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  1. Elias Boudinot. A formally educated Cherokee who became the editor of the first Native American newspaper in the United States, Elias Boudinot ultimately signed the New Echota Treaty (1835), which required the Cherokees to relinquish all remaining land east of the Mississippi River. Image from Oklahoma Historical Society, Muriel Wright Collection.

  2. Elias Boudinot. University of Georgia Press, 1996 - Biography & Autobiography - 243 pages. This volume collects most of the writings published by the accomplished Cherokee leader Elias Boudinot (1804?-1839). Founding editor of the Cherokee Phoenix, Boudinot is the most ambiguous and puzzling figure in Cherokee history.

  3. 29 de may. de 2018 · Elias Boudinot (ca 1803-1839) became the first editor of the bilingual newspaper Cherokee Phoenix, which began publication in the Cherokee Nation East (now Georgia) in 1828. He later became a primem over in the Treaty Party and was a signer of the Treaty of New Echota in 1835. This treaty was not authorized and had the effect of ceding tribal ...

  4. With Elias Boudinot as its founding editor, The Cherokee Phoenix became more than simply the first Native American newspaper.As Georgia, the United States, and the Cherokee Nation clashed in an historic crisis over the rights of states, Boudinot toiled to create an exemplary paper of record (in two languages) and to record in writing the voice of a people.

  5. Elias III was a famous silversmith who moved from Philadelphia to Princeton, New Jersey and then to Elizabeth, New Jersey. Elias Boudinot IV (1740-1821) was active in the Revolutionary War, as the Commissary General of Prisoners, and in the Continental Congress (he served as President of the Continental Congress from 1782 to 1783).

  6. This is a collection of letters by Elias Boudinot who served as the first Commissary General of Prisoners dealing with the prisoner management of our men held by the British during the Revolutionary War.

  7. Educated through age seventeen in the Spring Place Moravian missionary school, Watie met a man named Elias Boudinot, president of the American Bible Society and former member of the Continental Congress, while en route to study at another mission school in Cornwall, Connecticut. Out of respect, Watie adopted Boudinot’s name.