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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sedohr Nod who wrote (192021)7/2/2016 11:40:43 AM
From: TideGlider2 Recommendations

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They like repeating total BS about ISIS strikes being made out of desperation. Kerry, Obama and the rest of the administration demonstrate their actual contempt for honesty and the American people with lie after lie.

They enjoy telling us who we are as American citizens and remarkably it just their projection of thinly veiled lies that they impose on us rather than share with us.



To: Sedohr Nod who wrote (192021)7/2/2016 11:52:57 AM
From: TideGlider  Respond to of 224855
 
Access to knives to simple. No background checks at all!

Mom charged with stabbing 4 children to death in Memphis suburb




Shelby County Sheriff's deputies work the scene where four young children were fatally stabbed at the Greens of Irene apartment, Friday, July 1, 2016 in Memphis, Tenn. Four young children were stabbed to death in a gated apartment complex in suburban Memphis on Friday, and police took their mother into custody for questioning. (Mark Weber/The Commercial Appeal via AP)



Print Email
By Associated Press The Republican
on July 02, 2016 at 10:49 AM, updated July 02, 2016 at 11:21 AM





comments









MEMPHIS, Tenn. — A news report says the mother of four children who authorities say were fatally stabbed in a suburban Memphis apartment complex has been charged in their deaths.

Citing a charging document, The Commercial Appeal reports that the woman has been charged with four counts of first degree murder associated with aggravated child abuse, four counts of first degree murder in association with aggravated child neglect, and four counts each of aggravated child abuse and aggravated child neglect or endangerment.

Deputies were called to the complex in unincorporated Shelby County shortly before 1 p.m. Friday. They took the mother into custody after finding the children's bodies. Officials have not released the ages of the children, but sheriff's office spokesman Earle Farrell said deputies responding to the scene called them "babies."

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Authorities are planning a news conference later Saturday morning to update the public.

Shelby County Sheriff Bill Oldham said Friday that investigators did not know if she had mental health issues.

"This is an egregious act of evil that has shocked us to our core," Oldham said. "I will never understand how anyone can do this."

Oldham said the district attorney general's special victims' unit has been called in and Shelby County Mayor Mark Luttrell has promised all resources necessary for the investigation.

"One of the most difficult questions in any investigation is always, 'Why did this happen?'" the sheriff said.

County Commissioner Mark Billingsley also said the county would work to help the family of the children recover.

"It's just a very sad day," he said. "It's really beyond words, quite frankly."

Neighbor Sean Ahearn said he didn't know the family by name, but that he often saw the children, who all appeared to be under age 6, playing in the front yard. They liked to pet his dog when he was taking it for a walk, he said.

"From what I saw, they were very open and friendly kids," he said. "You never imagine that this kind of thing could happen."

The apartment where the stabbing occurred is in a gated community with a golf course called The Greens at Irene. On Friday afternoon, deputies were standing at the gate house questioning motorists as they drove into the neighborhood.

Resident Patricia Johnson spoke with reporters from her car. She said she wasn't allowed to leave for two hours as deputies investigated the scene.

She has a child, and said she burst into tears when she heard about the killings.

"I can't fathom that," she said. "What would babies do to make you do that?"

The state Department of Children's Service has offered its assistance to local law enforcement, but has no record of interaction with the slain children, said spokesman Rob Johnson.

"We've done an exhaustive search and we are not aware of any contact with this family," he said.



To: Sedohr Nod who wrote (192021)7/2/2016 12:00:01 PM
From: TideGlider6 Recommendations

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Elizabeth Warren's 'ancestor rounded up Cherokees from their homes for the Trail of Tears'... but she brushes off claims
By Daily Mail Reporter

Published: 07:49 EST, 9 May 2012 | Updated: 09:04 EST, 9 May 2012

31

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The great-great-great grandfather of Elizabeth Warren - who has long claimed to be part Native American - was not married to a Cherokee but actually rounded them up for the Trail of Tears, it has been claimed.

