Henry Anthony Conroy was appointed treaty commissioner and conducted the negotiations and signings in 1921.
As promised by Fillmore, treaty commissioners arrived in La Pointe in 1854 to come to agreement on a final treaty.
As treaty commissioner, Jackson managed to take away half the Creek lands, which he and his friends then bought on attractive terms.
In 1905, on behalf of the King of England, treaty commissioners negotiated a treaty with Moose Cree First Nation.
He was appointed treaty commissioner to Honduras in 1865.
However, the treaty commissioners revealed that they were only authorized to negotiate with the Anishinaabe whose hunting grounds were in Ontario.
In 1835, Jackson appointed Reverend John F. Schermerhorn as a treaty commissioner.
In that capacity, Dinsmoor was expected to keep peace between the Native Americans and white settlers, serve as treaty commissioner, and introduce "civilization" to the Indians.
The fifth article of the treaty stipulated, "That the treaty commissioners pay the first $200,000 directly to the McIntosh party."