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Encyclopedia > Dry Well Creek

Dry Well Creek is a creek in the Malheur Lake Basin in eastern Oregon in the United States.


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Creek: Definition and Much More From Answers.com (2067 words)
Creeks engaged in trade with their new British neighbors, receiving European trade goods in exchange for deerskins and Indian slaves captured in Florida.
On August 9, 1814, the Creek were forced to sign the Treaty of Fort Jackson, which ended the conflict and required the Creek to cede some 20 million acres (81,000 km²) of land - more than half of their ancestral territorial holdings - to the United States.
Land speculators and squatters began to defraud Creeks out of their allotments, and violence broke out, leading to the so-called "Creek War of 1836." Secretary of War Lewis Cass dispatched General Winfield Scott to end the violence by forcibly removing the Creeks to the Indian Territory west of the Mississippi River.
Creek: Definition and Much More From Answers.com (2067 words)
The Creek received their name from early white traders because so many of their villages were located at rivers and creeks.
Creek statesman Alexander McGillivray rose to prominence as he organized pan-Indian resistance to this encroachment and received arms from the Spanish in Florida to fight trespassing Georgians.
Although the Creeks had been forced from Georgia, with many Lower Creeks moving to the Indian Territory, there were still about 20,000 Upper Creeks living in Alabama.
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