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To Thomas Jefferson from Henry Dearborn, with Jefferson’s Notes and Calculations, 12 January 1805

From Henry Dearborn,
with Jefferson’s Notes and Calculations

War Department January 12th. 1805

Sir,

I have the honor of transmitting herewith, a general view of the subject of our purchases from the several Indian nations, in the course of the last four years. It may not be strictly correct as to the respective quantities of land. But I presume the quantity is not in any case overrated. There may also be some small inaccuracies as to the sums paid by way of presents &c. but I am satisfied that the whole is sufficiently correct to answer the purpose intended.

I take the liberty of observing, that I had not considered the Chactaw and Vincennes bargains, in any other light than that of recognitions of the boundaries of former cessions, if so, it may be improper to take those cases into the present calculation. It will be found after leaving them out of the account, that the average price we have paid and engaged to pay for Indian cessions, does not amount to quite one quarter of a cent per acre; and that, exclusive of the purchase from the Sacs and Foxes, the remainder will fall a little short of one cent per acre, taking into the account all the expenses of Treaties: The amount of the several cessions and the sums paid and to be paid, being estimated as follows.

 Creek Cession in 1802
Acres. Dollars
cent
Part of Tallasee County 2.500.000 } Sums paid & to be paid 87.000
On the Oconee 1.000.000
3.500.000
cent
Kaskaskias Cession 8.000.000 1. Dollar pr. thousand 8.000 1/10
cent
Piankashaw & Delaware Cession 2.000.0001 6. Dollars pr. thousand 12.000
Sacs and Foxes 50.000.0002 44. cents pr thousand 22.000
63.000.000 129.000
Choctaw recognition was of 1,955.020. Expenses of treating estimated at 13.000
Vincennes do. 1,912,320 142.000

Accept, Sir, the Assurances of my high respect & consideration.


H. Dearborn

Louisiana. 30.° to 49.° = 19.° lat. × 69 = 1311 miles × = 1,209,397
22½° long. × 41 = 922½ miles
201,566 to wit ⅙ deducted from the square
1,007,831. sq. miles × 640 = 645,011,840. as. ÷ 15. Ms. D. = 2 cents pr. ac
Florida E. of Perdido about 1.° lat. × 69 miles × = 24,633 sq. miles × 640 = 15,765,120. as.
6.° long. × 59½ miles
the Choctaws. from Petits prairies to 31.° is 224. miles
all the waters of Misipi wd be in breadth 84. miles × = 18816. sq. mi. × 640 = 12,042,240
deduct 1,955,020. ours by recognition
10,087,220

RC (DLC); in a clerk’s hand, signed by Dearborn; text and figures in italics are in TJ’s hand; at foot of text: “The President of the United States”; endorsed by TJ as a letter of 11 Jan. received from the War Department on 12 Jan. and “price of Indian purchases” and so recorded in SJL. PrC (PHi: Daniel Parker Papers); lacks TJ’s notations. FC (Lb in RG 107, LSP); lacks TJ’s notations.

The U.S. treaty of 17 Dec. 1801 with the Choctaw (Chactaw) Indians, as well as a “Provisional Convention” of 17 Oct. 1802, reinforced territorial limits established by earlier agreements between the Choctaws and the British (U.S. Statutes at Large description begins Richard Peters, ed., The Public Statutes at Large of the United States … 1789 to March 3, 1845, Boston, 1855-56, 8 vols. description ends , 7:66-8, 73-4; Vol. 37:51; Vol. 39:279-80). More precise limits for the Vincennes tract, initially obtained by the United States as part of the Treaty of Greenville in 1795, were established under the first article of the treaty of 7 June 1803 between the United States and several nations living north of the Ohio River (U.S. Statutes at Large description begins Richard Peters, ed., The Public Statutes at Large of the United States … 1789 to March 3, 1845, Boston, 1855-56, 8 vols. description ends , 7:74-6; Vol. 41:642-3).

For the Treaties that factored into Dearborn’s estimates, see Vol. 39:223-4; Vol. 41:642-3; TJ to the Senate, 15 Nov. 1804; TJ to the Senate, 31 Dec. 1804.

1Above this figure TJ wrote “2,130,000.”

2Above this figure TJ wrote “51.”

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