TREATY OF
CHOCTAW TRADING HOUSE
WITH THE CHOCTAW
OCTOBER 24, 1816
7 Slat., 152.
Proclamation, Dec. 30, 1816.
A treaty of cession between the United States of America and the Choctaw nation of Indians.
JAMES MADISON, president of the United States of America, by general John Coffee, John Rhea, and
John M'Kee, esquires, commissioners on the part of the United States, duly authorized for that
purpose, on the one part, and the mingoes, leaders, captains, and warriors, of the Chactaw
nation, in general council assembled, in behalf of themselves and the whole nation, on the other
part, have entered into the following articles, which, when ratified by the president of the
United States, with the advice and consent of the senate, shall be obligatory on both parties:
ARTICLE 1. The Chactaw nation, for the consideration hereafter mentioned,
cede to the United States all their title and claim to lands lying east of the following
boundary, beginning at the mouth of Ooktibbuha, the Chickasaw boundary, and running from thence
down the Tombigby river, until it intersects the northern boundary of a cession made to the
United States by the Chactaws, at Mount Dexter, on the 16th November, 1805.
ARTICLE 2. In consideration of the foregoing cession, the United States
engage to pay to the Chactaw nation the sum of six thousand dollars annually, for twenty years;
they also agree to pay them in merchandise, to be delivered immediately on signing the present
treaty, the sum of ten thousand dollars.
Done and executed in full and open council, at the Choctaw trading house, this twenty-fourth day
of October, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixteen, and of the
independence of the United States the forty-first.
John Coffee,
John Rhea,
John McKee,
Mushoolatubee, his x mark,
Pooshamallaha, his x mark,
Pukshunnubbu, his x mark,
General Terror, his x mark,
Choctaw Eestannokee, his x mark,
General Humming Bird, his x mark,
Talking warrior, his x mark,
David Folsom,
Bob Cole, his x mark,
Oofuppa, his x mark,
Hoopoieeskitteenee, his x mark,
Hoopoieemiko, his x mark,
Hoopoieethoma, his x mark.
Witness:
Tho. H. Williams, secretary to the commission,
John Pitchlynn, interpreter,
Turner Broshear, interpreter,
M. Mackey, interpreter,
Silas Dinsmoor,
R. Chamberlin.
Source: Indian Affairs. Laws and Treaties. Vol. II. (Treaties.) Compiled and Edited by Charles
J. Kappler, LL. M., Clerk to the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs. Washington: Government
Printing Office. 1904.