Southern Appalachian Digital Collections

Western Carolina University (3) View all
  • Craft Revival (2)
  • Great Smoky Mountains - A Park for America (1)
  • Highlights from Western Carolina University (2)
  • Canton Champion Fibre Company (0)
  • Cherokee Traditions (0)
  • Civil War in Southern Appalachia (0)
  • Horace Kephart (0)
  • Journeys Through Jackson (0)
  • LGBTQ Archive of Jackson County (0)
  • Oral Histories of Western North Carolina (0)
  • Picturing Appalachia (0)
  • Stories of Mountain Folk (0)
  • Travel Western North Carolina (0)
  • Western Carolina University Fine Art Museum Vitreograph Collection (0)
  • Western Carolina University Herbarium (0)
  • Western Carolina University: Making Memories (0)
  • Western Carolina University Publications (0)
  • Western Carolina University Restricted Electronic Theses and Dissertations (0)
  • Western North Carolina Regional Maps (0)
  • World War II in Southern Appalachia (0)
University of North Carolina Asheville (0) View all
  • Faces of Asheville (0)
  • Forestry in Western North Carolina (0)
  • Grove Park Inn Photograph Collection (0)
  • Isaiah Rice Photograph Collection (0)
  • Morse Family Chimney Rock Park Collection (0)
  • Picturing Asheville and Western North Carolina (0)
  • Appalachian Region, Southern (1)
  • Cherokee County (N.C.) (1)
  • Jackson County (N.C.) (1)
  • Asheville (N.C.) (0)
  • Avery County (N.C.) (0)
  • Blount County (Tenn.) (0)
  • Buncombe County (N.C.) (0)
  • Clay County (N.C.) (0)
  • Graham County (N.C.) (0)
  • Great Smoky Mountains National Park (N.C. and Tenn.) (0)
  • Haywood County (N.C.) (0)
  • Henderson County (N.C.) (0)
  • Knox County (Tenn.) (0)
  • Knoxville (Tenn.) (0)
  • Lake Santeetlah (N.C.) (0)
  • Macon County (N.C.) (0)
  • Madison County (N.C.) (0)
  • McDowell County (N.C.) (0)
  • Mitchell County (N.C.) (0)
  • Polk County (N.C.) (0)
  • Qualla Boundary (0)
  • Rutherford County (N.C.) (0)
  • Swain County (N.C.) (0)
  • Transylvania County (N.C.) (0)
  • Watauga County (N.C.) (0)
  • Waynesville (N.C.) (0)
  • Yancey County (N.C.) (0)
  • Artifacts (object Genre) (1)
  • Crafts (art Genres) (1)
  • Letters (correspondence) (1)
  • Minutes (administrative Records) (1)
  • Transcripts (1)
  • Aerial Views (0)
  • Albums (books) (0)
  • Articles (0)
  • Cards (information Artifacts) (0)
  • Clippings (information Artifacts) (0)
  • Depictions (visual Works) (0)
  • Design Drawings (0)
  • Drawings (visual Works) (0)
  • Envelopes (0)
  • Financial Records (0)
  • Fliers (printed Matter) (0)
  • Glass Plate Negatives (0)
  • Guidebooks (0)
  • Internegatives (0)
  • Interviews (0)
  • Land Surveys (0)
  • Manuscripts (documents) (0)
  • Maps (documents) (0)
  • Memorandums (0)
  • Negatives (photographs) (0)
  • Newsletters (0)
  • Occupation Currency (0)
  • Paintings (visual Works) (0)
  • Pen And Ink Drawings (0)
  • Personal Narratives (0)
  • Photographs (0)
  • Poetry (0)
  • Portraits (0)
  • Postcards (0)
  • Programs (documents) (0)
  • Publications (documents) (0)
  • Questionnaires (0)
  • Scrapbooks (0)
  • Sheet Music (0)
  • Slides (photographs) (0)
  • Sound Recordings (0)
  • Specimens (0)
  • Speeches (documents) (0)
  • Text Messages (0)
  • Tintypes (photographs) (0)
  • Video Recordings (physical Artifacts) (0)
  • Vitreographs (0)
  • George Masa Collection (1)
  • A.L. Ensley Collection (0)
  • Appalachian Industrial School Records (0)
  • Appalachian National Park Association Records (0)
  • Axley-Meroney Collection (0)
  • Bayard Wootten Photograph Collection (0)
  • Bethel Rural Community Organization Collection (0)
  • Blumer Collection (0)
  • C.W. Slagle Collection (0)
  • Canton Area Historical Museum (0)
  • Carlos C. Campbell Collection (0)
  • Cataloochee History Project (0)
  • Cherokee Studies Collection (0)
  • Daisy Dame Photograph Album (0)
  • Daniel Boone VI Collection (0)
  • Doris Ulmann Photograph Collection (0)
  • Elizabeth H. Lasley Collection (0)
  • Elizabeth Woolworth Szold Fleharty Collection (0)
  • Frank Fry Collection (0)
  • Gideon Laney Collection (0)
  • Hazel Scarborough Collection (0)
  • Hiram C. Wilburn Papers (0)
  • Historic Photographs Collection (0)
  • Horace Kephart Collection (0)
  • Humbard Collection (0)
  • Hunter and Weaver Families Collection (0)
  • I. D. Blumenthal Collection (0)
  • Isadora Williams Collection (0)
  • Jesse Bryson Stalcup Collection (0)
  • Jim Thompson Collection (0)
  • John B. Battle Collection (0)
  • John C. Campbell Folk School Records (0)
  • John Parris Collection (0)
  • Judaculla Rock project (0)
  • Kelly Bennett Collection (0)
  • Love Family Papers (0)
  • Major Wiley Parris Civil War Letters (0)
  • Map Collection (0)
  • McFee-Misemer Civil War Letters (0)
  • Mountain Heritage Center Collection (0)
  • Norburn - Robertson - Thomson Families Collection (0)
  • Pauline Hood Collection (0)
  • Pre-Guild Collection (0)
  • Qualla Arts and Crafts Mutual Collection (0)
  • R.A. Romanes Collection (0)
  • Rosser H. Taylor Collection (0)
  • Samuel Robert Owens Collection (0)
  • Sara Madison Collection (0)
  • Sherrill Studio Photo Collection (0)
  • Smoky Mountains Hiking Club Collection (0)
  • Stories of Mountain Folk - Radio Programs (0)
  • The Reporter, Western Carolina University (0)
  • Venoy and Elizabeth Reed Collection (0)
  • WCU Gender and Sexuality Oral History Project (0)
  • WCU Mountain Heritage Center Oral Histories (0)
  • WCU Oral History Collection - Mountain People, Mountain Lives (0)
  • WCU Students Newspapers Collection (0)
  • Western North Carolina Tomorrow Black Oral History Project (0)
  • William Williams Stringfield Collection (0)
  • Zebulon Weaver Collection (0)
  • Weaving -- Appalachian Region, Southern (1)
  • African Americans (0)
  • Appalachian Trail (0)
  • Artisans (0)
  • Cherokee art (0)
  • Cherokee artists -- North Carolina (0)
  • Cherokee language (0)
  • Cherokee pottery (0)
  • Cherokee women (0)
  • Church buildings (0)
  • Civilian Conservation Corps (U.S.) (0)
  • College student newspapers and periodicals (0)
  • Dams (0)
  • Dance (0)
  • Education (0)
  • Floods (0)
  • Folk music (0)
  • Forced removal, 1813-1903 (0)
  • Forest conservation (0)
  • Forests and forestry (0)
  • Gender nonconformity (0)
  • Great Smoky Mountains National Park (N.C. and Tenn.) (0)
  • Hunting (0)
  • Landscape photography (0)
  • Logging (0)
  • Maps (0)
  • Mines and mineral resources (0)
  • North Carolina -- Maps (0)
  • Paper industry (0)
  • Postcards (0)
  • Pottery (0)
  • Railroad trains (0)
  • Rural electrification -- North Carolina, Western (0)
  • School integration -- Southern States (0)
  • Segregation -- North Carolina, Western (0)
  • Slavery (0)
  • Sports (0)
  • Storytelling (0)
  • Waterfalls -- Great Smoky Mountains (N.C. and Tenn.) (0)
  • Wood-carving -- Appalachian Region, Southern (0)
  • World War, 1939-1945 (0)

