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Post by Vicky on Jan 12, 2009 9:59:55 GMT -5
Ray, Are you logged in at jstor? There is a box which includes this-
"Want the full article? Login to access JSTOR, or check our access options. You may have access for free through an institution."
You would have to check into what options are available to you, to become a member. You might try contacting Jimmy about this.
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Post by Vicky on Jan 12, 2009 10:05:16 GMT -5
Or, you might have access to this at your local library for free.
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Post by rayhenry on Jan 16, 2009 18:17:23 GMT -5
Dear Ray Henry, There are various means by which we can get you a copy of the article. First, please know that there are two parts to the article. Their citations are as follows: Gray, John S. "The Story of Mrs. Picotte-Galpin, a Sioux Heroine: Eagle Woman Learns about White Ways and Racial Conflict, 1820-1868," Montana, the Magazine of Western History Spring 1986, vol. 36, No. 2, pp. 2-21. Gray, John S. "The Story of Mrs. Picotte-Galpin, a Sioux Heroine: Eagle Woman Becomes a Trader and Counsels for Peace, 1868-1888," Montana, the Magazine of Western History Summer 1986, vol. 36, No. 3, pp. 2-21. You might consider inquirying at a local library which is a member of the Interlibrary Loan system. They can usually get article copies without charge. A local library may even have a subscription to JSTOR and be able to run off copies of the article immediately for you. If the above options are not available to you, I suggest that you submit a research request. There will be an initial fee of $5 if you are from Montana, or a $20 charge if you are submitting from out of state. This fee includes the first 10 pages. If your project requires more than 10 pages, you will be invoiced 35 cents for each additional copied page. This option is available through our website. For this option please go to our site at mhs.mt.gov/-click on Research Center in the green bar at the top of the page -click on Research Request in the menu offered in the middle of the page -click on General or Genealogy Research in the list offered near the bottom of the page -in the upper right hand corner, you have the option of either submitting a request on line or by land mail. Whether you choose the online option, or going through the mail, please include as much information as possible regarding your request—including names, dates, descriptions, and locations. More specifically, include the citations from above in your request. Thank you and let me know which of the above options will work best for you. Zoe Ann Stoltz Reference Historian Montana Historical Society Research Center P.O. Box 201201 Helena, MT 59620-1201 Phone: 406-444-1988 Email: zstoltz@mt.gov
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Post by akhummingbird on Jan 17, 2009 6:13:05 GMT -5
Ray
I have a copy of both of the Mrs. Galpin articles. There is only a short bit about Alfred Sully in the first article...(to quote and paraphrase:)
"During the winter of 1855 - 1856...Mrs. Galpin ...met Captina Alfred Sully (at Fort Pierre), who would play an important role in the early Indian wars and would later avail himself of her services as mediator.
(In 1863...) (Charles) Galpin again traveled upriver, arriving on June 10 in Sioux city where he saw his old friend, General Alfred Sully. Sully was organizing an upriver expedition to punish the still hostile Santee sioux. Tha night the La Barges's new boat, the Robert Campbell, docked at Sioux City. Galpin must have then withdrawn from La Barge, Harkness and company , for the next day Sully's expedition quartermaster, Captain Arthur H . Mills, hired Galpin to serve as chief guide and interpreter on Sully's personal staff from June 11 to Spetermber 19. The trader would recruit Frank La Frambose, Charles DeGrey and other frontiermen for the expedition. On the march upriver, Sully would hold councils with all friendly Sioux to allay their fears, with Galpin undoubltedly advising and interpreting.
...When General Sully concluded his campaign, he returned to Fort Pierre and began building an army post nearby. Galpin' s service must of impressed the general, for by September 20 Sully appointed him the sutler at he new post, Fort Sully....
During the summer of 1864, General Sully waged a more ambitious campaign against the Northern Sioux, who were threatening to run all of the whites out of the upper country. ...Sully detached troops to build another new post - Fort Rice - and again appointed Galpin it sutler.
...During the summer of 1865, General Sully's third Indian campaign had been hampered by generals and politician quarreling over the proper means of solving the Indian problem. by the time Sully returned to Fort Rice on August 25, the government was pressing for a new peace policy. (He then convinced Charles and Matilda Galpin to go on a secret peace commission...which is successful)..."
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Post by rayhenry on Jan 17, 2009 9:04:56 GMT -5
Thanks, I was hopimg it would tell something about his "Indian wife." At east her name. That should be about when he met her because their daughter, Mary Sully Deloria was born in 1858. Oh well, back to the books. Again, Thanks
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Post by rayhenry on Jan 30, 2009 17:36:26 GMT -5
If anyone has or runs across anything on Susan Sully Le grande- The mother of Mary Sully Bordeaux Deloria I could sure use it. All I know is she was once married to Gen Alfred Sully. And the next time she shows up is as Susan Le Grande and the grand mother of Annie and Rosie Bordeaux. I think I got this right. Thanks, Ray
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allie
Full Member
Posts: 92
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Post by allie on Jan 30, 2009 19:33:31 GMT -5
akhummingbird, have you come across,in your readings, any mention of a Lakota named "Angry Eyes". He died around the Ft Pierre area the summer of 1862 just after the outbreak in MN. General Harney mentions him as one of his liason between the Lakota and the military. Any books or articles about this time frame that you might know of would be great! allie
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Post by akhummingbird on Feb 1, 2009 2:45:53 GMT -5
Sorry Allie, I have not seen anything yet on Angry Eyes...but I'll remember the name in my search and let you know if I see anything.
warm regards, Barbara / akhummingbird
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Post by hermin1 on Feb 1, 2009 16:07:53 GMT -5
re. "angry Eyes", you might try typing in the General's name in google. You may come up with a some information(ie. autobiography<etc.) that mentions angry eyes.
also try typing in "angry Eyes".Lakota Indian in google and see what you come up with.
