American+Indian+chief

  • 51Chief Niwot — or Left Hand( ed) (c. 1825 1864) was a tribal leader of the Southern Arapaho people and played an important part in the history of Colorado. Chief Niwot and his people lived along the Front Range often wintering in Boulder Valley, site of the… …

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  • 52Indian Creek massacre — Part of the Black Hawk War An 1878 depiction of the massacre …

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  • 53Indian Navy — crest Active 1947–Present Country …

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  • 54Chief Moses — (born Kwiltalahun, later called Sulk stalk scosum The Sun Chief ) (c. 1829–March 25, 1899) was a Native American chief of the Sinkiuse Columbia[1], in what is now Washington State. The territory of his tribe extended approximately from Waterville …

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  • 55Indian removals in Indiana — began in in the early 1830s and was mostly completed by 1846. The removals were preceded by several treaties, beginning in 1795, that gradually purchased most of the state from various tribes. The removals were part of a larger nationwide Indian… …

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  • 56Indian Institutes of Technology — …

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  • 57American Express — Company Type Public Traded as NYSE: AXP Dow Jones Component …

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  • 58Chief Vann House Historic Site — Chief Vann House U.S. National Register of Historic Places …

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  • 59Chief Thundercloud — Born Victor Daniels April 12, 1899(1899 04 12) Muskogee, Indian Territory, U.S. Died December 1, 1955(1955 12 01) (aged 56) Ventura, California, U.S. Occupation …

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  • 60Chief Pocatello — (1815–October 1884) was a leader of the Shoshone, a Native American people in western North America. He led attacks against early settlers during a time of increasing strife between emigrants and Native Americans. After making peace with the… …

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