![]() | An editor has marked this as a promising draft and requests that, should it go unedited for six months,
G13 deletion be postponed, either by making a
dummy/
minor edit to the page, or by improving and submitting it for review. Last edited by FloridaArmy ( talk | contribs) 2 months ago. ( Update) | ![]() |
Minnie Moore-Willson should redirect here
Minnie Moore-Willson was an author, women's club president, and naturalist from Pennsylvania who advocated for the Seminoles in Florida. [1] [2] [3] [4]
Seminole Wars Lt. Richard H. Pratt, 1879
left in peace for a time, but exposed to local justice, incidents
She served as president of the Women's National Indian Association
state not feds [5]
George Washington Manypenny Our Indian Wards Helen Hunt Jackson A Century of Dishonor Charles H. Coe Red Patriots [6]
should be main article Friends of the Florida Seminoles
January 7, 1899 Friends of the Florida Seminoles in Kissimmee Rt. Rev. William Crane Gray Bishop, President; Rev D. A. Dodge; Senator Charles A. Carson Treasurer; James M. Willson, Secretary
George W. Wilson Times-Union and Citizen; Dr. Jacob E. Brecht Fort Myers agent; Francis A. Hendry; Patrick Alexander Vans Agnew (2)(world's first ordinance to regulate aviation in 1908 [2]) Kissimmee Valley Gazette; R. H. Seymour Mayor [7]
The Indian's Friend calls for federal troops, answered by Times-Union and Citizen "...a reproach to the State of Florida that these things are so..." [8]
Tuestenugee [9] Cow Creek Seminole band in accounts of Frederick A. Ober [10], Pratt [11], Clay MacCauley [12], Wilson [13],and The Seminoles of Florida [14]
![]() | An editor has marked this as a promising draft and requests that, should it go unedited for six months,
G13 deletion be postponed, either by making a
dummy/
minor edit to the page, or by improving and submitting it for review. Last edited by FloridaArmy ( talk | contribs) 2 months ago. ( Update) | ![]() |
Minnie Moore-Willson should redirect here
Minnie Moore-Willson was an author, women's club president, and naturalist from Pennsylvania who advocated for the Seminoles in Florida. [1] [2] [3] [4]
Seminole Wars Lt. Richard H. Pratt, 1879
left in peace for a time, but exposed to local justice, incidents
She served as president of the Women's National Indian Association
state not feds [5]
George Washington Manypenny Our Indian Wards Helen Hunt Jackson A Century of Dishonor Charles H. Coe Red Patriots [6]
should be main article Friends of the Florida Seminoles
January 7, 1899 Friends of the Florida Seminoles in Kissimmee Rt. Rev. William Crane Gray Bishop, President; Rev D. A. Dodge; Senator Charles A. Carson Treasurer; James M. Willson, Secretary
George W. Wilson Times-Union and Citizen; Dr. Jacob E. Brecht Fort Myers agent; Francis A. Hendry; Patrick Alexander Vans Agnew (2)(world's first ordinance to regulate aviation in 1908 [2]) Kissimmee Valley Gazette; R. H. Seymour Mayor [7]
The Indian's Friend calls for federal troops, answered by Times-Union and Citizen "...a reproach to the State of Florida that these things are so..." [8]
Tuestenugee [9] Cow Creek Seminole band in accounts of Frederick A. Ober [10], Pratt [11], Clay MacCauley [12], Wilson [13],and The Seminoles of Florida [14]