User:Batsondl/Sandbox Michigan

Online Resources
Native American Online Genealogy Records
 * 1839 Carp River
 * [http://freepages.rootsweb.com/~trotochaud/genealogy/ "That Ignorant Frenchman- Jean Baptiste Trotochaud"


 * Onalee Jean CableA short history and description of the Ojibbeway Indians


 * The childhood of Ji-shib, the Ojibwa
 * Ojibwa Texts
 * Letters on the Mission to the Ojibwa Indians
 * The Mideẃiwin: Or "Grand Medicine Society" of the Ojibwa
 * A short history and description of the Ojibbeway Indians
 * Preliminary survey of the remains of the Chippewa settlements on La Pointe
 * History of the Ojebway Indians
 * The Traditional History and Characteristic Sketches of the Ojibway Nation
 * Sketches of a Tour to the Lakes
 * Chippewa Music
 * Claims Against Certain Chippewa Bands
 * The Dream Dance of the Chippewa and Menominee Indians
 * History of the Ottawa and Chippewa Indians of Michigan
 * Catholic Encyclopedia
 * Suggested Reading List: Potawatomi
 * The Indian Tribes of the Upper Mississippi Valley
 * Uses of plants by the Chippewa Indians
 * NARRATIVE OF AN Attempt to Establish a Mission Among the Chippewa Indians of Canada
 * Anishinabe: 6 studies of modern Chippewa
 * The Indian in Michigan
 * Memorial of the Chippeway, Pottawatomy and Ottawa Indians
 * Retracing Detroit's Native American Trails
 * Cass County
 * Village life
 * Indian Villages, Reservations, and Removal
 * Clements Library holdings

Tribes Recognized by the Federal Government
Bay Mills Indian Community Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Hannahville Indian Community Nottewaseppi Huron Band of The Potawatomi Keweenaw Bay Indian Community Lac Vieux Desert Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians of Michigan Little River Band of Ottawa Indians Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians Match-e-be-nash-she-wish Band of Pottawatomi Indians of Michigan Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indians (Michigan and Indiana) Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa

Tribes Recognized by the State of Michigan
There are currently no tribes recognized by the State Michigan.

Agencies
The following list of agencies that have operated or now exist in Michigan has been compiled from Hill's Office of Indian Affairs..., Hill's Guide to Records in the National Archives Relating to American Indians , and others.


 * Great Lakes Agency
 * Lac du Flambeau Agency
 * Mackinac Agency, 1828-1880
 * Michigan Agency, Federal Square Office Plaza, P.O. Box 884,Sault Ste. Marie, MI 49783
 * 1838 employees
 * Saginaw Subagency
 * Sault Ste. Marie Agency, 1824-1852

Allotment Records
Allotted Tribes of Michigan

•Isabella Reservation (Chippewa of Saginaw, Sawn Creek and Black River), L’Anse and Vieux Desert, Ontonagon


 * 1836 Ance Band Annuity List
 * 1839 Annuity of Mackinac, Bois Blanc, and Round Islands
 * 1839 Annuity List For Shawbwayway's Band Les Cheneaux Island Area
 * 1842 Annuity List For Ance's Band Oak Pointe Settlement
 * Annuity List for Mackinac Band 1842

Lists, Census and Payment Rolls

 * Michigan Education Library
 * Family History
 * 1839 mixed-blood list It should be noted that the list with notes are published in -  All our relations: Chippewa mixed bloods and the Treaty of 1837, (Theresa M. Schenck).
 * 1836 mixed-blood list
 * 1842 Mix-bloods
 * Sioux and Chippewa Half-breed Scrip
 * Ziibiwing Center listing
 * Lantz, Raymond C. - Ottawa &amp; Chippewa Indians of Michigan, 1870-1909.  “ - Ottawa and Chippewa Indians of Michigan, 1855-1868.   “ - Potawatomi Indians of Michigan, 1843 – 1904.
 * Government records

Michigan Indian Schools
 Indian Schools Currently Open: (if Applicable) Historical Schools:(if Applicable)


 * Bay Mills School
 * Bena School
 * Mt. Pleasant Indian School

Church Records

 * Michilimackinac Marriage Records
 * Mackinac Baptism Records 1810-1821
 * L'Anse - Church Records
 * Oka, Quebec

Indian Health Agencies in Michigan
(OPTIONAL HEADING)

Maps

 * Facebook Photo
 * 1996 locations
 * Canoe Trade Routes
 * Fur Trade Routes
 * Indian Trails
 * Archaeological Atlas
 * Early Settlement
 * 200 years ago

Biographies
Miscellaneous leaders, not all resided in Michigan but may have had descendants -

Chippewa Indian Chiefs and Leaders


 * Blackbird, Andrew J.