Federal court records: Latimer v. Poteet, Meigs Post

  • wcu_great_smoky_mtns-9771.jpg
4 / 13
Item
  • SUPREME COURT Lattimer v. Poteet. hence, I conclude, it will not be essential to extend it. That which the line reported on will intersect, if continued, meanin from the north boundary of North Carolina, I caused to be run, and marked, about sixty miles from the mouth of McNamee's creek to Rutherford's war trace, by Mr. Joseph Harden, in the course of last winter. Harden did not run north, as required by the treaty of Holston, but south, according to the treaty of Hopewell." The writer then states certain parts of the line, which, in his opinion, need not be run. In a letter from Governor Blount to the secretary of war (1 American State Papers, Indian Affairs, 029), dated July 15th, 1791, in reference to the treaty of Holston, concluded the 2d of the same month, he says, " According to my instructions, I proposed that the ridge dividing the waters of Tennessee from those of Little river should form a part of the boundary ; but the Indians would not agree to it, but insisted on a straight line which should cross the Holston where that ridge should strike it ; and were so firmly fixed in their determination, that I could not prevail on them to agree to any other." And in another letter from Governor Blount to the secretary (same page), dated 2d March 1792, he says, " I can't help remarking, that I proposed at the treaty that the ridge should be the line. Yon will recollect, that I was so instructed ; and the chiefs were unanimously opposed to it, saying it should be a straight line ; and that it wi dence that my heart was not straight, that I wanted a crooked line. The difficulty will be, in running the line, to ascertain where the ridge that, divides the waters of Little river and Tennessee will strike the Holston ; for, 1 it seems, the white people *cannot agree upon it—a circumstance I unknown to me at the time the Indians proposed it; but from the best information I can obtain, I am induced to believe, it will prove to be lower down than they expected ; and in that case, it* is my opinion, that the words of the treaty ought not to be so strictly adhered to as to give them any great degree of dissatisfaction." In his answer of 22d April 1792, the secretary of war says, " I am commanded by the president of the United States, to whom your letters are constantly submitted, to say, with respect to your remarks upon the line at Little river, that you will be pleased to make a liberal construction of that article, so as to render it entirely satisfactory to the Indians, and at the same time as consistently as may be with the treaty." On the 2d October 1798, the treaty of Tellico was entered into, which contained the following preamble : " Whereas, the treaty made and concluded on Holston river, on the 2d of July 1791, between the United States and the Cherokee nation of Indians, had not been carried into execution for some time thereafter, by reason of some misunderstanding wdiich had arisen; and whereas, in order to remove such misunderstanding, and to provide for carrying the said treaty into effect, and for re-establishing more fully the peace and friendship between the parties, another treaty was held, made and concluded, by and between them, at Philadelphia, the 26th of June 1794 ; in which, among other things, it was stipulated, that the boundaries mentioned in the fourth article of the said treaty of Holston should be actually ascertained and marked, in the manner prescribed by the said article, whenever the Cherokee nation should have ninety days' notice of the time and place at which the commissioners of the United States intended to commence their
Object