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Facts and Events
Name |
Capt. John Perry |
Gender |
Male |
Birth? |
Abt 1780 |
Tombigbee DistrictTombigbee District |
Property[4] |
Abt 1818 |
Holcomb, Grenada, Mississippi, United StatesChief Isaac Perry was granted as a Choctaw Indian a Reservation with land description as Sec. 22, - Twp. 22North - Range 3 East, located near the Yalobusha River. |
Property[3] |
1828 |
Wilkinson, Mississippi, United Statespossibly on the Homochitta, or on Buffalo Creek |
Other[1] |
27 Sep 1830 |
The Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek is signed. |
Other[1] |
Sep 1833 |
After the Treaty, in the fall of 1833, the Perry Family relinquished their 1,120 acres of lands. Including their lands on the Yalobusha settlement, Yalobusha County, Mississippi and The Elliot Mission, in present Holcomb, Mississippi |
Other[1] |
24 May 1834 |
Yalobusha, Mississippi, United StatesJoseph Perry of the Chickasaw Nation sells to William Fly for $1125, section of land in Yalobusha County, Mississippi Section 18 in township 11 & range 5 west of the basis meridian. Land Joseph Perry was entitiled to under Treaty with the Chickasaws on the 24th day of May 1834. Wit: G.W.Long Signed: Joseph Perry. On April 25, 1836 the following Chiefs ......certify that Joseph Perry ....... is capable to manage.....his own affairs. Signed: Benjamin Love, Henry Love |
Questionable information identified by WeRelate automation
To check: | | Born before mother was 12 | To check: | | Born before father was 15 |
Bayou Sara, West Feliciana, Louisiana, United States
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 United States. Bureau of Indian Affairs. Armstrong roll of Choctaws, 1831: records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, RG 75. (Salt Lake City, Utah: Genealogical Society of Utah, 1979).
Recorded in the 1830 Choctaw Roll 'Armstrong Roll' are listed these names: PERRY, 106, 140 Hardy, 107, 140 Isaac, 105, 139, 176 James, 106, 140 John, 106, 140 John's place, 106 Joseph, 106, 140 Lewis, 55, 109, 174 Moses, 121, 142 Ned, 104, 139
Pg. 106 John PERRY (2 places) 50 Ac. cultivated land, 4 in family, 1 male > 16 1 male and female < 10, east side, 640 total acres. Lived on his prairie farm at time of treaty.
PERRY, (widow) 30 Ac cultivated, 2 in family, 15 slaves, 480 total Ac Land good.
Joseph PERRY 30 Ac cultivated 10 in family 4 males over 16, 3 children under 10, 21 slaves, Waters of Loociskoonah creek. Old Lick 640 Ac. Good land
Pg. 107 Hardy PERRY 12 Ac cultivated, 7 in family 1 male over 16 4 children under 10, 160 total Ac of land. Pg. 140 John PERRY 50 Ac, 640 allowed James PERRY 50 Ac, 640 allowed Joseph PERRY 30 Ac, 480 allowed 5th Hardy PERRY 80 Ac, 640 allowed.
- English Names from Greenwood Leflore District
27 Sep 1830.
With the passage by the U.S. Congress of the Indian Removal Act that same year, the legal mechanisms were put in place for President Andrew Jackson to negotiate with Indian groups for their deportation.
The Choctaws, Mississippi’s largest Indian group, were the first southeastern Indians to accept removal with the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek in September 1830. The treaty provided that the Choctaws would receive land west of the Mississippi River in exchange for the remaining Choctaw lands in Mississippi. The Choctaws were given three years to leave Mississippi.
English names listed on the 1831 “list of claims allowed under the treaty in Greenwood Leflore district”. These are “persons that have relinquished their land.
Hardy Perry Isaac Perry James Perry John Perry Joseph Perry Moses Perry Ned Perry Widow Perry
Capt. Turnbull George Turnbull Robert Turnbull William Turnbull'
- ↑ Wilkinson County, Mississippi, in Tax Record
1828.
1828 tax list Hardy Perry 140 acres John Perry Sr. Isaac Perry John Perry, Jr
- ↑ Chief Isaac Perry, in Holcomb.org.
- Martini, Don. Chickasaw empire : the story of the Colbert family. (Ripley, Mississippi: D. Martini, 1986).
In 1830, it tells of the destitute position that Susan's brother James Colbert found himself in, and about how he was trying to get back the slaves that he had inherited from his father James Logan Colbert, but had given or sold to a number of his friends or relatives. Listed among those friends or relatives was Benjamin Love, who had married Charlotte Burney (a granddaughter of young James Colbert's sister Susan), David Burney (a brother of Charlotte's), Simon Burney (the father of Charlotte and David, as well as the husband of Margaret "Peggy" Allen), and Susan Perry, John Perry, and Joseph Perry.
- Patrick Hogue (Samples). Everett Family and the Choctaw Trading Post, the (Factory).
- Patrick Hogue (Samples). Perry Family, Dawes Packet (Choctaw), Witness: Hammond
19 Jan 1838.
- Patrick Hogue (Samples). Perry Family, Dawes Packet (Choctaw), Witness: TURNBULL
22 Jan 1838.
- Patrick Hogue (Samples). Perry Family, Dawes Packet (Choctaw), Witness: Robert Cole
30 Jan 1838.
- Patrick Lawrence (Samples). Perry Family, Dawes Packet (Choctaw), Witness: Moon-tubbee
30 Jan 1838.
- Patrick Hogue (Samples). Perry Family, Dawes Packet (Choctaw), Comment: A. C. Tonner
Jan 1838.
- Patrick Hogue (Samples). The Samples / Semples Family.
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