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Collection Reference Number GLC02437.03049
From Archive Folder The Henry Knox Papers [0073] August-December 1784 
Title Speech delivered to the Penobscot Tribe by Benjamin Lincoln
Date 4 September 1784
Author Lincoln, Benjamin (1733-1810)  
Additional authors Knox, Henry (1750-1806)
Document Type Military document
Content Description Written at the Penobscot River, present-day Maine. Lincoln, a commissioner chosen to negotiate land boundaries with the Penobscot Tribe, praises the Penobscots' involvement in the Revolutionary War. Continues, "It is said that in your own Opinion the Lands you occupy far exceed the Quantity necessary for your own Use; and that you have suffered pretended purchases for trifling Considerations, to engross Part of them... the Sovereign Power of this Commonwealth... will not suffer Individuals to purchase those Lands which you are permitted to occupy." Offers the option for the Penobscots to concentrate their land holdings on one side of the river, or on both sides higher up the river. This document is clerically written and signed for both Lincoln and Henry Knox.
Subjects American Indian History  Land Transaction  Canada  Revolutionary War  Revolutionary War General  Military History  Boundary or Property Dispute  Finance  Global History and Civics  Treaty  Diplomacy  Government and Civics  Forgery and Fraud  Law  
People Lincoln, Benjamin (1733-1810)  Knox, Henry (1750-1806)  
Place written Maine
Theme Government & Politics; Native Americans; The American Revolution
Sub-collection The Henry Knox Papers
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Settlement, Commerce, Revolution and Reform: 1493-1859
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