Black-and-white glass lantern slide of men and women standing outside in front of a building.; Slide located in section labelled 'Creek and Yuchi'; 13:1-6-d
Black-and-white glass lantern slide of a house made of wood with men and women standing outside.; Slide located in section labelled 'Creek and Yuchi'; 13:1-6-e
Black-and-white glass lantern slide portrait of a man standing outdoors in Atmore, Alabama.; Slide located in section labelled 'Creek and Yuchi'; 13:1-6-c
Glass lantern slide of Creek family, girl posing with mortar and pestle, boy posing with bow and arrow.; Slide located in section labelled 'Creek and Yuchi'; 13:1-6-h
Color lithograph of a portrait painted by Charles Bird King, Creek chief, part of 1825-1826 delegation to Washington, D.C., wearing white coat with colorful head-scarf and sash, with face paint.; Volume 2, number 9; Funding provided by: Getty Foundation
Pitcher gives route for Mr. Conrad (conchologist) to go west, tells of migration of Choctaws, road, and explorations for land for them. Has a Creek skeleton he will send when the river gets high enough.
Annotated: "N.B. The red dots mark the Canoe Track by which I descended. The black, note the deepest channel." John Vaughan, secretary of the American Philosophical Society, was asked by the Members to get "some further account of it for publication" from the donor. Brown replied on 10 June 1802 that the map "of the Muscle Shoals which you did me the favor to present to the Society, was taken under the direction of Gen[era]l Wilkinson who transmitted it to a friend together with a short description which unluckily was attached to a private confidential letter, from which his correspondent would not even suffer me to make an extract. Gen[era]l Wilkinson will no doubt supply the deficiency on his arrival at Philadelphia." Includes notes on roads to the Creek and Chickasaw, location of a Cherokee town with site of residence of Chief Double Head, and note on location of "Coxe's lodgment from whence he was dislodged by the Cherokees under the Chief Double Head without Bloodshed."