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Post by nativeeyes on Feb 1, 2009 23:46:15 GMT -5
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Post by nittygritty on Mar 5, 2009 19:10:56 GMT -5
Hi can anyone help me with this question?I need to know if the following number is a legitimate Tribal ID number,I will not post the last four numbers just incase it is legit.The number is 162730- - - -.I know that the code for Prairie Island is 273.Can you help me.
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Post by peacekeeper on Mar 8, 2009 23:10:30 GMT -5
The best way to find out would be to contact the local BIA where this number originates from. You other option would be to talk to the person this number came from, get the tribal information from them and then contact the tribe. Jackie
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Post by madrock on Mar 13, 2009 13:12:50 GMT -5
Is there an "appropriation act" entitled the Act of February 16, 1863 anywhere to be found online?
The only mention of an act on that date that I can find is from a website denoting events that have happened on February 12th in our history which states:
An Act (12 stat.l.652) states that all treaties between the United States and the "Sisseton, Wahpaton, Medawakanton, and Wahpakoota Bands of Sioux of Dakota are aborgated and annulled" as far as occupancy or obligations in Minnesota are concerned. This act took away their lands in Minnesota because of the "Santee Sioux uprising."
Thank you
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Post by peacekeeper on Mar 13, 2009 23:31:11 GMT -5
www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=ISO-8859-1&q=appropriation+Act+of+February+16%2C+1863+&btnG=Google+Search&aq=f&oq=THIS IS WHAT IF FOUND ON THIS LINK. PLEASE CHECK THE ONES YOU CONSIDER HELPFUL TO YOUR SEARCH. I FOUND ALL AT GOOGLE. JACKIE Google Advanced Search Preferences Web Books Results 1 - 10 of about 7,840 for appropriation Act of February 16, 1863. (0.31 seconds) Search ResultsSignificant Dates in GrantFebruary 12, 1871. Signs Coinage Act, making gold the sole monetary standard. ... signs the Indian Appropriation Act, which establishes Indians as national wards and .... October 16, 1863. Named commander of the Grand Division of the ... www.grantstomb.org/sgdates.html - 14k - Cached - Similar pages FindLaw | Cases and CodesThe stipulated annual installments were appropriated and paid, the appropriation ... Until the Indian outbreak of 1862 and the Act of February 16, 1863, ... caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=us&vol=277&invol=424 - 41k - Cached - Similar pages Early History of North Dakota: Essential Outlines of American History - Google Books Resultby Clement Augustus Lounsberry - 1919 - North Dakota - 645 pages The treaty of 1851 was abrogated by the act of February 16, 1863 (vol. ... The amount so paid included, also, other items appropriated for their benefit ... books.google.com/books?id=BHQUAAAAYAAJ... Records of the office of the Secretary of WarRecords relating to passes and transportation orders, 1863-66. Departmental visitor registers .... act of December 16, 1940. Designated Statistics Division, February 16, 1942. ... Reestablished by the Appropriation Act of 1883 (22 Stat. ... www.archives.gov/research/guide-fed-records/groups/107.html - 54k - Cached - Similar pages 208 U.S. 561To one half of $100000 advance annuity appropriated February 16, 1863 (12 ... next year were applied to that end by the forfeiture act of February 16, 1863. ... bulk.resource.org/courts.gov/c/US/208/208.US.561.338.339.html - Similar pages Confederate Imprints - The University of Iowa LibrariesA bill to be entitled An act making appropriations for the executive, ...... February 16, 1863. [2258] Communication from the Secretary of War . . . Feb. ... www.lib.uiowa.edu/spec-coll/MSC/ToMsc550/MsC540/confederateimprints.htm - 108k - Cached - Similar pages The American Presidency Project contains the most comprehensive ...His remarks were broadcast over radio and television. As enacted, the Second Supplemental Appropriation Act, 1965, is Public Law 89-16 (79 Stat. 81). ... www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=26925 - 61k - Cached - Similar pages The Dakota War of 1862 - Google Books Resultby Kenneth Carley - 2001 - History - 102 pages Congress eventually accepted this suggestion, appropriating $200000 in an act passed on February 16, 1863, and an additional ... books.google.com/books?isbn=0873513924... [PDF] CHAPTER 899 S.B. No. 1863 1 AN ACT 2 relating to certain fiscal ...File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTML 16 person, is subject to all prohibitions against the disclosure of .... 1863. 1 General Appropriations Act, to reflect the reduced cost of coverage ..... 24 (h) Not later than February 15 of each year, a certificated ... texinfo.library.unt.edu/sessionlaws/79thsession/bills/sb/SB1863.pdf - Similar pages List of United States federal legislation - Wikipedia, the free ...The National Banking Act of February 25, 1863, Sess. 3, ch. ..... May 12, 1917 — 1st Army Appropriations Act of 1917; May 18, 1917 — Selective Service ... 1012; October 16, 1918 — Corrupt Practices Act of 1918 (Gerry Act); November 7, ... en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_federal_legislation - 387k - Cached - Similar pages 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next Search within results - Language Tools - Search Tips - Dissatisfied? Help us improve - Try Google Experimental Google Home - Advertising Programs - Business Solutions - Privacy - About Google
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