772 



INDIAN LAND CKSSIOXS IN THE UNITED STATES 



SCHEDULE OE USTDI^TsT 



TTherf or how 

 concluded 



Itefercnce 



Dcscripliuii uf ccssii 



1838 



Jau. 15 



Bufilalo Creek, 

 New York. 



Stat. L., 

 VII, 550. 



Washington, 

 D. C. 



Nov. 6 



Great Nema- 

 ha agency. 



Stat. L., 

 VII, 566. 



Stat. L., 

 ^'II, 568. 



The several Also tho tr.act lying in Erie and Genesee counties commonly 

 tribes of known as the Tonawanilo reservation, and containing by 

 New York ' estimation 12,800 acres. 

 Indians. I 



The Tuscaroras sell to Ogden and Fellows the tract lying in 

 Niagara county and commonly known as the Tuscarora res- 

 ervatiou, or Seneca grant, containing 1,920 acres, being the 

 lauds occupied by them and not included in the lands con- 

 veyed to them by Henry Dearborn. 



Oneida (First 

 Christian 

 and Orchard 

 parties, re- 

 siding at 

 Green Bay). 



Forks of the 

 Wabash, in 

 State of In- 

 diana. 



Stat. L., 

 VII, 569. 



The First Christian and Orchard parties of Oneida Indians cede 

 to the U. S. all their title and interest iu the land set apart 

 for them in the first article of the treaty with the Menomo- 

 iiies of Feb. 8, 1831, and the second article of the treaty 

 with the same tribe of Oct. 27, 1832. 



From the ibregoing cession there shall be reserved to the said 

 Indians, to be held as other Indian lands are held, a tract of 

 land containing 100 acres for each individual, and the lines 

 of whicli shall be so ruu as to include all their settlements 

 and improvements in the vicinity of Green Bay. 



The loway tribe of Indians cede to the U. S. . 



1. All right or interest iu the country between the Mis- 



souri and Mississippi rivers and the boundary between 

 the Sacs and Foxes and Sioux, described iu the sec- 

 ond article of the treaty made with these and other 

 tribes on Aug. 19, 1825, to the full extent to which 

 such claim is recognized in the third article of said 

 treaty, and all interest or claim by virtue of the pro- 

 visions of any ti'caties since made by the U. S. with 

 the Sacs aud Foxes of the Mississippi. 



2. All claims or interest under the treaties of Aug. 4, 1824, 



July 15, 1830, and Sept. 17, 1836, except so much of the 

 last-mentioned treaty as secures to them 200 sections 

 of laud, etc. 



The Miami tribe of Indians hereby cede to the U. S. : 



1. All that tract of laud lying S. of the Wabash river and 



included within the following bounds, to- wit: Com- 

 mencing at a point on said river where the western 

 boundary line of the Miami reserve intersects the 

 same, near the mouth of Pipe creek; theuce S. 2 

 miles; thence W. 1 mile; thence S. along said bound- 

 ary line 3 miles; thence E. to the Mi.ssissiunewa 

 river; theuce up the said river with tlie meanders 

 thereof to the eastern boundary line of the said 

 Miami reserve; thence X. along said eastern bound- 

 ary line to the Wabash river; thence down the said 

 last-named river with the meanders thereof to the 

 place of lieginning. 



2. The reservation on the Wabash river below the forks 



thereof, made by the second article of the treatv of 

 Oct. 6, 1818. 



3. The residue of the reservation opposite the mouth of 



the river .-Vbouette, made by the second article of the 

 treaty ot Oct. 6. 1818. 



4. The reservation at the mouth of a creek called Flat 



Rock, where the road to White river crosses the 

 same, made by the second article of the treaty of Oct. 

 6, 1818. 



