A drawing of the house at New Echota, Georgia in which Elias Boudinot and his wife lived from 1827 to 1836.
The site of the Boudinot house at New Echota, Georgia is an historic landmark.
Historical marker in Calhoun, Georgia commemorates the spot where Elias Boudinot established the Cherokee Phoenix, the first Indian language newspaper, in 1828.
Elias Boudinot is buried at Worcester Mission Cemetery, Park Hill, Oklahoma.
An Address to the Whites (1826)
Cherokee Phoenix, Vol. 1, No. 1 [Feb. 21, 1828] (1828)
Cherokee Phoenix, Vol. 1, No. 2 [Feb. 28, 1828] (1828)
Cherokee Phoenix, Vol. 1, No. 3 [Mar. 6, 1828] (1828)
Cherokee Phoenix, Vol. 1, No. 4 [Mar. 13, 1828] (1828)
The Gospel According to Matthew; Translated into the Cherokee Language (1829, 1850)