Kilpatrick Collection of Cherokee Manuscripts

Kilpatrick Collection of Cherokee Manuscripts

The Kilpatrick Collection of Cherokee Manuscripts, housed at Yale University's Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, consists of material created and accumulated by Jack Kilpatrick and Anna Gritts Kilpatrick, dating from the 1890s to the 1960s. The material, entirely in the Cherokee syllabary, documents vernacular literacy in the Cherokee language, the practice of traditional medicine, social aspects of Christian religion and church organizations, dates and circumstances of death, funerary practices, and other topics relating to the history and culture of the Oklahoma Cherokee in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The Kilpatrick Collection is cataloged as WA MSS S-2707, and can be requested for research use at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University. To see a full description and list of contents, view the catalog record in Yale's online catalog, Orbis.
228 of 1974 pages transcribed
11.550151975684% Completed
50% Transcribed

Sunday School officer notes

Box 1, Folder 68
50% Transcribed

Autograph letter, annotated Barber, Okla.

1933 November 18
Box 1, Folder 76
50% Transcribed

Song

Box 1, Folder 83
50% Transcribed

Letter, illustrated with a small pencil drawing of two human figures

Watt, Johnson (Tsanisini Wadi)
Box 2, Folder 116
50% Transcribed

Letter relating to business or community organization

1935 December 28
Box 2, Folder 131
50% Transcribed

Letter listing members of a community organization

1938 August 25
Box 2, Folder 132
50% Transcribed

Siquanida Dilidegi (Willie Jumper), Meeting notes

[1966 March 11?]
Box 5, Folder 351
50% Transcribed

Note, on printed sheet of "Study Assignments"

Box 5, Folder 364