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Black Indians in the United States

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Black Native Americans
Billy Bowlegs III Edmonia Lewis Radmilla Cody
France Winddance Twine George Bonga Illinois Jacquet
Regions with significant populations
United States (especially the Southern United States or in locations populated by Southern descendants).
Languages
American English
Related ethnic groups
African American • Afro-Asian American • Afro-Boricua • Atlantic Creole • Black Seminoles • Brass Ankles • Cafuzo • Cherokee freedmen • Chestnut Ridge people • Choctaw Freedmen • Freedmen • Garifuna • Gullah • Hapa Popolo (Black Pacific Islander) • Indigenous peoples of the Americas • Indigenous peoples of the United States • Louisiana Creole people • Lumbee • Maroon • Melungeon • Miskito Sambu • Native Americans in the United States • Pardo • Redbone (ethnicity) • We-Sorts • Zambo

Black Native Americans are people of African-American descent, usually with significant Native American ancestry, who also have strong ties to Native American culture, social, and historical traditions.

Certain Native American tribes had close relations with African Americans, especially those where slavery was prevalent. Members of the Five Civilized Tribes held enslaved blacks, who migrated with them to the West in 1830 and later. In peace treaties with the US after the American Civil War, the tribes, which had sided with the Confederacy, were required to emancipate slaves and give them full citizenship rights in their nations. The Cherokee, Creek, and Seminole have created controversy in recent decades as they tightened rules for membership in their nations and excluded Freedmen who did not have at least one Native American ancestor on the early 20th century Dawes Rolls.

Overview

Waffles are so sexy

History

Colonial America

The earliest record of African and Native American contact occurred in April 1502, when the first African slaves arrived in Hispaniola. Some escaped inland on Santo Domingo; those who survived and joined with the natives became the first circle of Black Native Americans.[2][3] In addition, the first example of African slaves' escaping from European colonists and being absorbed by Native Americans was recorded in 1526. In June of that year, Lucas Vasquez de Ayllón established a Spanish colony near the mouth of the Pee Dee River in what is now eastern South Carolina. The Spanish settlement was named San Miquel de Guadalupe. Among the inhabitants were 100 enslaved Africans. In 1526, the first African slaves fled the colony and took refuge with local Native Americans.[3]

Intermarriage between African slaves and Native Americans began in the early 17th century in the coastal settlements.[4] In 1622 Native Americans overran the European colony of Jamestown. They killed the Europeans but brought the African slaves as captives back to their communities, gradually integrating them.[5] Interracial relationships occurred between African Americans and members of other tribes in the coastal states.[4] Several colonial advertisements for runaway slaves made direct reference to the connections which Africans had in Native American communities. For example, ...ran off with his Native American wife..., had kin among the Native Americans..., part Native American and speaks their language good.[6]

In South Carolina, colonists were so concerned about the possible threat posed by the mixed African and Native American population that was arising due to runaways, that they passed a new law in 1725. This law stipulated a fine of 200 pounds for persons bringing a slave to the frontier regions. In 1751 South Carolina passed a law against holding Africans in proximity to Native Americans, which was deemed detrimental to the security of the colony.

In 1726 the British governor of colonial New York exacted a promise from the Iroquois Confederacy to return all runaway slaves. He required the same from the Huron tribe in 1764 and the Delaware tribe in 1765.[5] Despite their agreements, the tribes never returned any escaped slaves.[5] They continued to provide a safe refuge for escaped slaves. In 1763 during Chief Pontiac's uprising, a Detroit resident reported that Native Americans killed whites but were "saving and caressing all the Negroes they take." He worried lest this might "produce an insurrection." Chief Joseph Brant's Mohawk in New York welcomed runaway slaves and encouraged adoption of them into the tribe and intermarriage.[5] The Native American adoption systems knew no color line.[5] Carter G. Woodson notion of an escape hatch from slavery proved correct: Native American villages welcomed fugitive slaves and some served as stations on the Underground Railroad.[5]

During the transitional period of Africans' becoming the primary race enslaved, Native Americans were sometimes enslaved at the same time. Africans and Native Americans worked together, lived together in communal quarters, produced collective recipes for food, and shared herbal remedies, myths and legends. Some intermarried and had mixed-race children.[7] Ads asked for the return of both African American and Native American slaves. Some Native Americans resented the presence of Africans.[8] In one description, the "Catawaba tribe in 1752 showed great anger and bitter resentment when an African American came among them as a trader."[8]

