Family:Unknown Pushmataha and Unknown (1)

Children
BirthDeath
References
  1.   Pushmataha, in Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia
    last accessed Jan 2017.

    ... The supplement to the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek mentions the widows of Pushmataha. Only one widow has been documented as having received the land guaranteed to them by the treaty. When she and her three children later sold the land, her name was recorded in three different spellings in the deed: as Immahoka, Lunnabaka/Lunnabaga, and Jamesaichikkako. [19] Some individuals claim to be descendants of the chief, but the only record of the number of his children is by Charles Lanman,[20] who wrote there were five. Lanman likely based his statement on the notes of Thompson Mckinney,[citation needed] who had resided among the Choctaw for many years. Mckinney had written in an 1830 letter to James L. McDonald, a Choctaw lawyer in Hinds County, Mississippi, about his interest in writing about Pushmataha.
    Alabama Congressional papers of November 1818 referred to a son.[21] Researchers believe the following are the names of four of his five children:
    Hashitubbiee, also known as Johnson Pushmataha, died 1862-1865 in Blue County, Choctaw Nation, 3rd District
    Betsy Moore, nothing found after deed
    Martha Moore, nothing found after deed
    James Madison, disappeared after the 1818 record in Alabama papers ...