States in the Court of Claims at Washington, DC;
    The Kern Clifton Roll came about due to the Cherokee Nation disputing the number of freedmen included in the Wallace Roll... yet the Kern Clifton Roll actually increased the number of people eligible for payment.
    McKennon Roll
    ~ 1889 History
    Choctaw Indians
    Proposed Legislation for the Full-blood and identified Choctaws of Mississippi, Louisiana, and Alabama: Memorial Evidence and Brief  published I believe in 1913.
    Old Settler Roll
    ~ 1851
    History
    Cherokee  Indians
    A listing of Cherokee, still living in 1851, who were already residing in Oklahoma when the main body of the Cherokee arrived in the winter of 1839, as a result of the Treaty of New Echota.  Approximately one third of the Cherokee people at that time were Old Settlers and two thirds were new arrivals.
    Reservation Roll
    ~ 1817 History  Cherokee Indians
    A listing of those applying for a 640 acre tract in the East in lieu of removing to Arkansas. This was only good during their lifetime and then the property reverted back to the state.
    Siler Roll
    ~ 1852 History
    Cherokee Indians
    A listing of those Eastern Cherokee entitled to a per capita payment pursuant to an act of Congress in 1850.
    Trail of Tears Roll
    ~ 1835 History  Cherokee Indians
    This is actually a report from the Secretary of War, in compliance with resolutions of the Senate, statements showing the persons employed, the funds furnished, and the improvements valued under the Cherokee Treaty of December 1835.
    Wallace Roll
    ~ 1890 History
    Cherokee Freedmen
    Of Cherokee Freedmen in Indian Territory of Cherokee freedmen created by Special Agent John W. Wallace. Individuals on the schedule were entitled to share with the Shawnee and Delaware in the per capita distribution of ,000, appropriated by Congress in October 1888, and issued under the supervision of his office.
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