Reflections on the different states & conditions of society : with the outlines of a plan to ameliorate the circumstances of the Indians of North America, 1823.

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Reflections on the different states & conditions of society : with the outlines of a plan to ameliorate the circumstances of the Indians of North America, 1823.

Essay written in 1823 at the behest of the Company for Propagation of the Gospel in New England, in which Hunter portrays Indians as moral individuals who deserve to be saved from destruction and presents a plan to establish them on farm settlements.

1 v. (38 p.) ; 23 cm.

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SNAC Resource ID: 7399349

Newberry Library

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There are 5 Entities related to this resource.

Newberry Library

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The Newberry was founded on July 1, 1887 and opened for business on September 6 of that year. The Newberry’s establishment came about because of a contingent provision in the will of Chicago businessman Walter L. Newberry (1804-68), which left what later amounted to approximately $2.2 million for the foundation of a “free, public” library on the north side of the Chicago River, if his two children died without issue. After the deaths of Mr. Newberry’s daughters and then, in 1885, of his widow, t...

Edward E. Ayer Manuscript Collection (Newberry Library)

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Barlow, Samuel L. M. (Samuel Latham Mitchill), 1826-1889

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Samuel Latham Mitchill Barlow, prominent corporation lawyer and backstage Democrat. Co-founder of the law firm of Bowdoin, Larocque, and Barlow in 1852, he specialized in corporate law and management, particularly in railroads, mining, land, and utilities, and was a part owner of the New York World. Barlow represented the English Shareholders Association in a successful attack on the corrupt management of the Erie Railroad in 1872 and was directly responsible for the ouster of Jay Gould from the...

Hunter, John Dunn, 1798?-1827

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Adventurer; author of "Manners and customs of several Indian tribes located west of the Mississippi." From the description of John D. Hunter letter to Mr. Bandinel [manuscript], 1824 November 20. (University of Virginia). WorldCat record id: 753978655 Captive, frontiersman, and author. Seized by the Kickapoo Indians at an early age (ca. 1800) and raised by the Kansas and Osage tribes west of the Mississippi, Hunter learned to read and write after ret...