Andrew Blackbird

Andrew Blackbird

AIS Assets

Michigan Markers

Book Blackbird


 * Cobmoosa

Wikipedia

Monument

Life

Sketch


 * Minavavana


 * Okemos

Michigan Markers

John Okemos

Chief Okemos

The Writings Okemos


 * Pontiac 

Chief Pontiac

American Indians History

Native Heritage Project

Ottawa Chief Pontiac

Chief Pontiac-Ottawa

Genealogy Trails

Biographic

Pontiac and the Indian Uprising, by H.H. Peckham, 1947.


 * Shawanese, Jonas. Resident of Harbor Springs, Michigan. The first 23 pages consist of a speech pertaining to the Indians of the Cheboygan and Grand Traverse area of Michigan. The paper is supplemented by copies of documents relating to Indian treaties and Indian affairs.
 * Shaw-shaw-way-nay-beece

Wikipedia


 * Shoppenagon

Hendershot, Robert M. “The Legacy of an Ojibwe ‘Lumber Chief’: David Shoppenagon,   MICHIGAN HISTORICAL REVIEW, 29:2, 41-69.


 * Waukazo(o)

Descendants


 * Wolfe, Payson

Payson-Wolfe

History Grand Rapids

Wiki Tree

Archives
(OPTIONAL HEADING)

Libraries
(OPTIONAL HEADING)

Museums
(OPTIONAL HEADING)

Societies
(OPTIONAL HEADING)

Other Repositories
MICHIGAN HISTORICAL REVIEW articles

CALLOWAY, Colin G. “The End of an Era: British-Indian Relations in the Great Lakes Region after the War of 1812,” 12:2, 1-20.

CASSIDY, Michelle. “‘The More Noise They Make”: Odawa and Ojibwe Encounters with American Missionaries in Northern Michigan, 1837-1871,” 38:2, 1-34.

CLIFTON, James A. “ Michigan’s Indians: Tribe, Nation, Estate, Racial, Ethnic, or Special Interest Group?” 20:2, 93-152.

DOHERTY, Robert. “‘We Don’t Want Them To Hold Their Hands Over Our Heads’: The Economic Strategies of the L’Anse Chippewas, 1830-1860,” 20:2, 47-70.

FIXICO, Donald L. “The Alliance of the Three Fires in Trade and War, 1630-1812,” 20:2, 1-23.

GENSER, Wallace. “‘Habitants,’ ‘Half-Breeds,’ and Homeless Children: Transformations in Métis and Yankee-Yorker relations in Early Michigan,” 24:1, 23-28. GILLS, Bradley J. “Navigating the Landscape of Assimilation: The Anishnabeg, the Lumber Industry, and the Failure of Federal Indian Policy in Michigan, 34:2, 57-74. GOUGH, Barry. “Michilimackinac and Prairie du Chien: Northern Anchors of British Authority in the War of 1812,” 38:1, 83-105.

GRAY, Susan E. “Limits and Possibilities: White-Indian Relations in Western Michigan in the Era of Removal,” 20:2, 71-91. JUNG, Patrick J. “To Extend Fair and Impartial Justice to the Indian: Native Americans and the Additional Court of Michigan Territory, 1823-1836,” 23:2, 25-48.