But the Senate hopeful has dismissed the embarrassing reports as 'politics as usual', and has brushed off calls for her to prove she did not use her questionable heritage to further her law career.

The denial comes after an article on Breitbart.com claimed Warren's ancestor Jonathan Crawford was a member of the Tennessee Militia who rounded up Cherokees from their family homes.


Scrutiny: The University of Pennsylvania is the second law school to promote Elizabeth Warren as a minority faculty member as reports surface that she identified as Native American

He then apparently herded them into government-built stockades at Ross's Landing, the starting point of the Trail of Tears - along which as many of 6,000 Native Americans died - in January 1837.

Crawford was apparently part of a volunteer militia between 1835 and 1836 under Brigadier General R. G. Dunlap.

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    These troops were responsible for forcing - often without violence - Cherokee families from their homes in Georgia, North Carolina and Tennessee, the states they had lived in for generations

    Previous reports had claimed Crawford's wife, O.C. Sarah Smith Crawford, had been noted as Cherokee on a marriage certificate in 1894 - a claim Breitbart.com rubbishes in its recent article.

    Instead it said she was listed as 'white' in the 1860 Census, and 'was most likely half Swedish and half English, Scottish, or German, or some combination thereof'. Cherokee was not listed on the wedding certificate, it adds.


    Kin: Warren, bottom left, was born in Oklahoma City in 1949 to Donald and Pauline Herring. It has emerged her great-great grand uncle once noted his mother as Cherokee - whereas she had never claimed this


    Roots: Previous reports had claimed Warren, pictured as a girl growing up in the 1950s, was 1/32 Cherokee as her great-great-great grandmother was. She said her Cherokee roots were 'family lore'

    It had previously been reported that one of her sons, William J. Crawford, had first made the claim his mother was Cherokee on his 1894 Oklahoma Territory marriage license application.

    'Neither O.C. Sarah Smith Crawford, Jonathan Crawford, nor any of their seven other children, apparently ever claimed [she] had Cherokee heritage,' article author Michael Patrick Leahy writes.

    It adds that Jonathan Crawford did probably not join the Army troops that travelled with the Cherokees along the Trail of Tears but he did join the voluntary militia again, which fought the Seminole Indians in Florida. Records show he was in Florida for six months from November 1837.

    Paul Reed, a Utah genealogist who is a fellow at the American Genealogical Society, said primary documentation supports these claims.

    'Jonathan H. Crawford did serve in the Indian wars,' Reed told the Boston Herald. 'He is listed as serving in the company that rounded up Cherokees.'





    Claims: After Warren joined Harvard Law in the 1990s, she listed herself as a 'minority' professor


    Horror: But now it has been claimed her ancestors actually forced Native Americans from their homes and onto the Trail of Tears, leading them from the South to Oklahoma after the Indian Removal Act of 1830

    Yet on Tuesday, Elizabeth Warren refused to comment on the latest reports while U.S. Senator Scott Brown claimed she had used the questionable heritage on job applications.

    THE TRAIL OF TEARS

    After the Indian Removal Act of 1830, Native Americans were rounded up from their homes in North Carolina, Georgia and Tennessee and into government-built stockades.

    The removal included members of the Cherokee, Muscogee (Creek), Seminole, Chickasaw and Choctaw nations.

    They were forced to give up their land and migrate to Oklahoma - a journey known as the Trail of Tears. The migrants faced hunger, disease, and exhaustion on the march, which was accompanied by troops.

    As many as 4,000 of the 15,000 Cherokees died on the route, with total deaths believed to be more than 6,000.

    By the end of the decade, 46,000 Native Americans from the southeastern states had been removed from their homes, opening 25 million acres for white settlement.

    'I think what this is about is Scott Brown trying to change the subject,' Warren said, the Boston Herald reported.

    'He just wants to find a way to talk about something else, and I think it’s wrong. I think this is why people are turned off on Washington politics.'

    Warren has been criticised for claiming an ancestor was a Cherokee without documentation.

