Angus P. McDonald Letter.

ArchivalResource

Angus P. McDonald Letter.

Single manuscript letter and a typescript transcript of same.

1 item.

Information

SNAC Resource ID: 7755348

Library of Congress

Related Entities

There are 3 Entities related to this resource.

McDonald, Angus, 1816-1889

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6fb7q7s (person)

Angus McDonald was born in Scotland in 1816, and came to Fort Colville in what is now the state of Washington in the fall of 1839 as a trader for the Hudson's Bay Company. He went to Fort Hall in what is now Idaho in 1840. In 1842, he married a Nez Percé woman, Catherine, at Fort Hall; their marriage was solemnized by a Jesuit missionary in 1854. They had twelve children between 1845 and 1871: Duncan, John Christina, Donald, Anne, Margaret, Thomas, Alexander, Archibald, Joseph, Angus Colville, ...

McDonald, Angus P. (Angus Pierre)

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6n66gbb (person)

Angus Pierre McDonald was the son of Hudson's Bay Company trader Angus McDonald and a Native American wife (Okanogan tribe) that McDonald took for a year in the absence of his wife, Catherine. He was born about 1861. In his later years, along with many of his siblings, he had to fight to establish his status as a U.S. citizen in order to keep his land in Niarada, Mont., after allotment of the Flathead Reservation. From the description of Angus P. McDonald Letter. (Unknown). WorldCat ...

United States., Department of the Intérior

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w68d3k69 (corporateBody)

The Alaska Public Works Program was authorized during the 81st Congress through the Alaska Public Works Act, Public Law 264. The Act authorized the General Services Administration to construct public works in Alaska, at a total cost of $70 million, then to sell them to the Territory of Alaska or other public bodies in Alaska at a purchase price that would recover approximately 50% of the total estimated cost. The authority, set to expire June 30, 1955, was extended to June 30, 1959. The program ...