Hakha Aiola – Where the Canada Goose Cries
A look back at what the Hakha Aiola, or Where the Canada Goose Cries, Choctaw village site might have looked like in pre-removal Mississippi.
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A look back at what the Hakha Aiola, or Where the Canada Goose Cries, Choctaw village site might have looked like in pre-removal Mississippi.
ViewPart 2 of the history and development of the Talihina Indian hospital sheds light on the early medical care of the people in the area.
ViewExploring the history of the tuberculosis epidemic of the early 1900s and the Carter Hospital, built for Choctaw and Chickasaw tuberculosis patients in Talihina, Oklahoma.
ViewFollowing the conversations between representatives of the United States and the Choctaw Nation from the 1801 Treaty of Fort Adams.
ViewContinuing to examine the conversations between representatives of the United States and the Choctaw Nation by reviewing the minuets from the 1801 Treaty of Fort Adams in this second part of the series.
ViewFor many decades prior to the 1801 Treaty of Fort Adams, Choctaw leaders had been renting Choctaw lands to the French, British, and Spanish. Rent was paid to the Choctaw Nation in the form of gifts or presents.
ViewIndian relocation didn't stop with the Trail of Tears. Read about how the Bureau of Indian Affairs ran another government sponsored relocation program.
ViewSmall mounds that go by several names dot the Oklahoma landscape, we look at what these mounds are and where they came from.
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