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Indian agent for the Cheyenne and Arapaho, 1878–1884. Major Laban J. Miles, Indian agent at Osage Agency to the Osage and Kaw, 1878–1893. Uncle of president Herbert Hoover. George Morgan, Indian agent to the Lenape during the American Revolutionary War [15] Abel C. Pepper, Indian agent in Indiana
Oregon Superintendents for Indian Affairs (5 P) Pages in category "United States Indian agents" The following 101 pages are in this category, out of 101 total.
Individuals authorized to interact with the natives of North America by the British government, the British Indian Department, or the provincial governments of British America. For their successors after the American Revolution, see Category:United States Indian agents and Indian Agent (Canada).
Johnson's most important legacy is the comparatively peaceful co-existence of Anglo-Americans and Indians during his tenure as Indian Agent for British North America. As an adopted Mohawk chief and husband of Mohawk Mary (Molly) Brant, according to Iroquois law, he was a trusted counselor and member of the Mohawk nation.
George Morgan was made an agent for Indian affairs in the Middle Department in 1776, and commissioned on January 8, 1777, as colonel in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War. He was assigned to Fort Pitt to oversee diplomacy with Native Americans in the area: Lenape, Shawnee, and others. The American rebels hoped to gain ...
Johnston remained at Fort Wayne through a period of growing resentment between the American Indians and the United States, [4] and filed a report summarizing Indian accounts of the Battle of Tippecanoe in 1811. [5] That same year, an Indian agency was established at Piqua, Ohio, and Johnston asked
Charanjeet Kaur, 30, stands behind her husband Daler Singh, 37, who was among dozens of Indian nationals deported by U.S. authorities back to India on a U.S. military plane, allegedly in handcuffs ...
John Clum (center) with Indians Diablo and Eskiminzin on the San Carlos Agency in 1875. John Clum was born on a farm near Claverack, New York, US.His parents were William Henry and Elizabeth van Deusen Clum of Dutch and German descent; he had five brothers and three sisters: Henry W. Clum, Jane E. Clum, Cornelia Clum, Sarah E. Clum, George A. Clum, Robert A. Clum, Cornelius N. Clum, and Alfred ...