Manuscripts
Thomas C. Battey letter to Lucinda Hampton Gregg Battey and children
You might also be interested in
Image not available
Thomas C. Battey letter to Lucinda Hampton Gregg Battey and children
Manuscripts
Lawrence (Kan.)
HM 61141
Image not available
Thomas C. Battey letter to Lucinda Hampton Gregg Battey and children
Manuscripts
Oklahoma. Incomplete.
HM 61145
Image not available
Thomas C. Battey letter to Lucinda Hampton Gregg Battey and children
Manuscripts
Fort Sill (Okla.)
HM 61143
Image not available
Thomas C. Battey letter to Lucinda Hampton Gregg Battey and children
Manuscripts
Fort Sill (Okla.)
HM 61142
Image not available
Thomas C. Battey letter to Lucinda Hampton Gregg Battey and children
Manuscripts
Fort Sill (Okla.)
HM 61144
Image not available
Thomas C. Battey sketchbook
Manuscripts
The seven letters, written by Battey to his wife and children, describe Battey's efforts to help settle the Kiowa/Washington dispute and persuade the U.S. government to free the Kiowa chiefs Satanta and Big Tree. Battey's letters also talk about his experiences working with the Indian council and teaching at a school for Kiowa and Comanche children. He often refers to Satanta, Big Tree, Lone Wolf, and Kicking Bird. Battey's drawings include a sketch book containing ten landscape sketches of the Wichita Mountains in Oklahoma, and a sketch he drew entitled "My Kiowa Camp Home." The ephemera includes a speech entitled "Thomissey and Kicking Bird as Peacemakers" given by Battey's granddaughter, Ruth Edgerton Hoge, typed transcripts of material written by Battey which he intended to add to his book but that most of which never made it into any published version, and copies of photographs of Battey and his wife.
HM 61147