KARAMANSKI, Theodore J. “State Citizenship as a Tool of Indian Persistence: A Case Study of the Anishinaabeg of Michigan,” 37.2, 119-138. KERRIGAN, William. “Apples on the Border: Orchards and the Contest for the Great Lakes,” 34:1, 25-41. LEWIS, G. Malcolm. “First Nations Mapmaking in the Great Lakes Region in Intercultural Contexts: A Historical Review,” 30:2, 1-34. LEWIS, G. Malcolm. “Intracultural Mapmaking by First Nations Peoples in the Great Lakes Region: A Historical Review,” 32:1, 1-17. MCCLURKEN, James M. “Ottawa Adaptive Strategies to Indian Removal,” 12:1, 29-55.

MEAD, Rebecca J. "The Kawbawgum Cases: Native Claims and the Discovery of Iron in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan." 40:2. 1-32. MIDDLETON, Richard. “Pontiac: Local Warrior or Pan-Indian Leader?” 32:2, 1-32. ​ MUMFORD, Jeremy. “Mixed-Race Identity in a Nineteenth-Century Family: The Schoolcrafts of Sault Ste. Marie, 1824-27,” 25:1, 1-23.

PEARCE, Margaret Wickens. “The Holes in the Grid: Reservation Surveys in Lower Michigan,” 30:2, 135-165. PETERS, Bernard C. “Hypocrisy on the Great Lakes Frontier: The Use of Whiskey by the Michigan Department of Indian Affairs,” 18:2, 1-13. PETERS, Bernard C. “Indian-Grave Robbing at Sault Ste. Marie, 1826,” 23:2, 49-80. PETERS, Bernard C. “John Johnston’s 1822 Description of the Lake Superior Chippewa,” 20:2, 25-46. PETERS, Bernard C. “Wa-bish-kee-pe-nas and the Chippewa Reverence for Copper,” 15:2, 47-60. PFLUG, Melissa A. “Politics of Great Lakes Indian Religion,” 18:2, 15-31. SCHENCK, Theresa. “Who Owns Sault Ste. Marie?” 28:1, 109-120. SCHWARTZ, James Z. “Taming the ‘Savagery’ of Michigan’s Indians,” 34:2, 39-55.

SECUNDA, Ben. “The Road to Ruin?: ‘Civilization’ and the Origins of a ‘Michigan road Band’ of Potawatomi,” 34:1, 119-149. STEVENS, Paul L. “The Indian Diplomacy of Capt. Richard B. Lernoult, British Military Commandant of Detroit, 1774-1775,” 13:1, 47-82.

TANNER, Helen Hornbeck. “Mapping the Grand Traverse Indian Country: The Contributions of Peter Dougherty,” 31:1, 45-92. TEASDALE, Guillaume. “Old Friends and New Foes: French Settlers and Indians in the Detroit River Border Region,” 38:2, 35-62.

TUCKER, Patrick M. and Laurel E. Heyman. “Welcome to Hard Times: Two French Merchants and Militiamen in the Detroit River Region during the War of 1812,” 38:1, 53-81.

WIDDER, Keith R. “After the Conquest: Michilimackinac, a Borderland in Transition,” 34:1, 43-61. WIDDER, Keith R. “The 1767 Maps of Robert Rogers and Jonathan Carver: A Proposal for the Establishment of the Colony of Michilimakinac,” 30:2, 35-76.


 * WOLF, Payson

Language

 * Anishinaabemowin
 * Bird Nomenclature of the Chippewa Indians
 * A Theoretical and Practical Grammar of the Otchipwe Language
 * Native Tech
 * Dictionary
 * Native Language
 * A Cheap and Concise Dictionary of the Ojibway and English Languages: English
 * A Dictionary of the Otchipwe Language, Explained in English: Part I
 * A Dictionary of the Otchipwe Language, Explained in English: Part II
 * Wikipedia
 * Ojebway Language Manual

The name Michigan comes from a Chippewan word "Michigana" meaning "great or large lake" The following list of tribes and bands of American Indians who have lived in Michigan has been compiled from Hodge's Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico...  and Swanton's Indian Tribes of North America.


