690 



INDIAN LAND CESSIONS IN THE UNITED STATES 



SCPIEDXJLE OF II«^DI^^:K 



1818 

 Aug. 24 



Sept. 17 



Stat. L., 

 VII, 176. 



St Marv's, Stat. L. 

 Ohio. ! VII, 178. 



Quapaw 



Sept. 20 



St Mary's, 

 Ohio. 



Stat. L., 

 VII, 180. 



Wyandot, Sen- 

 eka, Shaw 

 nee, and 

 Ottawa. 



Wyandot . 



From the limits of tbfi foregoing cession the Quapaws reserve 

 for their future home the following-di'Scribed tract: Begiii- 

 iiiug at a |ioiut on the Arkansas river opposite the present 

 post of Arkausaw and ruumng thence a due S\V. course to 

 the Washita river; thence up that river to the Saliue fork, 

 and up the Saline fork to a poiut from whence a due N. 

 course wouUl strike the Arkansaw river at the Little Rock; 

 and thence down the right bank of the Arkansaw to the jilace 

 of beginning. 



It is agreed between the U. .S. and the parties to this treaty that 

 the several tracts of land described iu the treaty of Sei)t. 29, 

 IM17, to which this is supidementary, and agreed thereby to 

 be granted by the U. S. to the chiefs of the tribes named 

 theiciu for the use of said tribes, and also the tract granted 

 to the Ottawns by the twentieth article of said treaty, shall 

 not be tlius gratted, but shall be excepted from the cession 

 • made l)y said tribes to the U. S., and reserved for the use of 

 said Iiuiians and held by them in the same manner as Indian 

 reservations have been heretofore held. 



It is also agreed that there shall be reserved for the use of the 

 Wyandots, iu addition to the reservations before made, 55,680 

 acres, to be laid otf in two tracts, the tirst to adjoin the S. 

 line of the section heretofore reserved for the Wyandot chief, 

 Cherokee Boy, and to extend S. to the N. line of the reserve 

 of 12 mih'8 S(|uare at Upper Sandusky, and the other to ad- 

 join the E. line of the reserve of 12 miles siiuare at Upper 

 Sandusky and to ext(;nd E. for quantity. 



There is also reserved for the use of the Wyandots residing at 

 Solomon's town and on Blanchard's fork, in addition to the 

 reservation heretofore made, 16,000 acres, to be laid off in 

 square form on the head of Blanchard's fork, the center of 

 which shall be at the Big spring on the trace leading from 

 Upper Sandusky to Fort Findlay. 



There is also reserved for the use of the Wyandots, on the W. 

 side of Sandusky river, adjoining the said river, 160 acres, 

 and which shall also adjoin the lower line of the two sec- 

 tions granted to Elizabeth Whitaker by the treaty of Sept. 

 29, 1817. 



There is also reserved for the use of the Shawanees, in addition 

 to the reservations before made, 12,800 acres, to be laid oft' 

 adjoining the E. line of their reserve of 10 miles S(iuare at 

 Wapaughkoiietta. 



There is also reserved for the use of the Shawanees and Senecas 

 8,960 acres of land, to be laid off adjoining the W. line of the 

 reserve of 48 square miles at Lewistown. And the reserve 

 hereby made, as well as tlie former reserve at the same ]ilace, 

 shall be equally divided by an E. and W. line to be drawn 

 through the same. And the N. half of the said tract shall 

 lie reserved for the use of the Senecas who reside there and 

 the S. half for the use of the Shawanees who reside there. 



There is also reserved for the use of the Senecas, iu addition to 

 tlie reservations before made, 10,000 acres, to be laid otf on 

 the E. side of Sandusky river adjoining the S. line of their 

 reservation of 30,000 acres, which begins on the Sandusky 

 river at the lower corner of William Spicer's section, and ex- 

 cluding said section therefrom. 



The Wyandot tribe cede to the U. S. a tract of land in the ter- 

 ritory of Michigan, includingthe village called Brownstown, 

 reserved to them and their descendants for 50 years by the 

 provisions of an act of Congress passed Feb. 28, 1809. 



The Wyandots also cede to the U. S. a tract of land iu the ter- 

 ritory of Michigan, to include the village called Maguagua, 

 reserved to them and their descendants for 50 years by the 

 provisions of an act of Congress passed Feb. 28, 1809. 



The U. X., in consideration of the foregoing cessions, agree to 

 reserve for thi^ use of the Wyandot Indians sections 23, 24, 

 25, 26, 34, 35, 36, 27, and that part of section 22 which con- 

 tains 8 acres and lies on the S. side of the river Huron, being 

 in 'I'p. 4 S.. R. 9 E. of the first meridian in the territory of 

 Mil higan and containing 4.996 acres. 