The Cherokee had the strongest color prejudice of all Native Americans.[9] The hostility has been attributed to European fears of a unified revolt of Native Americans and African Americans: "Whites sought to convince Native Americans that African Americans worked against their best interests." [10] Europeans considered both races inferior and made efforts to make Native Americans and Africans enemies.[11] Native Americans were rewarded if they returned escaped slaves, and African Americans were rewarded for fighting in "Native American Wars".[11][12][13] European colonists told the Cherokee that the smallpox epidemic of 1739 was due to disease brought by African slaves, to create tension between the groups.[14] The British tried to restrict contact between Africans and free Native Americans. They feared Native Americans' taking enslaved Africans as spouses and tried to discourage trade between the groups. The British also passed laws prohibiting the carrying of slaves into the frontier of the Cherokee Nation's territory to restrict interactions between the two groups.[14] Some tribes were said to encourage marriage between the two groups, to create stronger children from the unions.[15]

Even among the Cherokee, interracial marriages increased as the number of slaves held by the tribe increased.[14] The Cherokee were noted for having slaves work side by side with their owners.[14] Resisting the Euro-American system of chattel slavery created tensions between the Cherokee and European Americans.[14] The Cherokee tribe began to become divided; as intermarriage between white men and native women increased and there was increased adoption of European culture, so did racial discrimination against those of African-Cherokee blood and African slaves.[14] Cultural assimilation among the tribes, particularly the Cherokee, created pressure to be accepted by European Americans.[14]

Diana Fletcher of the Kiowa tribe.

In 1758 the governor of South Carolina James Glen stated:

it has always been the policy of this government to create an aversion in them Native Americans to Negroes.[14]

In the 18th century, some Native American women turned to freed or runaway African men due to a major decline in the male population in Native American villages. At the same time, the early African slave population was disproportionately male. Records show that some Native American women bought African men as slaves. Unknown to European sellers, the women freed and married the men into their tribe. Some African men chose Native American women as their partners because their children would be free, as the child's status followed that of the mother. The men could marry into some of the matrilineal tribes and be accepted, as their children were still considered to belong to the mother's people. As European expansion increased in the Southeast, African and Native American marriages became more numerous.[11]

1800s through Civil War

In the early 19th century, the US government believed that some tribes had become extinct, especially on the East Coast and those without reservations.[16] It did not have a separate census designation for Native Americans. Those who remained among the European-American communities were frequently listed as mulatto, a term applied to Native American-white, Native American-African, and African-white mixed-race people, as well as tri-racial people.[16]

The Seminole people of Florida were unusual for forming in the 18th century, mostly from Creek and other Native Americans who migrated from Georgia. They incorporated some Africans who had escaped from slavery. Other maroons formed separate communities near the Seminole, and were allied with them in military actions. Some intermarriage took place. African Americans living near the Seminole were called Black Seminoles. Several hundred people of African descent traveled with the Seminole when they were removed to Native American Territory. Others stayed with a few hundred Seminole in Florida.

By contrast, an 1835 census of the Cherokee showed that 10% were of African descent.[6] In those years, censuses of the tribes classified people of mixed Native American and African descent as Native American.[17] By contrast, during the registration for the Dawes Rolls, generally Cherokee Freedmen were classified separately on a Freedmen roll, even if individuals had Cherokee ancestry and qualified as "Cherokee by blood". This has caused problems for their descendants in the late 20th and 21st-century, as the Nation has passed legislation and a constitutional amendment to make membership more restrictive, open only to those with certificates of blood ancestry (CDIB). Western frontier artist George Catlin described "Negro and North American Native American, mixed, of equal blood" and stated they were "the finest built and most powerful men I have ever yet seen."[5] By 1922 John Swanton's survey of the Five Civilized Tribes noted that half the Cherokee Nation were freedmen and their descendants.