 * Indians of the Midwest
 * Great Lakes Region
 * Natives Michigan
 * Native American and French Settlement Patterns
 * Michigan Tribes
 * Michigan Natives
 * Wikipedia

Tribes:


 * Chippewa

Literature - Welker Chippewa

Tolats Ojib

Native Heritage Project Chippewa

Native Tech

Every Culture

History


 * Delaware

Tolats Delaware


 * Fox - Tolats
 * Huron - see Wyandot

Tolats


 * Kickapoo

Tolats


 * Menominee

Dick Shovel


 * Miami

Dick Shovel


 * Neutrals - Dick Shovel
 * Noquet - Access Genealogy
 * Ottawa

A starting point for doing Ottawa/Odawa Indian genealogy research - Ottawa Indians

Scott Nicholson

Native Languages

Tolats


 * Potawatomi

Trail of Tears - Potawatomi

Potawatomi Traditionals Prairie Band Res. 1930's Part 1

Potawatomi Traditionals Prairie Band Res. 1930's Part 2

Potawatomi Traditionals Prairie Band Res. 1930's Part 3

Tolats


 * Sauk - Tolats
 * Winnebago

Dick Shovel


 * Wyandot
 * Tribal Map

Tribes Recognized by the State of Michigan
Burt Lake Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians, Grand River Band of Ottawa Indians, Gun Lake Village Band of Grand Lake Ottawa Indians, (Match-e-be-nash-she-wish Band of Pottawatomi Indians United Nations of Chippewa, Ottawa, and Potawatomi), Swan Creek Black River Confederated Ojibwa Tribe, and Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe of Michigan,

Bands:


 * Desert Band of Lake Superior Chippewa
 * Croix Band of Chippewa
 * Grand River- Grand River
 * Grand Traverse
 * Keweenaw Bay
 * L'Anse
 * Lac Vieux Desert
 * Little River
 * Little Traverse
 * Mackinac
 * Ontonagon
 * Saginaw - Chippewa
 * Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa
 * Michigan Wikipedia
 * Michigan Government Documents

Families: Indian, Metis
Multiple families:


 * Native American Families
 * Habitant Heritage
 * Research Resources

ALLEN / Naish-ka-ze

Report

ANCE / ANSE


 * Genealogy wise

ASKIN


 * WorldConnect

ASSIGINACK


 * Facebook groups

ASSINIWE


 * Facebook Groups

BAILLEY


 * Chesterton Tribune
 * Facebook Group
 * Wikipedia

BEAUBIEN


 * Facebook Group

BEAUCHAMP / BOUSHAW


 * Facebook Group

BERTRAND


 * Joseph and Madeleine

BISSAILON


 * WorldConnect

BLACKBIRD


 * Facebook Group

BOURASSA


 * Facebook Groups

CADOT(TE)


 * Mathurin Cadeau
 * Fur Trader's Account Book

CAMPAU


 * Facebook Group

CHEESMAN

CHIPPEWA


 * Facebook Group

COBMOOSA aka WALKER


 * Facebook Groups
 * Facebook Groups

COON / KOON


 * (see attached file)

CORNSTALK


 * Facebook Group

COWN / CANNE / COWAN 


 * Native American Ancestry Mackinac-Metis-Families

DAVENPORT


 * Family Tree Maker

ERMENTINGER


 * Ermentinger Family

ESPIEW


 * Espiew Family

FAGNANT &amp; FONTAINE


 * Mackinac Metis Families

FARLING


 * Facebook Group

GESICK


 * Facebook Groups

GORNOR / GURNOE


 * Facebook Group

GREENSKY


 * Facebook Group

JACKO


 * Facebook Groups

JOHNSTON


 * John-Johnston

KAWBAAHSHE


 * Facebook Group

Kinonchausie


 * WorldConnect

LaFRAMBOISE

(De)LANGLADE


 * Hoxsie Family
 * Facebook Group

LAPINE


 * Facebook Group

LaPLANTE


 * Facebook Group

LEASK


 * Facebook Group
 * WorldConnect
 * WorldConnect
 * WorldCpnnect
 * WorldCenncet

LEBLANC


 * Facebook Group

LOUISIGNAN


 * Facebook Groups

LOZON


 * Facebook Groups

MADOSH


 * Facebook Groups

MAISHCAW / MAISHKAW


 * Facebook Group

MARCOT


 * WorldConnect

MARTIN - SOUD


 * Habitant Heritage
 * Facebook Group

MASTA(W)