    She also listed herself as a 'minority' law professor in a professional directory in the 1990s.

    Former executive director of the National Congress of American Indians Suzan Shown Harjo said it was infuriating that Warren identified herself as part Cherokee without the proper paperwork.

    She said: ‘If you believe you are these things, then that’s fine and dandy, but that doesn’t give you the right to claim yourself as Native American.’

    In the 1990s, when Harvard Law came under fire for having a poor diversity-hiring record and a faculty dominated by white male professors, the school widely publicised Warren's alleged Native American roots.


    Demands: Sen. Scott Brown has said Warren needs to prove she did not use her heritage to further her career


    Refusal: But Warren, pictured on the campaign trail last year, brushed off the new claims as 'politics as usual'

    In 1996, school paper the Harvard Crimson quoted a Harvard Law spokesperson saying that 'of 71 current Law School professors and assistant professors, 11 are women, five are black, one is Native American and one is Hispanic.'

    Warren’s aides said the candidate does not remember mentioning her Native American heritage to anyone on the Harvard Law School faculty before her hire in 1995.

    She was born in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma in 1949, in the lower-middle class family of Donald and Pauline Herring.

    The youngest of four children, Warren became the first member of her family to graduate from college and then went on to get her law degree.

    After taking a leave of absence from Harvard Law, she was selected to lead the National Bankruptcy Review Commission in 2008. In 2011, she helped design the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

    That year, Warren announced she would run for the US Senate to unseat Republican Scott Brown.

    A recent Rasmussen poll held on Monday indicates Warren has not been harmed by the scandal and is tied with Brown at 45 percent, according to the poll of 500 likely voters.

    Read more:

    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2141789/Elizabeth-Warrens-ancestor-rounded-Cherokees-homes-Trail-Tears--brushes-claims.html#ixzz4DGYNMP1Y
    Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook



    To: Sedohr Nod who wrote (192021)7/2/2016 12:10:30 PM
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    Sedohr Nod

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    A little Cherokee history and genealogy mixed in with a whole lot of truth.

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    Elizabeth Warren Information

    Elizabeth Warren is a candidate for the U.S. Senate from the state of Massachusetts. She claims she is of Cherokee descent. She has come under fire for possibly using that claim to give her career a boost at a time when Harvard Law was under pressure to hire more minority professors. We have done extensive research on her ancestry and on the stories she has told trying to back up her claim. There is absolutely no evidence to suggest she actually had a Cherokee or American Indian ancestor. Despite repeated requests for her to release her personnel records from the University of Pennsylvania and Harvard Law School, she refuses to do so.



    The stories she has told and our conclusions
    Click on the following links to go to the posts.

    Her maternal genealogy

    Part 1
    Part 2
    Part 3
    Part 4
    Part 5

    The "Elopement Story"

    When is an elopement not an elopement?
    Elizabeth Warren's mother lied.



    The "Family Feud" Story

    The 25th Anniversary Party

    Warren's White Great Grandpa Shot an Indian News Article

    Bam! Last Nail in the Coffin on that Old Story



    Her brothers' story


    Pinch Hitters in the Bottom of the 9th Inning


    Was her father really a janitor?

    Janitor, flight instructor or businessman?











    Elizabeth Warren's Maternal Ancestors

    She claims to have Indian blood through her mother so that side of her family is shown here. All were always found in all records as white. They were never found in any Cherokee records or listed as Indian. The Trail of Tears was in 1838-39. We chose to show back to the generation born before that time, though we have traced most her lines back further. Additional information or documentation available upon request.



    Generation 1

    1. Pauline Louise Reed: born 14 Feb 1912 in Hughes County, Oklahoma; died 19 Jul 1995 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma County, Oklahoma.

    Generation 2

    2. Harry Gunn Reed: born 1 Oct 1872 in Mount Vernon, Jefferson County, Illinois; married 2 Jun 1893 in Sebastian, Arkansas, United States; died 23 Dec 1956 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma County, Oklahoma.
    3. Bethania Elvina "Hannie" Crawford: born 29 Oct 1875 in Laclede County, Missouri; died 11 Nov 1969 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma County, Oklahoma.

