Gulf South History

Gulf South History

Archival Collection

GULF SOUTH HISTORY COLLECTION

Folder

1. “Bienville’s Expedition Against the Chickasaws,” (from
Illustrated Historical Sketches of The Indians: Exhibiting their
Manners and Customs on the Battle Field and in the Wigwam, with
numerous anecdotes and speeches, From the Best Authorities, by John
Frost, 1857)

2. La Salle Shipwreck (xeroxed from
Texas Historical Commission,
The Medallion, January/February 1997-2 copies;
Texas Historical Commission,
The Medallion, Special Issue, n. d.-2 copies; Sieur
de La Salle’s Fateful Landfall,
Smithsonian, by David Roberts, April 1997; La
Salle’s Last Voyage, by Lisa Moore LaRoe,
National Geographic, Vol. 191, No. 5, May 1997)

3. “The French in Mississippi, 1699-1763,” by Howell, Walter G.,
(xeroxed from
History of Mississippi Vol. I, Chapter,
A , edited by R. A. McLemore, University & College
Press of Mississippi, 1973)

4. “Notes and Documents, Dr. Daniel Coxe and Carolana,” (xeroxed
from
The Mississippi Valley Historical Review, pp. 257-262)

5. “The Tennessee River as the Road to Carolina: The Beginnings
of Exploration and Trade,” (xeroxed from
The Mississippi Valley Historical Review, Vol. III, No.
1)

6. “The Chickasaw, the English, and the French, 1699-1744,” by
Dawson A. Phelps (xeroxed from
Tennessee Historical Quarterly, pp. 117-133)

7. “Early Indian Trade in the Development of South Carolina:
Politics, Economics, and Social Mobility during the Proprietary
Period, 1670-1719,” by Philip M. Brown (xeroxed from
The South Carolina Historical Magazine, Vol. 76, No. 3,
July 1975, pp. 118-128)

8. “Fort Assumption: The First Recorded History of White
Man’s Activity on the Present Site of Memphis,” by James Troy
Robison (xeroxed from
The West Tennessee Historical Society Papers, pp.

9. “Thomas Nairne’s 1708 Western Expedition: An Episode in
the Anglo-French Competition for Empire,” by Alexander Moore
(xeroxed from
Proceedings of the Tenth Meeting of the French Colonial
Historical Society, April 12-14, 1984
, pp. 47-58)

10. “The English Invasion of Spanish Florida, 1700-1706,” by
Charles W. Arnade (xeroxed from
Florida Historical Quarterly, pp. 29-37)

11. “Fort Prudhome: Its Location,” by William A. Klutts (xeroxed
from
The West Tennessee Historical Society Papers, pp.
28-40)

12. “The ‘Trade Do’s Not Flourish as
Formerly’: The Ecological Origins of the Yamassee War of
1715,” by Richard L. Haan (xeroxed from Ethnohistory, Vol. 28, No.
4, Fall 1982, pp. 341-358)

13. “An Account of the Invasion of South Carolina by the French
and Spaniards in August 1706, Edited by Joseph Ioor Waring, M.D.
(xeroxed from
South Carolina Historical Magazine, Vol. 66, No. 2, 1965,
pp. 98-101)

14. “Coxe’s Account of the Activities of the English in
the Mississippi Valley in the Seventeenth Century, A Memorial by
Dr. Daniel Coxe,” (xeroxed pp. 231-249)

15. Notes and Queries (xeroxed from
The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, Vol.
V, 1881, pp. 114-120)

16. Article II-The Life of Father Marquette, by Jared
Sparks, Library of American Biography, Vol. X (xeroxed from
North American Review, Vol. 48, 1839, pp. 63-108)

17. Documents Tonti Letters (xeroxed from
Mid-American, Vol. 21, 1939, pp. 209-288)

18. “Dauphin Island’s Critical Years, 1701-1722,” by Jack
D. L. Holmes (xeroxed from The
Alabama Historical Quarterly, Vol. XXIX, Nos. 1 & 2,
Spring & Summer, 1967, pp. 39-63)

