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{{Short description|Chief of the Seminole Tribe of Florida (1923–2011)}}
'''{{distinguish2|[[Betty May (Tiger Woman)]]}}'''
{{distinguish|Betty May}}
[[File:Betty Mae Tiger Jumper.jpg|thumb|Betty Mae Jumper]]

'''Betty Mae Tiger Jumper,''' also known as '''''Potackee''''' (April 27, 1923 – January 14, 2011) (Seminole) was the first and so far the only female chief of the [[Seminole Tribe of Florida]]. A nurse, she co-founded the tribe's first newspaper in 1956, the ''Seminole News'', later replaced by ''The Seminole Tribune,'' for which she served as editor, winning a Lifetime Achievement Award from the [[Native American Journalists Association]]. In 2001 she published her memoir, entitled ''A Seminole Legend.''
{{Infobox officeholder
|name = Betty Mae Tiger Jumper
|image = File:Betty Mae Tiger Jumper.jpg
|office = 2nd Tribal Council Chairman of the [[Seminole Tribe of Florida]]
|deputy =
|term_start = 1967
|term_end = 1971
|predecessor = [[Bill Osceola]]
|successor = Howard Tommie
|birth_date = {{birth date|1923|04|27}}
|birth_place = Indiantown, Florida
|death_date = {{death date and age|2011|01|14|1923|04|27}}
|death_place =
|resting_place = New Seminole Cemetery
|party =
|spouse = Moses Jumper
|children =
|education =
}}

'''Betty Mae Tiger Jumper,''' also known as '''''Potackee''''' (April 27, 1923 – January 14, 2011) (Seminole), was the first and so far the only female chairperson of the [[Seminole Tribe of Florida]]. A nurse, she co-founded the tribe's first newspaper in 1956, the ''Seminole News'', later replaced by ''The Seminole Tribune,'' for which she served as editor, winning a Lifetime Achievement Award from the [[Native American Journalists Association]]. In 2001 she published her memoir, entitled ''A Seminole Legend.''


Tiger was the first Florida Seminole to learn to read and write English, and the first to graduate from high school and a nursing program. In addition to serving as editor of the newspaper, she was Communications Director for the tribe.
Tiger was the first Florida Seminole to learn to read and write English, and the first to graduate from high school and a nursing program. In addition to serving as editor of the newspaper, she was Communications Director for the tribe.


==Early life and education==
==Early life and education==
Born Betty Mae Tiger on April 27, 1923 in a Seminole camp near [[Indiantown, Florida]], she was the daughter of Ada Tiger, a Seminole woman of the Snake [[clan]], and a French trapper. Her grandmother Mary Tiger picked her Seminole name of ''Potackee.''<ref name="interview">{{cite web|title=Betty Mae Jumper interview|url=http://ufdc.ufl.edu/UF00008107/00001|work=Seminole Oral History Collection, Samuel Proctor Oral History Program |publisher=University of Florida Digital Collections|date=June 28, 1999}}</ref> Under the Seminole [[matrilineal]] kinship system, Betty Mae was given her mother's surname.
Born Betty Mae Tiger on April 27, 1923, in a Seminole camp near [[Indiantown, Florida]], she was the daughter of Ada Tiger, a Seminole woman of the Snake [[clan]], and a French trapper, Abe Partan. Her grandmother Mary Tiger picked her Seminole name of ''Potackee.''<ref name="Interview">{{cite web|title=Betty Mae Jumper interview|url=http://ufdc.ufl.edu/UF00008107/00001|work=Seminole Oral History Collection, Samuel Proctor Oral History Program|publisher=University of Florida Digital Collections|date=June 28, 1999|access-date=August 2, 2012|archive-date=December 30, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121230204021/https://ufdc.ufl.edu/UF00008107/00001|url-status=dead}}</ref> Under the Seminole [[matrilineal]] kinship system, Betty Mae was given her mother's surname.


