Okchai
Muskogee tribe
The Okchai are a Muscogee tribe. They formed part of the former Creek (Muscogee) Confederacy in Alabama, prior to their removal during the 1830s to the Indian Territory.[1]
References
- ^ "Creek Research". Alabama Indian Affairs Commission. State of Alabama. Retrieved August 19, 2012.
- v
- t
- e
Muscogee Creek Confederacy
- Abihka
- Coweta
- Kasihta
- Tukabatchee
- Alabama
- Apalachicola
- Coushatta
- Eufaula
- Fowltown (four locations)
- Hitchiti
- Miccosukee
- Muklassa
- Muscogee
- Okchai
- Okfuskee
- Prospect Bluff Historic Sites
- Sabacola
- Tallapoosa
- Tribal town
- Josiah Francis (Francis the Prophet)
- William McIntosh
- Peter McQueen
- Menawa
- Neamathla
- Osceola
- William Weatherford
- Mississippian culture
- Pisgah phase
- Etowah
- Moundville
- Long Swamp Site
- Apalachicola Province (predecessor to Lower Towns)
- Chiaha
- Leon-Jefferson culture
- Battle of Taliwa
- State of Muskogee
- Forbes purchase
- Red Sticks
- Red Stick War (Creek civil war)
- Battle of Burnt Corn
- Fort Mims Massacre
- Kimbell-James Massacre
- Battle of Horseshoe Bend (1814)
- Prospect Bluff Historic Sites
- Battle of Ocheesee
- Seminole Wars
- Indian Removal Act
- Trail of Tears
- Creek War of 1836
- Creek National Capitol
- Crazy Snake Rebellion
- Treaty of New York (1790)
- Treaty of Fort Jackson (1814)
- Treaty of Nicolls' Outpost (unratified)
- Treaty of Moultrie Creek
- Treaty of Washington (1826)
- Indian Removal Act
- Treaty of Cusseta
- Oklahoma Tax Commission v. United States
- Sharp v. Murphy
This article relating to the Indigenous peoples of North America is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e