 * Facebook Group
 * Facebook Group

McGULPIN


 * Facebook Groups

McSAWBY


 * McSawby Family

MEEMEE


 * Facebook Group

MONTOUR / MONTURE


 * Family
 * WorldConnect
 * WorldConnect

Nay-wash-metta-wash Descendants


 * Facebook Groups

(O')FLINN / FLYNN


 * Facebook Group

OTTOWANCE


 * Facebook Group

OZAMICK


 * Facebook Groups

Pay-She-Ne-Ne-Abe descendants


 * Facebook Groups

PONGOWISH


 * Facebook Group

PONTIAC


 * Facebook Groups

PRICKETT


 * Facebook Groups

SABO / SABBOOE


 * Sabbooe Families

SHOMIN


 * Facebook Groups

SHOPPENGON


 * Facebook Group

SOLOMON


 * Facebook Group

ST.ONGE


 * Facebook Group

TANNER


 * Facebook Group

TROT(T)IER


 * Facebook Group

WABANIMIKI


 * Facebook Group

Burt Lake Band

 * Burt Lake Indians(FRIDAY, Matthew J. “Morality vs. Legality: Michigan’s Burt Lake Indians and the Burning of Indianville,” MICHIGAN HISTORICAL REVIEW, 33:1, 109-123.)

MICHIGAN HISTORY magazine, Jan/Feb 2016 issue has an article “The Burt Lake Burn-Out”, by Eric Hemenway.

MICHIGAN JOURNAL

Miscellaneous

 * [http://freepages.rootsweb.com/~trotochaud/genealogy/ "That Ignorant Frenchman- Jean Baptiste Trotochaud"


 * Onalee Jean CableA short history and description of the Ojibbeway Indians


 * The childhood of Ji-shib, the Ojibwa
 * Ojibwa Texts
 * Letters on the Mission to the Ojibwa Indians
 * The Mideẃiwin: Or "Grand Medicine Society" of the Ojibwa
 * A short history and description of the Ojibbeway Indians
 * Preliminary survey of the remains of the Chippewa settlements on La Pointe
 * History of the Ojebway Indians
 * The Traditional History and Characteristic Sketches of the Ojibway Nation
 * Sketches of a Tour to the Lakes
 * Chippewa Music
 * Claims Against Certain Chippewa Bands
 * The Dream Dance of the Chippewa and Menominee Indians
 * History of the Ottawa and Chippewa Indians of Michigan
 * Catholic Encyclopedia
 * Suggested Reading List: Potawatomi
 * The Indian Tribes of the Upper Mississippi Valley
 * Uses of plants by the Chippewa Indians
 * NARRATIVE OF AN Attempt to Establish a Mission Among the Chippewa Indians of Canada
 * Anishinabe: 6 studies of modern Chippewa
 * The Indian in Michigan
 * Memorial of the Chippeway, Pottawatomy and Ottawa Indians
 * Retracing Detroit's Native American Trails
 * Cass County
 * Village life
 * Indian Villages, Reservations, and Removal
 * Clements Library holdings

MICHIGAN HISTORICAL REVIEW articles

CALLOWAY, Colin G. “The End of an Era: British-Indian Relations in the Great Lakes Region after the War of 1812,” 12:2, 1-20.

CASSIDY, Michelle. “‘The More Noise They Make”: Odawa and Ojibwe Encounters with American Missionaries in Northern Michigan, 1837-1871,” 38:2, 1-34.

CLIFTON, James A. “ Michigan’s Indians: Tribe, Nation, Estate, Racial, Ethnic, or Special Interest Group?” 20:2, 93-152.

DOHERTY, Robert. “‘We Don’t Want Them To Hold Their Hands Over Our Heads’: The Economic Strategies of the L’Anse Chippewas, 1830-1860,” 20:2, 47-70.

FIXICO, Donald L. “The Alliance of the Three Fires in Trade and War, 1630-1812,” 20:2, 1-23.