The tribe so discouraged intermarriage with whites that sometimes they left half-breed children in the Everglades to die. When Betty Mae was five, some Seminole medicine men threatened to put her and her younger brother to death, because their father was white. Her great-uncle resisted the men and moved the family to the [[Dania]] reservation in [[Broward County]], where the government protected the children.<ref>Interview, p. 4</ref> At the time, her mother had to leave nearly 500 head of cattle; she sold some and offered others to the tribe for people who needed food.<ref>Interview, p. 11</ref>
The tribe so discouraged intermarriage with whites that sometimes they left half-breed children in the Everglades to die. When Betty Mae was five, some Seminole medicine men threatened to put her and her younger brother to death, because their father was white. Her great-uncle resisted the men and moved the family to the [[Dania Beach, Florida|Dania]] reservation in [[Broward County]], where the government protected the children.<ref>Interview, p. 4</ref> At the time, her mother had to leave nearly 500 head of cattle; she sold some and offered others to the tribe for people who needed food.<ref>Interview, p. 11</ref>


Betty Mae's first languages were [[Mikasuki language|Mikasuki]] and [[Creek language|Creek]], as relatives spoke both. At night she often listened as older members of the tribe told stories passed down from their ancestors. "The stories taught you how to live," she said.<ref name="interview"/> She would later record the stories for future generations.
Betty Mae's first languages were [[Mikasuki language|Mikasuki]] and [[Creek language|Creek]], as relatives spoke both. At night she often listened as older members of the tribe told stories passed down from their ancestors. "The stories taught you how to live," she said.<ref name="Interview" /> She would later record the stories for future generations.


Tiger decided she had to learn how to read and write. In the [[Racial segregation in the United States|segregated]] school system of Florida, neither the white nor the black schools would accept Seminole children. Tiger decided to go to a federal [[Indian boarding school]], and enrolled at one in [[Cherokee, North Carolina]], along with her cousin Mary and younger brother.
Tiger decided she had to learn how to read and write. In the [[Racial segregation in the United States|segregated]] school system of Florida, neither the white nor the black schools would accept Seminole children. Tiger decided to go to a federal [[Indian boarding school]], and enrolled at one in [[Cherokee, North Carolina]], along with her cousin Mary and younger brother.


She started learning English at age 14. She became the first formally educated Seminole of her tribe, as well as the first to read and write English; she graduated from high school in 1945.<ref name="tigerbio"/> Betty Tiger enrolled in a nursing program at the [[Kiowa]] Indian Hospital in [[Oklahoma]], which she completed the following year. The Seminole then were still very traditional, and many would only accept care from Medicine Men. Her family had roles as medicine people: her mother, uncles and great-uncle Jimmy. Unlike the Medicine Men, her mother was willing also to accept white doctors and hospitals, whatever would help sick people.<ref>Interview, p. 7</ref>
She started learning English at age 14. She became the first formally educated Seminole of her tribe, as well as the first to read and write English; she graduated from high school in 1945.<ref name="tigerbio"/> Betty Tiger enrolled in a nursing program at the [[Kiowa]] Indian Hospital in [[Oklahoma]], which she completed the following year. The Seminole then were still very traditional, and many would only accept care from Medicine Men. Her family had roles as medicine people: her mother, uncles and great-uncle Jimmy. Unlike the Medicine Men, her mother was willing also to accept white doctors and hospitals, whatever would help sick people.<ref>Interview, p. 7</ref>


==Marriage and family==
==Marriage and family==
After finishing the nursing program, Tiger returned to Florida, where she did field training. She married Moses Jumper, and they had a son Moses and two daughters, who died young. After that, they adopted two Seminole girls, Betner Roger and Scarlet.<ref>Interview, pp. 14-15</ref>
After finishing the nursing program, Tiger returned to Florida, where she did field training. She married Moses Jumper, and they had a son Moses and two daughters, who died young. After that, they adopted two Seminole children, Boettner Roger and Scarlet.<ref>Interview, pp. 14-15</ref>


==Career==
==Career==
Betty Tiger Jumper worked as a nurse for 40 years to improve health care in the Seminole community, initially traveling a large circuit to the various small communities of the areas that became Big Cypress, Brighton and Hollywood reservations. "As the people came out of the swamps", as she said, she and another nurse inoculated many children with [[vaccinations]] for the first time.<ref>Interview, p. 8</ref> She and her mother, who was a midwife, would work to persuade women to go to the hospital when needed, as they began to adapt to the new world.
Betty Tiger Jumper worked as a nurse for 40 years to improve health care in the Seminole community, initially traveling a large circuit to the various small communities of the areas that became Big Cypress, Brighton and Hollywood reservations. "As the people came out of the swamps", as she said, she and another nurse inoculated many children with [[vaccinations]] for the first time.<ref>Interview, p. 8</ref> She and her mother, who was a midwife, would work to persuade women to go to the hospital when needed, as they began to adapt to the new world.


