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E-book
Author Hawkins, Benjamin

Title The Collected Works of Benjamin Hawkins
Published Tuscaloosa : University of Alabama Press, 2003

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Description 1 online resource (716 pages)
Series Book collections on Project MUSE
Contents Contents; Introduction; A Viatory or Journal of Distances and Observations; A Sketch of the Creek Country in the Years 1798 and 1799; Letters of Benjamin Hawkins; Index
Summary In 1795 Benjamin Hawkins, a former U.S. senator and advisor to George Washington, was appointed U.S. Indian agent and superintendent of all the tribes south of the Ohio River. Unlike most other agents, he lived among the Creek Indians for his entire tenure, from 1796 to 1816. Journeying forth from his home on the Flint River in Georgia, he served southeastern Indians as government intermediary during one of the longest eras of peace in the historic period. Hawkins's journals provide detailed information about European-Indian relations in the 18th-century frontier of the South. His descriptions
Notes Print version record
Subject Hawkins, Benjamin, 1754-1816 -- Correspondence
Hawkins, Benjamin, 1754-1816 -- Diaries
SUBJECT Hawkins, Benjamin, 1754-1816 fast
Subject Creek Indians -- History -- Sources
Indians of North America -- Government relations -- 1789-1869.
Indian agents -- Southern States -- History -- Sources
Creek Indians
Indian agents
Indians of North America -- Government relations
Gender & Ethnic Studies.
Social Sciences.
Ethnic & Race Studies.
Southern States
Genre/Form Diaries
History
Personal correspondence
Sources
Form Electronic book
Author Foster, H. Thomas
LC no. 2003008305
ISBN 9780817383718
0817383719
9780817313678
0817313672