Black and white photograph of Cherokee men, in native attire, head-dresses, commemorating the treaty of Dumplin Creek, Kodak, Tennessee.; Number 3, item #1; Funding provided by: Getty Foundation
Discusses available Cherokee recordings, difficulties surrounding making new recordings, and details on subsequent Inuvialuit recordings. This program was made as part of a wire recording sent to Floyd Lounsbury by John W. Gillespie, containing recordings made by himself and excerpts of other field recordings he had acquired.; Also see the John W. Gillespie correspondence in the Floyd Lounsbury papers.
This recording has been identified as culturally sensitive. Digital access and reproduction is restricted. Please contact the Curator of Native American Materials for more information.; For text of this program and Speck's original field notes see: Ms. Coll. 126, Box 11, IV(17D3). See Related Resource. Originally recorded on phonograph cylinder, then transferred to reel-to-reel in 1964.
Black and white photgraph of exhibited Cherokee rattlesnake mask, with carved face, snake, and fur, of Will West Long.; Folder III (6B1o); Freeman guide #1661; Funding provided by: Getty Foundation
Explorations in the Louisiana country. Record of travel on road built between Choctaw and Chickasaw country; notes condition of Indian-white relations, increase of white population. At Muscle Shoals he stays with Cherokee chiefs Doublehead and Skiowska. Finds Indians have good farms, good furnishings, good fences, good stock. One Indian runs an inn. This item was donated by Reverend J. P. Wilson. The author of this item has been identified at different times as either James Patriot Wilson or Reverend Patrick Wilson.; 2p.and add.: "For John Vaughan Esq."
audio:9662; APSdigrec_4076; Recording Number: 01; Program Number: 01
Description
Cassette copy of an unidentified commercial phonograph record containing a dramatic reading of John G. Burnett's account of the Cherokee removal, or Trail of Tears, originally given on his 80th birthday in 1890.