In 1956, Tiger Jumper was co-founder of a tribal newsletter, called the ''Seminole News.'' It closed a short time after others took it over.
In 1956, Tiger Jumper was co-founder of a tribal newsletter, called the ''Seminole News.'' It closed a short time after others took it over.


In 1967 Betty Mae Tiger Jumper was elected as the first female chairwoman, or chief, of the Seminole tribe, a decade after it gained federal recognition. She founded the [[United South and Eastern Tribes]] (USET), a group to run health and education programs for its members; it also became a powerful lobby with the states and Congress.<ref name="halloffame"/> In 1970, she was one of two women appointed by President [[Richard M. Nixon]] to the National Congress on Indian Opportunity.<ref name="halloffame"/> She served on the Council for a total of 16 years.<ref>Interview, p. 9</ref>
In 1967 Betty Mae Tiger Jumper was elected as the first female chairwoman, or chief, of the Seminole tribe, a decade after it gained federal recognition. She founded the [[United South and Eastern Tribes]] (USET), a group to run health and education programs for its members; it also became a powerful lobby with the states and Congress.<ref name="halloffame"/> In 1970, she was one of two women appointed by President [[Richard M. Nixon]] to the National Congress on Indian Opportunity.<ref name="halloffame"/> She served on the council for a total of 16 years.<ref>Interview, p. 9</ref>


Thanks to her leadership, the Seminole Tribe went from near bankruptcy in 1967 to having $500,000 when she left office in 1971. "I had three goals in my life," Mrs. Jumper said in 1999. "To finish school, to take nurse's training and come back and work among my people, and to write three books."<ref name="interview"/> She met those goals and many more.
Thanks to her leadership, the Seminole Tribe went from near bankruptcy in 1967 to having $500,000 when she left office in 1971. "I had three goals in my life," Mrs. Jumper said in 1999. "To finish school, to take nurse's training and come back and work among my people, and to write three books."<ref name="Interview" /> She met those goals and many more.


In the 1970s, the ''Alligator News'' was founded as the tribal newspaper. After it was renamed as ''The Seminole Tribune,'' Tiger-Jumper served as editor for several years<ref name="interview"/> and also became Communication Director for the Tribe. She wrote many articles about tribal traditions and culture. By 1999, the paper had four Seminoles working on it and five or six whites, and was being distributed across the country and internationally.<ref>Interview, p. 18</ref> Tiger-Jumper was awarded the first Lifetime Achievement Award by the [[Native American Journalists Association]].
In the 1970s, the ''Alligator News'' was founded as the tribal newspaper. After it was renamed as ''The Seminole Tribune,'' Tiger-Jumper served as editor for several years<ref name="Interview" /> and also became Communication Director for the Tribe. She wrote many articles about tribal traditions and culture. By 1999, the paper had four Seminoles working on it and five or six whites, and was being distributed across the country and internationally.<ref>Interview, p. 18</ref> Tiger-Jumper was awarded the first Lifetime Achievement Award by the [[Native American Journalists Association]].


==Books==
==Books==
Line 38: Line 59:


==Later years==
==Later years==
By the time she published her memoir in 2001, ''A Seminole Legend'', Tiger-Jumper also had created her own website. The last surviving matriarch of the Snake clan, she died peacefully in her sleep on January 14, 2011.<ref name="man">[http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/2011-01-15/news/fl-seminole-chair-dead-20110115_1_mitchell-cypress-seminole-leader-tribal-council Anthony Man, "Betty Mae Tiger Jumper, 88, Seminole leader dies"], ''Sun Sentinel'', 15 January 2011, accessed 17 April 2013</ref>
By the time she published her memoir in 2001, ''A Seminole Legend'', Tiger-Jumper also had created her own website. The last surviving matriarch of the Snake clan, she died peacefully in her sleep on January 14, 2011.<ref name="man">{{cite news|first=Anthony|last=Man|title=Betty Mae Tiger Jumper, 88, Seminole leader dies|work=Sun-Sentinel|location=Fort Lauderdale, Florida|date=January 15, 2011|url=http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/2011-01-15/news/fl-seminole-chair-dead-20110115_1_mitchell-cypress-seminole-leader-tribal-council|access-date=April 17, 2013|archive-date=January 21, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110121071748/http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/2011-01-15/news/fl-seminole-chair-dead-20110115_1_mitchell-cypress-seminole-leader-tribal-council|url-status=dead}}</ref>


