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Personal Reminiscences of William McCombs: Last Living Supreme Judge of the Old Creek Nation
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Personal Reminiscences of William McCombs: Last Living Supreme Judge of the Old Creek Nation
By None
Current price: $19.50


By None
Personal Reminiscences of William McCombs: Last Living Supreme Judge of the Old Creek Nation
Current price: $19.50
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Size: Large Print
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William McCombs provided this informal personal history in October 1928, the year before his death. He spent all his life among his home people in the Creek Nation. His education came from the Indian Government schools, and at 17 years of age at the outbreak of the Civil War he enlisted in the First Creek Regiment in Company C. He worked as an interpreter during this time. Soon after the war he was elected a member of the Creek Council and sat in that body altogether for six terms. For another period of four years he sat on the Supreme bench of the Creek Nation. The last official rank he held in the Creek Nation was as interpreter for General Pleasant Porter, a governor of the Creek Nation. He filled that office for six years. [Large Print Edition 20 pt]
William McCombs provided this informal personal history in October 1928, the year before his death. He spent all his life among his home people in the Creek Nation. His education came from the Indian Government schools, and at 17 years of age at the outbreak of the Civil War he enlisted in the First Creek Regiment in Company C. He worked as an interpreter during this time. Soon after the war he was elected a member of the Creek Council and sat in that body altogether for six terms. For another period of four years he sat on the Supreme bench of the Creek Nation. The last official rank he held in the Creek Nation was as interpreter for General Pleasant Porter, a governor of the Creek Nation. He filled that office for six years. [Large Print Edition 20 pt]


