    Generation 3

    4. Joseph H Reed: born abt 1837 in Ohio; died 13 Feb 1898 in Fort Smith, Sebastian County, Arkansas.
    5. Charity Louise Gorman: born abt 1841 in Illinois; died bef 1900.
    6. John Houston Crawford: born 26 Mar 1858 in Laclede County, Missouri; died 23 Jan 1924 in Hughes County, Oklahoma.
    7. Paulina Ann Bowen: born abt 1860 in Missouri; died 1905 in Johnson County, Arkansas.

    Generation 4

    8. Joseph H Reed: born 17 Jun 1793 in New Jersey; died 27 Feb 1847 in Richland County, Illinois.
    9. Eliza Bell: born 1798 in New Jersey; died 1869 in Richland County, Illinois.
    10. Ezekiel Gorman: born 1800 in Missouri; married 7 Dec 1828 in Cape Girardeau County, Missouri; died 20 Mar 1867 (bef) in Washington County, Illinois.
    11. Elizabeth Mathieus: born abt 1810 in Missouri.
    12. Preston H Crawford: born 1824 in Tennessee; died 1875 in Laclede County, Missouri.
    13. Edith May Marsh: born 5 Mar 1826 in Tennessee; died 24 Jun 1871 in Laclede County, Missouri.
    14. George Washington Bowen: born 14 Feb 1826 in Indiana; married 1 Jan 1846 in Camden, Ray County, Missouri; died 14 Jan 1907 in Clarksville, Johnson County, Arkansas.
    15. Bethany Clark: born 27 Feb 1828 in Kentucky; died 17 Jun 1926 in Johnson County, Arkansas



    Timeline of Elizabeth Warren's Minority Claim

    1977 to 1978 - Taught at Rutgers University
    1978 to 1983 - Taught at University of Houston 1981 to 1987 - University of Texas (Austin), personnel records listed her as whiteFrom the Boston Globe, "Warren’s employment document at the University of Texas allowed her to check multiple boxes specifying “the racial category or categories with which you most closely identify.” The options included “American Indian or Alaskan Native,” but she chose only white."1986 - Listed herself as a minority in the American Association of Law Schools directoryFrom the Washington Post, "Warren first listed herself as a minority in the Association of American Law Schools Directory of Faculty in 1986, the year before she joined the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania Law School. She continued to list herself as a minority until 1995, the year she accepted a tenured position at Harvard Law School."1987 to 1992 - Taught at University of Pennsylvania1992 to 1993 - Taught at Harvard Law School as visiting professor1993 - Harvard behind in diversity goalsFrom The Crimson, "As the University winds up a plan launched in 1988 to promote diversity in its faculty and staff, officials express disappointment about their progress."1993 - Harvard minority student groups issue demandsFrom the Crimson, "The panelists addressed several of the issues raised by the protesters, including Harvard's response to Mansfield's remarks, the lack of minority faculty and the absence of Asian-American representation on the panel."1993 - Listed in the article "Women of Color in Legal Academia: A Biographic and Bibliographic Guide"From Breibart, "An article, “Women of Color in Legal Academia: A Biographic and Bibliographic Guide,” which was published by the Harvard Women’s Law Journal (since renamed the Harvard Journal of Law and Gender) in its Spring 1993 edition (Volume 16), lists Warren as one of approximately 250 “women of color” in legal academia."1993 - Offered permanent position at Harvard (turned down)From The Crimson, "Visiting Professor of Law Elizabeth Warren, one of the two female scholars offered tenure by Harvard Law School this year, said yesterday that she will not accept the post.

