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Title
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Travelers and Travel's ''Significant 'Others''': Three Visitors to the Arkansas Territory in 1818-1819
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Description
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Article details the trip made by three different men, Thomas Nuttall, Henry Schoolcraft, and Timothy Flint, into Arkansas Territory during 1818-1819. At that time the territory encompassed an area which today includes Arkansas, a thin corridor of southern Missouri and a sizeable chunk of southeastern Oklahoma. Schoolcraft aimed to demonstrate his command of the new field of mineralogy, Nuttall was to produce a scientific catalog of southwestern plants, and Flint was set on travel writing. "Schoolcraft, for example, went West to study mining, but in his Journal, he rivets his attention on the Arkansas backwoodsmen he had met. Nuttall, who went to Arkansas to study plants, gave over a great deal of the Travels to consideration of the origins of Native Americans and the dangers of federal Indian policy. Flint began his travels and Recollections as a loyal New Englander; he finished as a Western booster and apologist." Indian relations, land titles, water systems, resources, etc., are all discussed. Article ends relating the fate of each man after his travels.
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Date
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2005-10-01
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Object Type
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Magazine Article
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Title
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Map of the State of Missouri and Territory of Arkansas, Compiled from the Latest Authorities
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Description
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Map of Missouri, and Arkansas territory showing rivers, towns, counties, and a few roads. Tribal territories in Missouri are indicated for the Kickapoos, Delawares, and Shawnees. Some Osage Indian settlements are shown, in addition, in (present-day) Kansas and Oklahoma. A statistical table shows 1820 population figures for whites and blacks for some counties in Missouri and Arkansas Territory.
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Date
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1831
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Object Type
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Map