724 



INDIAN LAND CESSIONS IN TilK UNITED STATES 



SCHEDXJLE OF INDI^IST 



1829 



July 29 



P r a i 1- i 

 Cliitu 



torv. 



(■ (In 

 Mich- 

 teni- 



Stiit. L., 

 VII, 31'0. 



' r a i r i e d ii 

 Chieii.Mii'li- 

 igan terri 

 tory. 



Stat. L, 

 VII, 31' 



Chippewa, 

 Ottawa, and 

 Potawato- 

 mi nations 

 of the wa- 

 ters of the 

 Illinois, 

 M ilwaukee, 

 and Manito- 

 woc rivers. 



Winnebago . . . 



Little Sau- 

 dusky 

 Ohio. 



Stat. L.. 

 vii, 3L't>. 



ei.t. 1'4 C 



ouucilcaiup Stat. L., 

 oil .lames vii. 327. 

 f . . r L- o f 

 White riv- 

 er, Missouri. 



From the Ibresoiug cessions the following reservations are 

 made. \ iz: 



1. I'lir Wau-pou eh-see. 5 sections of land at the Grand 

 Hois on Fox river of the llliuois, where Shaytee's vil- 

 lage stands. 



2. For Shab-eh-uay, 2 sections at his village near the Paw- 

 I'aw grove. 



3. For Awn-kote, 4 sections at the village of Saw-meh- 

 uaug, on the Fox river of the Illinois. 



4. Also 15 sections of land for various individuals. 



The Winneliaygo nation cede to the U. S. all claim to lands 

 within the following lionudaries: Beginning on Rock river 

 at the mouth of Pee-keetauuo or Pee-kee-tol-a-ka, a branch 

 thereof; thence up the Pee-kee-tol a-ka to the mouth of 

 Sugar creek; thence up the said ereek to the source of the 

 eastern br.mch thereof; thence by a line running due N. to 

 the road leading from the Eastern Blue Mouud, by the most 

 northern of the four lakes, to the Portage of the Wisconsin 

 and Fox rivers; thence along the said road to the crossing 

 of Duck creek; thence by a line running in a direct course 

 to the most southeasterly bend of Lake Puck-a-way, on Fox 

 river; thence up said lake and Fox river to the Portage of 

 the Wisconsin; thence across said portage to the Wisconsin 

 river; thence down said river to the eastern line of the F. S. 

 reservatiim. at the mouth of said river, on the S. side thereof, 

 as described in the second article of the treaty of Aug. 24, 

 18U), with the Chippewas, Ottawas, and Potawatamies; 

 thence with the lines of a tract of country on the Mississippi 

 river (secured to the Chippewas, Ottawas, and Potawatamies 

 of the Illinois by the ninth article of treaty of Aug. 19, 182.5), 

 running southwanlly, jiassiiig the heads of the small streams 

 emptying into the Mississippi, to the Koek river at the Win- 

 nebaygo village, 40 miles above its mouth; thence up Rock 

 river to the mouth of the Pee-kee-tol a-ka river, the place of 

 beginning. 



Delaware Said band of Delawares cede to the U. S. the tract of 3 miles 

 (band on i s(iuare adjoining the Wyandot reservation, upon the San- 

 Sandusky dnsky river, reserved for their use by the treaty of Sept. 29, 

 river). 1S17. and they agree to remove and .join their nation on the 



W. side of the ilississippi, on the laud allotted to them, on 



or before Jan. 1, 1830. 



Delaware Whereas the treaty of Oct. 3. 1818, stipulates that the I'. S. 

 [supple- i shall provide a home for the Delaware nation west of the 

 mental to Mississippi river, .and whereas the Delawares are willing to 

 treaty of remove from the country on James's fork of White river, in 

 Oct.3,1818J. Missouri, to the country selecte<l in the fork of Kansas and 

 ' Missouri rivers, as recoumieuded by the II. S. for the perma- 

 I nent residence of the whole Delaware nation, it is agreed 

 that the country in the fork of the Kansas and Missouri 

 rivers, extending up the Kansas river to the Kansas line and 

 up the Missouri river to Camp Leavenworth and thence by 

 a line drawn westwardly, leaving a space 10 miles wide N. 

 of the Kansas boundary line for an outlet, shall be conveyed 

 and forever secured by the U. S. to saiii Delaware nation as 

 their ))crmanent residence. 

 The Delawares cede to the U. S. all claim to land in Missouri, 

 comprised in two tracts, viz: 



1. 1 he tract known as the Cape Girardeau tract, which 

 was granted to the Delawares and Shawnees .jointly 

 by Baron de Carondolet on behalf of the Spanish gov- 

 ernment, Jan. 4, 1793. 



2. The tract in SW. Missouri selected for them under the 

 provisions ot the treaty of Oct. 3, 1818, and lying along 

 the James fork of White river. 



