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Hummingbird Journal - Inspirational Notebook for Writing, Sketching & Planning | Perfect for Nature Lovers, Students & Creative Minds | Use for Daily Journaling, Poetry or Birdwatching Notes
Hummingbird Journal - Inspirational Notebook for Writing, Sketching & Planning | Perfect for Nature Lovers, Students & Creative Minds | Use for Daily Journaling, Poetry or Birdwatching NotesHummingbird Journal - Inspirational Notebook for Writing, Sketching & Planning | Perfect for Nature Lovers, Students & Creative Minds | Use for Daily Journaling, Poetry or Birdwatching NotesHummingbird Journal - Inspirational Notebook for Writing, Sketching & Planning | Perfect for Nature Lovers, Students & Creative Minds | Use for Daily Journaling, Poetry or Birdwatching NotesHummingbird Journal - Inspirational Notebook for Writing, Sketching & Planning | Perfect for Nature Lovers, Students & Creative Minds | Use for Daily Journaling, Poetry or Birdwatching Notes

Hummingbird Journal - Inspirational Notebook for Writing, Sketching & Planning | Perfect for Nature Lovers, Students & Creative Minds | Use for Daily Journaling, Poetry or Birdwatching Notes

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Product Description

  • 192 pages
  • Designed by artist Francis Dick of the Kwakwaka'wakw
  • Pen your wishes, whimsies, dreams, and plans within the pages of this indigenous art journal. This hardcover journal features rounded corners for reduced wear and elastic band closure. 192 pages with blank pages on the left and lined pages on the right for personal reflection, sketching, or jotting down favorite quotations or poems.

  • From 1774 until about 1832, treaties between individual sovereign American Indian nations and the United States were negotiated to establish borders and prescribe conditions of behavior between the parties.

    The form of these agreements was nearly identical to the Treaty of Paris, which ended the Revolutionary War between the U.S. and Great Britain. The negotiations resulted in a mutually signed pact that had to be approved by the U.S. Congress. Non-tribal citizens were required to have a passport to cross sovereign Indian lands.

    From 1832 until 1871, American Indian nations were considered domestic, dependent tribes. In 1871, the House of Representatives ceased to recognize individual tribes within the U.S. as independent nations with which the U.S. could contract by treaty. This ended the nearly 100-year-old practice of treaty-making between the U.S. and American Indian tribes.

    The online exhibit includes a visual timeline of the history of American Indian treaties and Native American activism to defend tribal sovereignty.

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