Memoirs, official and personal
0 min read
Rate this book:
About This Book
Also contained in the same book is a second volume by McKenney, entitled ***On the Origin, History, Character and the Wrongs and Rights of the Indians, with a Plan for the Preservation and Happiness of the Remnants of that Persecuted Race***. Volume 2 begins after page 340 of Volume 1.
Thomas Loraine McKenney (1785-1859) was a Quaker who was appointed in 1816 by President Madison in 1816 as the “Superintendent of the United States Indian Trade with the Indian Tribes”. The account in Volume 1 opens with that appointment. He later served as the “Superintendent of Indian Affairs”, but was dismissed by President Andrew Jackson in 1830. McKenney was a strong advocate for educating Indians, and openly critical of the way they had been treated by the government.
Thomas Loraine McKenney (1785-1859) was a Quaker who was appointed in 1816 by President Madison in 1816 as the “Superintendent of the United States Indian Trade with the Indian Tribes”. The account in Volume 1 opens with that appointment. He later served as the “Superintendent of Indian Affairs”, but was dismissed by President Andrew Jackson in 1830. McKenney was a strong advocate for educating Indians, and openly critical of the way they had been treated by the government.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Thomas Loraine McKenney
A Catalogue of eighty Indian p
A Catalogue of eighty Indian portrait lithographs from the History of the Indian tribes of North America
A narrative of the Battle of B
A narrative of the Battle of Bladensburg
Biographical sketches and anec
Biographical sketches and anecdotes of ninety-five of 120 principal chiefs from the Indian tribes of North America
Catalogue of one hundred and f
Catalogue of one hundred and fifteen Indian portraits
Catalogue of one hundred and seventeen Indian portraits, representing eighteen different tribes
Essays on the spirit of Jacksonism