==Legacy and honors==
==Legacy and honors==
* In 1989, the monthly ''Seminole Tribune'' was the first Native American newspaper to win a [[Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award]]. That year, it was also nominated for a [[Pulitzer Prize]].<ref name="about">[http://www.semtribe.com/SeminoleTribune/AboutUs.aspx "About Us"], ''The Seminole Tribune'', 2013</ref>
* In 1989, the monthly ''Seminole Tribune'' was the first Native American newspaper to win a [[Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award]]. That year, it was also nominated for a [[Pulitzer Prize]].<ref name="about">[http://www.semtribe.com/SeminoleTribune/AboutUs.aspx "About Us"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141018070621/http://www.semtribe.com/SeminoleTribune/AboutUs.aspx |date=2014-10-18 }}, ''The Seminole Tribune'', 2013</ref>
* 1994, she was inducted into the [[Florida Women's Hall of Fame]].<ref name="halloffame">[http://www.fcsw.net/halloffame/WHOFbios/betty_mae_jumper.htm "Betty Mae Jumper. 1923- :Inducted 1994"], Florida Women's Hall of Fame</ref>
* In 1994, she was inducted into the [[Florida Women's Hall of Fame]].<ref name="halloffame">[http://www.fcsw.net/halloffame/WHOFbios/betty_mae_jumper.htm "Betty Mae Jumper. 1923- :Inducted 1994"] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070527041708/http://www.fcsw.net/halloffame/WHOFbios/betty_mae_jumper.htm |date=May 27, 2007 }}, Florida Women's Hall of Fame</ref>
* In 1997 she received the first Lifetime Achievement Award ever presented by the [[Native American Journalists Association]].<ref name="tigerbio"/>
* Received Florida Department of State Folklife Heritage Award<ref name="tigerbio">Betty Mae Tiger-Jumper and Patsy West, ''A Seminole Legend,'' University Press of Florida, 2001</ref>
* Received an honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from [[Florida State University]].<ref name="tigerbio"/>
* In 1997, the ''Seminole Tribune'' earned five awards from the Native American Journalists Association.<ref name="about"/>
* 1997 she received the first Lifetime Achievement Award ever presented by the [[Native American Journalists Association]].<ref name="tigerbio"/>
* In 1997, she was named "Woman of the Year" by the Florida Commission on the Status of Women.<ref name="tigerbio"/>
* 1997, the ''Seminole Tribune'' earned five awards from the Native American Journalists Association.<ref name="about"/>
* She received an honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from [[Florida State University]].<ref name="tigerbio"/>
* In 2019, a historical marker honoring Jumper was erected in Stuart, Florida.<ref>{{cite news|title=Woman's Club of Stuart to honor Betty Mae Tiger Jumper with historical marker|date=January 24, 2019|last=Begley|first=Janet|work=TCPalm|location=Treasure Coast, Florida|url=https://www.tcpalm.com/story/news/local/martin-county/2019/01/24/betty-mae-tiger-jumper-historical-marker-seminole-tribe-indiantown/2667385002/|access-date=May 28, 2019}}</ref>
* 1997, she was named "Woman of the Year" by the Florida Commission on the Status of Women.<ref name="tigerbio"/>
* She received a Florida Department of State Folklife Heritage Award<ref name="tigerbio">{{cite book|first1=Betty Mae Tiger|last1=Jumper|first2=Patsy|last2=West|title=A Seminole Legend|publisher=University Press of Florida|date=2001}}</ref>


==References==
==References==
Line 53: Line 75:


==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.firn.edu/civiced/games/faces/jumper.html Betty Mae Tiger Jumper, 1922 - : First Woman to Lead Florida's Seminoles]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20060920121943/http://www.firn.edu/civiced/games/faces/jumper.html Betty Mae Tiger Jumper, 1922 - : First Woman to Lead Florida's Seminoles]
*[http://www.fcsw.net/halloffame/WHOFbios/betty_mae_jumper.htm "Betty Mae Jumper. 1923- :Inducted 1994"], Florida Women's Hall of Fame
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20070527041708/http://www.fcsw.net/halloffame/WHOFbios/betty_mae_jumper.htm "Betty Mae Jumper. 1923- :Inducted 1994"], Florida Women's Hall of Fame


{{Florida Women's Hall of Fame}}
{{Florida Women's Hall of Fame}}


{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}

{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| NAME = Jumper, Betty Mae Tiger
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES = Potackee
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = Chief of the Seminole Tribe of Florida, nurse and editor
| DATE OF BIRTH = April 27, 1923
| PLACE OF BIRTH = Indiantown, Florida
| DATE OF DEATH = January 14, 2011
| PLACE OF DEATH =
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Jumper, Betty Mae Tiger}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Jumper, Betty Mae Tiger}}
[[Category:1923 births]]
[[Category:1923 births]]
[[Category:2011 deaths]]
[[Category:2011 deaths]]
[[Category:Seminole people]]
[[Category:People from Dania Beach, Florida]]
[[Category:People from Florida]]
[[Category:People from Indiantown, Florida]]
[[Category:Seminole Tribe of Florida people]]
[[Category:20th-century Native Americans]]
[[Category:21st-century Native Americans]]
[[Category:20th-century Native American women]]
[[Category:21st-century Native American women]]
[[Category:Native American history of Florida]]

Latest revision as of 03:04, 5 November 2024

Betty Mae Tiger Jumper
2nd Tribal Council Chairman of the Seminole Tribe of Florida
In office
1967–1971
Preceded byBill Osceola
Succeeded byHoward Tommie
Personal details
Born(1923-04-27)April 27, 1923
Indiantown, Florida
DiedJanuary 14, 2011(2011-01-14) (aged 87)
Resting placeNew Seminole Cemetery
SpouseMoses Jumper

Betty Mae Tiger Jumper, also known as Potackee (April 27, 1923 – January 14, 2011) (Seminole), was the first and so far the only female chairperson of the Seminole Tribe of Florida. A nurse, she co-founded the tribe's first newspaper in 1956, the Seminole News, later replaced by The Seminole Tribune, for which she served as editor, winning a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Native American Journalists Association. In 2001 she published her memoir, entitled A Seminole Legend.

Tiger was the first Florida Seminole to learn to read and write English, and the first to graduate from high school and a nursing program. In addition to serving as editor of the newspaper, she was Communications Director for the tribe.

Early life and education

[edit]

Born Betty Mae Tiger on April 27, 1923, in a Seminole camp near Indiantown, Florida, she was the daughter of Ada Tiger, a Seminole woman of the Snake clan, and a French trapper, Abe Partan. Her grandmother Mary Tiger picked her Seminole name of Potackee.[1] Under the Seminole matrilineal kinship system, Betty Mae was given her mother's surname.

The tribe so discouraged intermarriage with whites that sometimes they left half-breed children in the Everglades to die. When Betty Mae was five, some Seminole medicine men threatened to put her and her younger brother to death, because their father was white. Her great-uncle resisted the men and moved the family to the Dania reservation in Broward County, where the government protected the children.[2] At the time, her mother had to leave nearly 500 head of cattle; she sold some and offered others to the tribe for people who needed food.[3]

Betty Mae's first languages were Mikasuki and Creek, as relatives spoke both. At night she often listened as older members of the tribe told stories passed down from their ancestors. "The stories taught you how to live," she said.[1] She would later record the stories for future generations.

Tiger decided she had to learn how to read and write. In the segregated school system of Florida, neither the white nor the black schools would accept Seminole children. Tiger decided to go to a federal Indian boarding school, and enrolled at one in Cherokee, North Carolina, along with her cousin Mary and younger brother.