GENSER, Wallace. “‘Habitants,’ ‘Half-Breeds,’ and Homeless Children: Transformations in Métis and Yankee-Yorker relations in Early Michigan,” 24:1, 23-28. GILLS, Bradley J. “Navigating the Landscape of Assimilation: The Anishnabeg, the Lumber Industry, and the Failure of Federal Indian Policy in Michigan, 34:2, 57-74. GOUGH, Barry. “Michilimackinac and Prairie du Chien: Northern Anchors of British Authority in the War of 1812,” 38:1, 83-105.

GRAY, Susan E. “Limits and Possibilities: White-Indian Relations in Western Michigan in the Era of Removal,” 20:2, 71-91. JUNG, Patrick J. “To Extend Fair and Impartial Justice to the Indian: Native Americans and the Additional Court of Michigan Territory, 1823-1836,” 23:2, 25-48.

KARAMANSKI, Theodore J. “State Citizenship as a Tool of Indian Persistence: A Case Study of the Anishinaabeg of Michigan,” 37.2, 119-138. KERRIGAN, William. “Apples on the Border: Orchards and the Contest for the Great Lakes,” 34:1, 25-41. LEWIS, G. Malcolm. “First Nations Mapmaking in the Great Lakes Region in Intercultural Contexts: A Historical Review,” 30:2, 1-34. LEWIS, G. Malcolm. “Intracultural Mapmaking by First Nations Peoples in the Great Lakes Region: A Historical Review,” 32:1, 1-17. MCCLURKEN, James M. “Ottawa Adaptive Strategies to Indian Removal,” 12:1, 29-55.

MEAD, Rebecca J. "The Kawbawgum Cases: Native Claims and the Discovery of Iron in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan." 40:2. 1-32. MIDDLETON, Richard. “Pontiac: Local Warrior or Pan-Indian Leader?” 32:2, 1-32. ​ MUMFORD, Jeremy. “Mixed-Race Identity in a Nineteenth-Century Family: The Schoolcrafts of Sault Ste. Marie, 1824-27,” 25:1, 1-23.

PEARCE, Margaret Wickens. “The Holes in the Grid: Reservation Surveys in Lower Michigan,” 30:2, 135-165. PETERS, Bernard C. “Hypocrisy on the Great Lakes Frontier: The Use of Whiskey by the Michigan Department of Indian Affairs,” 18:2, 1-13. PETERS, Bernard C. “Indian-Grave Robbing at Sault Ste. Marie, 1826,” 23:2, 49-80. PETERS, Bernard C. “John Johnston’s 1822 Description of the Lake Superior Chippewa,” 20:2, 25-46. PETERS, Bernard C. “Wa-bish-kee-pe-nas and the Chippewa Reverence for Copper,” 15:2, 47-60. PFLUG, Melissa A. “Politics of Great Lakes Indian Religion,” 18:2, 15-31. SCHENCK, Theresa. “Who Owns Sault Ste. Marie?” 28:1, 109-120. SCHWARTZ, James Z. “Taming the ‘Savagery’ of Michigan’s Indians,” 34:2, 39-55.

SECUNDA, Ben. “The Road to Ruin?: ‘Civilization’ and the Origins of a ‘Michigan road Band’ of Potawatomi,” 34:1, 119-149. STEVENS, Paul L. “The Indian Diplomacy of Capt. Richard B. Lernoult, British Military Commandant of Detroit, 1774-1775,” 13:1, 47-82.

TANNER, Helen Hornbeck. “Mapping the Grand Traverse Indian Country: The Contributions of Peter Dougherty,” 31:1, 45-92. TEASDALE, Guillaume. “Old Friends and New Foes: French Settlers and Indians in the Detroit River Border Region,” 38:2, 35-62.

TUCKER, Patrick M. and Laurel E. Heyman. “Welcome to Hard Times: Two French Merchants and Militiamen in the Detroit River Region during the War of 1812,” 38:1, 53-81.

WIDDER, Keith R. “After the Conquest: Michilimackinac, a Borderland in Transition,” 34:1, 43-61. WIDDER, Keith R. “The 1767 Maps of Robert Rogers and Jonathan Carver: A Proposal for the Establishment of the Colony of Michilimakinac,” 30:2, 35-76.


 * WOLF, Payson

WABANIMIKI


 * Facebook Group