From Indian Territory to White Man's Country: Race, Nation, and the Politics of Land Ownership in Eastern Oklahoma, 1889-1940University of Wisconsin--Madison, 2002 - 351 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 68
... Party candidate . Throughout the 1870s , that party repeatedly counted African American Creeks by favoring the extension of Creek citizenship to former Creek slaves who had been denied citizenship on the grounds that 54 they had ...
... Party candidate . Throughout the 1870s , that party repeatedly counted African American Creeks by favoring the extension of Creek citizenship to former Creek slaves who had been denied citizenship on the grounds that 54 they had ...
Page 171
... Party away from policies favored by its “ din farmer faction . " 78 As the Democratic Party moved to the right , more and more white farmers migrated into the Socialist Party . The Socialist Party was growing nationally , but the ...
... Party away from policies favored by its “ din farmer faction . " 78 As the Democratic Party moved to the right , more and more white farmers migrated into the Socialist Party . The Socialist Party was growing nationally , but the ...
Page 172
... party's appeal to poor white tenants and small landowning farmers , who constituied the bulk of the party . Stale party leaders in Oklahoma City initially hewed to Marxist orthodoxy , contending that because land was part of the means ...
... party's appeal to poor white tenants and small landowning farmers , who constituied the bulk of the party . Stale party leaders in Oklahoma City initially hewed to Marxist orthodoxy , contending that because land was part of the means ...
Common terms and phrases
activities Administration African American agents agrarian Agricultural allotment argued authority became blood called Census century chapter Chief citizens citizenship City Civil Collection communal constituted Correspondence Council County created Creek and Seminole Creek Nation Dawes Commission Demonstration dissertation Division economic efforts enrollment entry example Extension Service farm farmers federal fields Five folder Freedmen History ideas identity immigrants important included Indian Affairs Indian Territory individual interest John Klan Klux Klan labor land ownership landlords lived meant microcopy Muskogee NAACP Native Americans Negro newcomers Norman Office Okmulgee organization Party political protection race racial Records Relating remained Report represented restrictions Robert rural secure slaves social society tenants testimony towns Tribes Union United University of Oklahoma University Press vote Walton Washington women