SOURCE LIST SANDY LAKECHIPPEWA REMOVAL GREAT LAKES INDIAN FISH

STATE OF CALIFORNIA C THE RESOURCES AGENCY PRIMARY
 POINT SOURCE NUTRIENT DELIVERY MODEL FOR JORDAN LAKE
  COUNTY NIMS RESOURCE TYPING DATE  

EMA5718982015 ENPREMA NETWORKS FUNDING SOURCES BACKGROUND AN ENPREMA
REVISION CONTROL INFORMATION SOURCE VOLOPUAOPUA2SISSIS11COMMONSRCSISCOMMANDRCSCOMMANDDOCV
3 DRAFT RESOURCES FOR WORKING

SOURCE LIST

SOURCE LIST


Sandy Lake/Chippewa Removal


Great Lakes Indian Fish and Wildlife Commission. “Timber, Minerals, and

Treaties Attempted Removal to Minnesota”. From website of Great

Lakes Indian Fish and Wildlife Commission.

www.glifwc.org/pub/sandy_brochure.pdf. Retrieved June 11, 2006.


Loew, Patty. Indian Nations of Wisconsin: Histories of Endurance and

Renewal. . Madison, WI: Wisconsin Historical Society Press, 2001.


Loew, Patty. Native People of Wisconsin. Madison, WI: Wisconsin

Historical Society Press, 2003.


Miller, Harry. “These I Do Not Sell: A Statement Made by the Indians.”

Wisconsin Magazine of History. Summer 2001, 26-33.


Pfaff, Tim. Paths of the People: The Ojibwe in the Chippewa Valley.

Eau Claire, WI: Chippewa Valley Museum Press, 1993.


Rasmussen, Charlie Otto. Ojibwe Journeys: Treaties, Sandy Lake & The

Waabanong Run. Odanah, WI: Great Lakes Indian Fish & Wildlife

Commission Press, 2003.


Satz, Ronald N. Chippewa Treaty Rights: The Reserved Rights of

Wisconsin’s Chippewa Indians in Historical Perspective.

Madison, WI: Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts & Letters,

1991.


Wisconsin State Historical Society. “Ojibwe leaders tell the story of the Sandy

Lake Tragedy in a picture”. From Wisconsin State Historical Society’s

Turning Points website. http:/www.wisconsinhistory.org/turningpoints/search.asp?id=75

Retrieved June 11, 2006.


Wisconsin State Historical Society. “Ojibwe chiefs protest broken treaties to

Officials in Washington in 1864.” From Wisconsin State Historical

Society’s Turning Points website.

http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/turningpoints/search.asp?id=40

Retrieved June 29, 2006.



Wisconsin State Historical Society. “United State Bureau of Indian Affairs

Documents, 1801-1906”. From Wisconsin State Historical Society’s

Connecting to the Classroom website.

http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/teachers/classroom .

Retrieved June 11, 2006.







Trail of Tears


American Memory website. memory.loc.gov/


Cherokee Nation. “Official Site of the Cherokee Nation.”

http://www.cherokee.org/

Retrieved June 17, 2006.


Golden Inc. “About North Georgia”. http://ngeorgia.com/history/nghisttt.html

Retrieved June 16, 2006.


Golden, Randy. “Our Georgia History”.

http://ourgeorgiahistory.com/indians/cherokee/trail_of_tears.html

Retrieved June 16, 2006.

National Park Service. “Trail of Tears”. http://www.nps.gov/trte/

Retrieved June 16, 2006.


Prucha, Francis Paul, ed. Documents of United States Indian Policy.

Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press, 2000.


Rozema, Vicki, ed. Voices from the Trail of Tears. Winston-Salem, NC:

John F. Blair Publishing, 2003.


Trail of Tears Association. “The Trail of Tears”. http://www.nationaltota.org/

Retrieved June 16, 2006.


Trail of Tears Association. “National Historic Trail: The Trail of Tears 1838-

1839”. http://www.rosecity.net/tears/trail/tearsnht.html

Retrieved June 17, 2006.


Tulsa Reparations Coalition. “Excerpts from Eyewitness Accounts.”

http://www.tulsareparations.org/Eyewitness.htm

Retrieved June 17, 2006.







3 RADIOCOMMUNICATION STUDY GROUPS SOURCE DOCUMENT 4CTEMP42(REV1)
ALZHEIMER’SDEMENTIA RESOURCES FOR FAMILIES THERE ARE MANY
BUILDING PLATFORM CHECKLIST (VERSION NOV2019) RESOURCE CONSENT NO


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