    Warren, who holds a tenured position at the University of Pennsylvania, said that her decision was based on "personal reasons." "1993 to 1995 - Taught at University of Pennsylvania1994 - University of Pennsylvania, received a teaching award, designated as a minorityFrom the Boston Globe, "The University of Pennsylvania, where Warren taught at the law school from 1987 through 1995, listed her as a minority in a “Minority Equity Report” posted on its website. The report, published in 2005, well after her departure, included her as the winner of a faculty award in 1994. Her name was highlighted in bold, the designation used for minorities in the report."March 1994 - Student Protests at Harvard demanding more minority faculty hiresFrom The Crimson, "Beginning on March 5, the Saturday of Junior Parents Weekend ,the Asian American Association, Raza and other minority groups launched an all-out assault, complete with protests, petitions and postering. one of their primary goals: to increase minority faculty hiring."

    and

    "A protester's sign on March 5 displays Harvard's "report card," giving the administration an "A" for "evasion" and an "F" for "action" on the issue of minority faculty hiring The underlying message is that Harvard's facultyis not diverse due to institutionalized racism and stubborn, reactionary administrators."1995 - Accepted a permanent position at Harvard Law SchoolFrom The Crimson, "University of Pennsylvania legal scholar Elizabeth Warren has been appointed the Leo Gottlieb Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, University officials announced yesterday.
    Warren, who taught at the law school as a visiting professor during the spring of 1993, said yesterday the offer had been available since that time, but added that family circum-stances had kept her from accepting the position until now."1995 - Stopped listing herself as minority in the American Association of Law Schools directoryFrom the Washington Post, "Warren first listed herself as a minority in the Association of American Law Schools Directory of Faculty in 1986, the year before she joined the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania Law School. She continued to list herself as a minority until 1995, the year she accepted a tenured position at Harvard Law School."1996 - Touted as Native American in The CrimsonFrom The Crimson, "Although the conventional wisdom among students and faculty is that the Law School faculty includes no minority women, Chmura said Professor of Law Elizabeth Warren is Native American."1997 - Touted as Harvard Law's first woman of color in Fordham Law ReviewFrom Politico, " "There are few women of color who hold important positions in the academy, Fortune 500 companies, or other prominent fields or industries," the piece says. "This is not inconsequential. Diversifying these arenas, in part by adding qualified women of color to their ranks, remains important for many reaons. For one, there are scant women of color as role models. In my three years at Stanford Law School, there were no professors who were women of color. Harvard Law School hired its first woman of color, Elizabeth Warren, in 1995." "









    Is this the form that she "checked the box" on?

    If so, it is clear to see why she won't release the records. She does not legally meet the criteria to be counted as a Native American for diversity reports to the EEOC.









    Sources for her entire genealogy include, but are not limited to:

