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註釋Small collection of four letters written by Thomas L. McKenney to various correspondents between 1820 and 1843. Concerning official government business, the correspondents in the first three letters (1820, 1826, and 1830) are Henry Thompson (Baltimore merchant), William Clark (Superintendent of Indian Affairs, St. Louis), and William B. Lewis (second auditor of the Treasury). The corresponding topics are as follows: sale of deer skins, illegal liquor trade at the trading posts of the American Fur Company, and a report regarding the Arkansas Cherokees. In the final letter (1843) to a Mr. Jackson in Brunswick, Maine, McKenney asks his help in establishing a series of lectures on American Indian history.