Edward Everett Dale has written nine books in the
fields of western history, among the best known of which are The
Range Cattle Industry, A History of Oklahoma, and Frontier Trails.
His interest in the American Indian is of long standing. Aside from
his study of Indian history, particularly that of the Five
Civilized Tribes, he spent a year in field work among the tribes of
the United States as a member of the Indian Survey Staff of the
Brookings Institution. Mr. Dale is a graduate of the University of
Oklahoma, and his A.M. and Ph.D. degrees are from Harvard, where he
studied under Frederick Jackson Turner. He is now professor and
head of the Department of History in the University of
Oklahoma.
Gaston Litton was educated at the University of
Southern California and at the Library School of the University of
Oklahoma. He has also done graduate work in history in the letters
institution. He is at present a member of the staff of the National
Archives in Washington, D.C., attached to the Archives of the
Office of Indian Affairs.
James W. Parins (1939-2013) was a Professor of English and
Associate Director of the Sequoyah National Research Center at the
University of Arkansas, Little Rock. Among numerous articles and
books about American Indians, he is the coeditor of the
Encyclopedia of Indian Removal and author of Elias Cornelius
Boudinot: A Life on the Cherokee Border.
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