    1. 1790 United States Federal Census
    2. 1820 United States Federal Census
    3. 1830 United States Federal Census
    4. 1840 United States Federal Census
    5. 1841 England Census
    6. 1850 United States Federal Census
    7. 1851 England Census
    8. 1860 United States Federal Census
    9. 1861 England Census
    10. 1870 United States Federal Census
    11. 1880 United States Federal Census
    12. 1900 United States Federal Census
    13. 1910 United States Federal Census
    14. 1920 United States Federal Census
    15. 1930 United States Federal Census
    16. 1940 United States Federal Census
    17. American Civil War Soldiers
    18. Arkansas Death Index, 1914-1950
    19. Arkansas, County Marriages Index, 1837-1957
    20. California Death Index, 1940-1997
    21. Civil War Pension Index: General Index to Pension
    22. England & Wales, Free BMD Birth Index, 1837-1915
    23. Illinois Marriages to 1850
    24. Illinois Marriages, 1790-1860
    25. Illinois, Deaths and Stillbirths Index, 1916-1947
    26. Indiana, Marriage Collection, 1800-1941
    27. Maryland Marriages, 1655-1850
    28. Maryland, Births and Christenings Index, 1662-1911
    29. Missouri Marriage Records, 1805-2002
    30. Missouri Marriages, 1766-1983
    31. Missouri, Death Records, 1834-1910
    32. North Carolina, Marriage Collection, 1741-2004
    33. Oregon, Death Index, 1898-2008
    34. Pennsylvania, Church and Town Records, 1708-1985
    35. Selected U.S. Federal Census Non-Population Schedu
    36. Social Security Death Index
    37. Tennessee State Marriages, 1780-2002
    38. Tennessee, Death Records, 1908-1951
    39. Tennessee, Deaths and Burials Index, 1874-1955
    40. Texas Death Index, 1903-2000
    41. U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900
    42. U.S. Army, Register of Enlistments, 1798-1914
    43. U.S. City Directories, 1821-1989 (Beta)
    44. U.S. Civil War Soldiers, 1861-1865
    45. U.S. General Land Office Records, 1796-1907
    46. U.S. IRS Tax Assessment Lists, 1862-1918
    47. U.S. National Cemetery Interment Control Forms, 19
    48. U.S. Passport Applications, 1795-1925
    49. U.S. Public Records Index, Volume 1
    50. U.S. Public Records Index, Volume 2
    51. U.S. Veterans Gravesites, ca.1775-2006
    52. U.S. World War II Draft Registration Cards, 1942
    53. U.S., Civil War Draft Registrations Records, 1863-
    54. U.S., Indexed Early Land Ownership and Township Plats
    55. U.S., Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications
    56. Web: Arkansas, Find A Grave Index, 1819-2011
    57. Web: Illinois, Find A Grave Index, 1809-2011
    58. Web: Maryland, Find A Grave Index, 1788-2011
    59. Web: Missouri, Find A Grave Index, 1812-2011
    60. Web: Obituary Daily Times Index, 1995-2011
    61. Web: Oklahoma, Find A Grave Index, 1834-2011
    62. Web: Tennessee, Find A Grave Index, 1796-2011
    63. Web: Texas, Find A Grave Index, 1836-2011
    64. Web: Washington, Find A Grave Index, 1853-2011
    65. World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918
    66. Muskogee Times Democrat; Muskogee, Oklahoma, 1906
    67. Ada Evening News; Ada, Oklahoma, 1929
    68. Wetumka Gazette; Wetumka, Oklahoma 1932
    69. The Democrat-American; Sallisaw, Oklahoma 1932, 1936
    70. Oklahoma District Court Records
    71. Oklahoma Vital Records
    72. Hughes County, Oklahoma Marriage Records
    73. Logan County, Oklahoma Marriage Records
    74. 1860 Census of Indian Lands West of Arkansas (whites only census)
    75. “Prairies of Promise” – Bowen
    76. Christian Advocate (Methodist records)
    77. Sebastian County, Arkansas Death records
    78. Michigan Bible Records
    79. Johnson County, Arkansas published records
    80. Illinois Regional Archives Repository
    81. Quaker Records
    82. Volunteer Soldiers in the Cherokee War, 1836 - 39, James L. Douthat
    83. National Archives – Pension and Bounty Land records, Neona Crawford
    84. National Archives – Pension papers of William J. Crawford
    85. Index to Compiled Service Records of Volunteer Soldiers who Served During the Cherokee Disturbances and Removal
    86. Passenger lists
    87. US Army Indian Campaign Service Records
    88. Maryland Calendar of Wills
    89. Utah State University Database, Ridgway papers
    90. Missouri Soldiers Database
    91. Missouri Vital Records
    92. Civil War Soldiers and Sailors Database
    93. Laclede County, Missouri: histories and families
    94. The History of Richland County, Illinois
    95. Richland County, Ohio Directory and History
    96. Richland County, Illinois land patents
    97. Biography of Notable Americans, 1904
    98. The Condor, Cooper Ornithological Club
    99. The Oklahoman; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
    100. The Smith Family Story: Nebo and Winnipeg by James Everett Smith
    101. Welsh Settlement in Pennsylvania by Charles H. Browning
    102. Incompleted Records of Merion Burial Grave Yard 1682-1848 by Margaret Harvey
    103. Tennesseans in the War of 1812 - Sistler
    104. Tennessee Wills and Administrations, Index to -- Sistler

