- The
Potawatomi /pɒtəˈwɒtəmi/ , also
spelled Pottawatomi and
Pottawatomie (among many variations), are a
Native American people of the
Great Plains, upper...
- the 1821
Treaty of
Chicago that
ceded to the
United States most of the
Potawatami holdings in Michigan, with the
exception of a
small section of Berrien...
- the
Chippewa Indians;
Which Is Also
Spoken by the Algonquin,
Otawa and
Potawatami Indians, with
Little Difference, For the Use of
Missionaries and Other...
-
County and
adjacent LaPorte County to the
north was
inhabited by the
Potawatami Indian nation.
These groups were
forcibly removed to
Kansas by the United...
- Chicago. The area
known as
Westmont earlier had been
inhabited by the
Potawatami.
After several failed attempts by the U.S.
government to
persuade the...
-
majority of the CDP and
parts of the
surrounding area. Devil's Lake was a
Potawatami village until about 1830. Most of the
people were
forced west of the Mississippi...
-
Joseph River Watershed Fish
Migration Barrier Inventory (PDF) (Report).
Potawatami Resource Conservation &
Development Council. 2011.
Retrieved July 15,...
-
Annals of the West, 295, 1850.
Potawatamies – Ind. Aff. Rep., 144, 1827.
Potawatamis –
Johnson (1765) in N. Y . Doc. Col. Hist., VII, 711, 1856. Potawatimie...
- modern-day
Halsted Street,
Western Avenue, 91st and 115th
Streets in 1839.
Potawatami Indians remained in the area
until they were
expelled by
treaty and settled...
-
Maketoquit was the
leader of a
large band of
Potawatami in
modern Clinton County,
Michigan and Shiaw****ee County,
Michigan in the late 18th and
early 19th...