GULF SOUTH HISTORY COLLECTIONContinued

Folder

19. “Fort St. Gabriel and Fort Bute: A Border Incident of 1768,”
by R. E. Chandler (xeroxed from
Revue de Louisiane, Vol. 8, No. 2, 1979, pp. 174-185)

20. “La Salle: Discovery of a Lost Explorer,” by Peter H. Wood
(xeroxed from
American Historical Review, Vol. 2, No. 89, April 1984,
pp. 294-323)

21. “The Contest for Pensacola Bay and Other Gulf Ports,
1698-1722,” Parts I and II, by Stanley Faye (xeroxed from
Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. 24, 1946, pp. 167-195
and 302-328)

22. “The Occupation of Pensacola Bay, 1689-1700, Part III, by
William E. Dunn (xeroxed from
Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. 4, 1926, pp.
140-154)

23. “The Siege of Saint Augustine by Governor Moore of South
Carolina in 1702 as Reported to the King of Spain by Don Joseph De
Zuniga Y Zerda, Governor of Florida,” translated by Mark F. Boyd
(xerox from
Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. 26, 1948, pp.
345-352)

24. “Spanish Pensacola, 1700-1763,” by William B. Griffen
(xeroxed from
Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. 37, 1959, pp.
242-262)

25. “A Hero of New France, From Hudson Bay to the Mississippi
this soldier-seaman served his king, Pierre LeMoyne, Scourge of the
English,” by Ian McCulloch (xeroxed from
The Beaver, Exploring Canada’s History, June/July
1995, pp. 14-22)

26. “Jean Laffite, the Baratarians, and the Historical Geography
of Piracy in the Gulf of Mexico,” by Robert C. Vogel (xeroxed from
Gulf Coast Historical Review, Vol. 5, No. 2, Spring 1990,
pp. 62-77)

27. “Suppressing the Anglo-American Trade at Mobile, 1733-1737,”
by Michael James Forêt (xeroxed from
Gulf Coast Historical Review, Vol. 5, No. 2, Spring 1990,
pp. 36-46)

28. “How General Andrew Jackson Learned of the British Plans
Before the Battle of New Orleans,” by William S. Coker (xeroxed
from
Gulf Coast Historical Review, Vol. 3, No. 1, Fall 1987.
pp. 84-95)

29. ” ‘Perier’s Water’: Roullet’s 1732
Exploration of Pearl River,” by John Hawkins Napier III (xeroxed
from
Gulf Coast Historical Review, Vol. 8, No. 1, Fall 1992,
pp. 73-84)

30. “Fort Toulouse and the North American Southeast, 1700-1764,
by Ethan A. Grant (xeroxed from
Gulf Coast Historical Review, Vol. 7, No. 2, Spring 1992,
pp. 6-15)

31. “Pierre Georges Rousseau, Louisiana’s Unsung
Revolutionary War Hero,” by Piercy J. Stakelum, Jr. (Donated by
Pierre Georges Rousseau Chapter, Louisiana Society of the Sons of
the American Revolution)

32. Zachary Taylor Information

33.
Houma Indian Arts: Triptych, by Ivy Billiot, Cyril
Billiot, Marie Dean, and Exhibition curated/catalogue by
Frédéric Allamel

34. “John Law Raids the Underworld,” (xeroxed from
Brides from Bridewell, Female Felons Sent to Colonial
America
, by Walter Hart Blumenthal, 1962, pp. 79-104)

35. “Preserving a heritage, River cane’s return vital to
Chitimachas,”
Advocate, September 11, 2001

36. “Ougoula Tchetoka, Ackia, and Bienville’s First
Chickasaw War: Whose Strategy and Tactics?, by Patricia Galloway
(xeroxed from
The Journal of Chickasaw History, Vol. 2, No. 1, 1996, pp.
3-10)