    Cherokee documents and records we checked (and found NONE of her direct line ancestors) include, but are not limited to:

    1. Cherokee Emigration Rolls 1817-1835, Transcribed by Jack D Baker


    2. 1835 Cherokee Census, Transcribed by the Trail of Tears Association
    3. 1884 Hester Roll of the Eastern Cherokee, Transcribed by Barbara Crumpton
    4. Mullay Roll, Transcribed by Barbara Benge
    5. Mullay Roll, hand copied transcription by Lulu Boggs, Talbot Library, Colcord OK
    6. Siler Roll
    7. Cherokee Drennen Roll of 1851, Transcribed by Marybelle W Chase
    8. 1869 Cherokee Census, photocopies of provided by Jack D Baker
    9. Chapman Roll, published. (Copies from Oklahoma Historical Society)
    10. Only The Names Remain, by Sandi Garrett, Five Vols.
    11. Cherokee Old Settlers by David Keith Hampton (1852 and 1896 payroll)
    12. 1867 Swetland Roll transcribed by Barbara Benge
    13. 1880 Cherokee Census, Transcribed by Barbara Benge
    14. 1890 Cherokee Census, Transcribed by Barbara Benge
    15. The Intruders, The Illegal Residents of the Cherokee Nation 1866-1907 by Nancy Hope Sober
    16. The Moravian Springplace Mission To The Cherokee Nation, Rowena McClinton, Two Vols.
    17. Old Cherokee Familes by Emmet Starr
    18. Old Cherokee Families, Notes of Dr. Emmet Starr, Jack D Baker and David Keith Hampton.
    19. Chronicles of Oklahoma, Oklahoma State University Database
    20. Index Chronicles of Oklahoma” Vol 2 and Vol 3, Okahoma Historical Society
    21. Indian Pioneer History Papers, Western History, University of Oklahoma
    22. Index to the Eastern Cherokee Application, CD
    23. Eastern Cherokee Applications, Fold3.com
    24. Index to Dawes, online
    25. Dawes Card and Packets, Fold3.com
    26. River Trail by Jane B Noble
    27. Cherokee By Blood by Jerry Wright Jordon, 9 vols.
    28. Abstracts of Eastern Cherokee Applications.
    29. Indians and Intruders, Sharron Standifer Ashton, 5 Vols.
    30. Cherokee Nation Papers Inventory and Index”, revised and edited by Kristina L Southwell
    31. Records of the Cherokee Agency in Tennessee 1810-1835, Transcribed by Marybelle W Chase.
    32. The Journal of Rev. Daniel S Butrick May 19, 1838 – April 2, 1839, Trail of Tears Association.
    33. Southeastern Native American Documents, University of Georgia (Galileo)
    34. Those Who Cried, The 16,000, arranged, edited and indexed by James W. Tyner, 1974
    35. Cherokee Claims for Transportation and Subsistence Special File 154, Vol. 1, compiled by Dawn C. Stricklin
    36. Cherokee Planters in Georgia 1832 – 1838 by Don L. Shadburn
    37. The Payne – Butrick Papers Vols 1 – 6, edited and annotated by William L. Anderson
    38. History of the Cherokee Indians by Emmet Starr
    39. Trail of Tears muster rolls, ration lists
    40. War of 1812 Cherokee muster rolls
    41. Cherokee Roots by Bob Blankenship 2 Vols
    42. Who Was Who Among the Southern Indians - A Genealogical Notebook 1698-1907 complied by Don Martini
    43. Guide to Manuscripts in the Western History Collections of the University of Oklahoma
    compiled by Kristina L Southwell
    44. Index to 1896 Cherokee Citizenship Applications
    45. 1842 Cherokee Claims, Marybelle Chase (multiple volumes)

    Read more: pollysgranddaughter.com



    To: Sedohr Nod who wrote (192021)7/2/2016 12:35:42 PM
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    FBI at Hillary's DC home now interviewing her.