She started learning English at age 14. She became the first formally educated Seminole of her tribe, as well as the first to read and write English; she graduated from high school in 1945.[4] Betty Tiger enrolled in a nursing program at the Kiowa Indian Hospital in Oklahoma, which she completed the following year. The Seminole then were still very traditional, and many would only accept care from Medicine Men. Her family had roles as medicine people: her mother, uncles and great-uncle Jimmy. Unlike the Medicine Men, her mother was willing also to accept white doctors and hospitals, whatever would help sick people.[5]

Marriage and family

[edit]

After finishing the nursing program, Tiger returned to Florida, where she did field training. She married Moses Jumper, and they had a son Moses and two daughters, who died young. After that, they adopted two Seminole children, Boettner Roger and Scarlet.[6]

Career

[edit]

Betty Tiger Jumper worked as a nurse for 40 years to improve health care in the Seminole community, initially traveling a large circuit to the various small communities of the areas that became Big Cypress, Brighton and Hollywood reservations. "As the people came out of the swamps", as she said, she and another nurse inoculated many children with vaccinations for the first time.[7] She and her mother, who was a midwife, would work to persuade women to go to the hospital when needed, as they began to adapt to the new world.

In 1956, Tiger Jumper was co-founder of a tribal newsletter, called the Seminole News. It closed a short time after others took it over.

In 1967 Betty Mae Tiger Jumper was elected as the first female chairwoman, or chief, of the Seminole tribe, a decade after it gained federal recognition. She founded the United South and Eastern Tribes (USET), a group to run health and education programs for its members; it also became a powerful lobby with the states and Congress.[8] In 1970, she was one of two women appointed by President Richard M. Nixon to the National Congress on Indian Opportunity.[8] She served on the council for a total of 16 years.[9]

Thanks to her leadership, the Seminole Tribe went from near bankruptcy in 1967 to having $500,000 when she left office in 1971. "I had three goals in my life," Mrs. Jumper said in 1999. "To finish school, to take nurse's training and come back and work among my people, and to write three books."[1] She met those goals and many more.

In the 1970s, the Alligator News was founded as the tribal newspaper. After it was renamed as The Seminole Tribune, Tiger-Jumper served as editor for several years[1] and also became Communication Director for the Tribe. She wrote many articles about tribal traditions and culture. By 1999, the paper had four Seminoles working on it and five or six whites, and was being distributed across the country and internationally.[10] Tiger-Jumper was awarded the first Lifetime Achievement Award by the Native American Journalists Association.

Books

[edit]
  • And With the Wagon - Came God's Word
  • Legends of the Seminoles, illustrated by Guy La Bree (children's book, 1994)
  • with Patsy West, A Seminole Legend (2001)

She narrated a video, The Corn Lady, telling a Seminole traditional story.

Later years

[edit]

By the time she published her memoir in 2001, A Seminole Legend, Tiger-Jumper also had created her own website. The last surviving matriarch of the Snake clan, she died peacefully in her sleep on January 14, 2011.[11]

Legacy and honors

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d "Betty Mae Jumper interview". Seminole Oral History Collection, Samuel Proctor Oral History Program. University of Florida Digital Collections. June 28, 1999. Archived from the original on December 30, 2012. Retrieved August 2, 2012.
  2. ^ Interview, p. 4
  3. ^ Interview, p. 11
  4. ^ a b c d e Jumper, Betty Mae Tiger; West, Patsy (2001). A Seminole Legend. University Press of Florida.
  5. ^ Interview, p. 7
  6. ^ Interview, pp. 14-15
  7. ^ Interview, p. 8
  8. ^ a b c "Betty Mae Jumper. 1923- :Inducted 1994" Archived May 27, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, Florida Women's Hall of Fame
  9. ^ Interview, p. 9
  10. ^ Interview, p. 18
  11. ^ Man, Anthony (January 15, 2011). "Betty Mae Tiger Jumper, 88, Seminole leader dies". Sun-Sentinel. Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Archived from the original on January 21, 2011. Retrieved April 17, 2013.
  12. ^ a b "About Us" Archived 2014-10-18 at the Wayback Machine, The Seminole Tribune, 2013
  13. ^ Begley, Janet (January 24, 2019). "Woman's Club of Stuart to honor Betty Mae Tiger Jumper with historical marker". TCPalm. Treasure Coast, Florida. Retrieved May 28, 2019.
[edit]