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Summary Of: Chief Moses

The boy who would become Chief Moses was the third son of Chief Sulk... but in later life Chief Moses took the name of his father... The next year Chief Moses made his first trip to Washington... Chief Moses was ordered to Washington on Feb 12... Chief Moses probably thought that the verdict in his upcoming murder trial would depend upon whether he... United States set aside the Columbia Reservation for Chief Moses and his tribe... Chief Moses complained about the white settlers on the reservation... Chief Moses himself did not live there... Chief Moses and other delegates were taken to Washington... Chief Moses died in 1899 on the Colville Reservation... Chief Moses once asked a follower to count the grains of sand in a pile...

Encyclodia Page On: Chief Moses

These Are Links To Other Documents
| | March 25 | 1899 | Sinkiuse-Columbia | Washington State | Waterville | White Bluffs | Columbia Basin | Moses Lake | Lapwai, Idaho | Nez Perce | Yakima War | | | Peo-peo-mox-mox | Chief Joseph | O'Sullivan Dam | Yakima | Rutherford B. Hayes | April 18 | 1879 | Okanogan River | Colville Indian Reservation | Columbia River | Chelan River | Lake Chelan | Cascade Mountains | international boundary | July 9 | 1879 | Lake Osoyoos | Interior Secretary | Carl Schurz | Bureau of Indian Affairs | August 19 | 1880 | April 18 | 1879 | Colville Indian Reservation | February 23 | 1883 | Chester A. Arthur | July 7 | 1883 | July 4 | 1884 | May 1 | 1886 | Okanogan County | Stevens County | Nespelem, Washington | Moses Lake | Moses Coulee | Moses Lake | ISBN 0-87770-453-8 | University of Oklahoma | ISBN 0806127384 | ISBN 0-87770-453-8 | Categories | 1899 deaths | Native American leaders |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Chief Moses".