Starting in 1996, Alexa Internet has been donating their crawl data to the Internet Archive. Flowing in every day, these data are added to the Wayback Machine after an embargo period.
“...Twenty-five U. S. G. S. topographic maps annotated by Mooney to show old village sites of the Cherokee in Alaska, Georgia, Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennesse and Virginia; with transcriptions of Mooneyʹs notations by Winslow M...”
“...Some lists of plants - Cherokee name, common English name with notes on their uses. Mostly in Mooneyʹs writing and shorthand. 1 list in Cherokee syllabary. No translation...”
“...Mooneyʹs informant in 1885 and 1886 in Washington for the Upper Cherokee was N. J. Smith (Tsálatihĭ), "chief of the East Cherokees," and in North Carolina in 1887 Mooney revised the Upper Cherokee with N. J. Smithʹs brother, Ross Smith. The Middle...”
“... Cherokee was recorded in 1887 on the reservation from James Blythe, "the official interpreter, and his brother David . . . ." The Middle Cherokee is "written or underlined with red ink." (See title page)...”
“... twenty-five years, soldiers from Fort Supply performed duties that included peace-keeping and monitoring of the Cheyenne and Arapaho reservation and the Cherokee Outlet as well as monitoring the Land Run of 1893. From 1869 to early 1870, the post served...”
“...Catalog of archeological sites in Alanta Georgia, Kentucky, North Carolina, Tennessee & Virginia and other data relating to the Cherokee country...”
“...Also an Analysis of the Cherokee language (pamphlet), Clinton Duncan, Tahlequah, Cherokee Nation, 1890 (author, place and date supplied in Mooneyʹs hand). In addition, miscellaneous Cherokee notes...”
“...Usually with brief description of contents added in hand of James Mooney. Described by Pilling, Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 6, 1888, page 185, as follows: "Manuscript, consisting of original letters in the Cherokee alphabet, written...”
“... by or to Inali (Black-fox) during a period of thirty years. They cover a wide range of subjects connected with the daily life and official interests of the Cherokees. Many of the letters were written to friends at home by Cherokees in the Confederate service...”
“... during the late war, and contain accounts of operations in east Tennessee. There are also muster-rolls of the Cherokee troops, memoranda of issues of clothing, Sunday-school rolls...”
“...Six specimens. Items 1-5 marked "leaves found in Mooney notes I page 83, I, page 70, II page 72, III page 39, IV page 74 or 73?)" and 6th item labeled with title in Cherokee script. It is not apparent to which manuscript these citations refer...”
“..., although Cherokee cards show several borrowed by Olbrechts...”
“..."Obtained at Washington, D. C. in May and June, 1885, of N. J. Smith (Tsá-la-tiʹ -hi or Charles-killer), the principal chief of the eastern Cherokees, composed mainly of old âʹ -tă-lu Tsăʹ -lă-kiʹ or [?] Upper Cherokees . . . ." Mooneyʹs...”
“...Also includes many scattered ethnographic notes, 13 pages of Cherokee place names, and 6 pages of Cherokee personal names (pages 86-87, 104, 107-108, and 112)...”
“...Recorded in Smithsonian Instutition Comparative Vocabulary. Note on last page in handwriting of George Gibbs reads, "There are about 2000 of the Mountain Cherokees still in their old resorts, the mountains of North Carolina and Tennessee."...”