Former slaves and Native Americans intermarried in northern states as well. Massachusetts Vital Records prior to 1850 included notes of "Marriages of 'negroes' to Native Americans". By 1860 in some areas of the South, Native Americans were believed to have intermarried with African Americans to such an extent that white legislators thought the Native Americans no longer qualified as "Native American", as they were not paying attention to culture but only race. Legislators wanted to revoke their tax exemptions.[5]

Freed African Americans, Black Native Americans and some Native Americans fought in the American Civil War against the Confederate Army. During November 1861, the Creek and Black Native Americans, led by Creek Chief Opothleyahola, fought three pitched battles against Confederate whites and allied Native Americans to reach Union lines in Kansas and offer their services.[5] Some people who were Black Native Americans served in colored regiments with other African-American soldiers.[18]

Black Native Americans were documented in the following regiments: The 1st Kansas Colored Infantry, the Kansas Colored at Honey Springs, the 79th US Colored Infantry, and the 83rd US Colored Infantry, along with other colored regiments that included men listed as Negro.[18] Civil War battles occurred in Native American Territory.[19] The first in Native American Territory took place July 1–2, 1863, and involved the 1st Kansas Colored Infantry.[19] The first battle against the Confederacy outside Native American Territory occurred at Horse Head Creek, Arkansas on February 17, 1864. The 79th U.S. Colored Infantry participated.[19]

Many Black Native Americans returned to Native American Territory once the Civil War had been won by the Union.[18] When the Confederacy and its Native American allies were defeated, the US required new peace treaties with the Five Civilized Tribes, including provisions to emancipate slaves and make them full citizens of their nations, with equal rights in annuities and land allotments. The former slaves were called tribal freedmen, as in Cherokee Freedmen and Seminole Freedmen. The pro-Union Cherokee faction had freed their slaves in 1863, before the end of the war, but the pro-Confederacy Cherokee then constituted the majority of the tribe and kept hold of the slaves until later.[5][20]

Native American slave ownership

Slavery existed among Native Americans before it was introduced by the Europeans, although it was unlike chattel slavery where slaves become the personal property of a master. In oral tradition, for instance, Cherokees recounted people being enslaved as the result of failure in warfare, and as a temporary status pending adoption or release.[21] As the United States Constitution and the laws of several states permitted slavery, Native Americans were legally allowed to own slaves, including those brought from Africa by Europeans. Benjamin Hawkins was the federal agent assigned to the southeastern tribes in the 1790s and advised the tribes to take up slaveholding.[14] The Cherokee tribe had the most members who held black slaves, more than any other Native American nation.[22]

In colonial North America, the first exposure that Africans and Native Americans had to each other came from Africans being imported as laborers, both indentured servants and as slaves.[4] Records from the slavery period show several cases of brutal Native American treatment of black slaves. However, most Native American masters rejected the worst features of Southern practices.[5] Federal Agent Hawkins considered the form of slavery the tribes were practicing to be inefficient because the majority didn't practice chattel slavery.[14] Travelers reported enslaved Africans "in as good circumstances as their masters." A white Native American Agent, Douglas Cooper, upset by the Native American failure to practice more severe rules, insisted that Native Americans invite white men to live in their villages and "control matters."[5] Though less than 3% of Native Americans owned slaves, racial bondage and pressure from European-American culture created destructive cleavages in their villages. Many had a class hierarchy based on "white blood."[5] Native Americans of mixed white blood stood at the top, "pure" Native Americans next, and people of African descent were at the bottom.[5] As among mixed-race African Americans, some of the status of white descent may also have been related to the economic and social capital passed on by white relations.

Numerous African-descended people were held as slaves by members of Native groups up until the Civil War. Some later recounted their lives for a WPA oral history project during the Great Depression in the 1930s.[23]

Native American Freedmen

Members of the Creek (Muscogee) Nation in Oklahoma around 1877. Note mixed European, African and Native American ancestry. L to R, Lochar Harjo, principal chief; unidentified man, John McGilvry, and Silas Jefferson or Hotulko micco (Chief of the Whirlwind). The latter two were interpreters and negotiators.[24]

After the Civil War in 1866, the United States government required new treaties with the Five Civilized Tribes, who had mostly allied with the Confederacy. They were required to emancipate their slaves and grant them citizenship and membership in the respective tribes, as the United States freed slaves and granted them citizenship by amendments to the US Constitution. These people were known as tribal freedmen - for instance, Creek or Cherokee Freedmen. Similarly, the Cherokee were required to reinstate membership for the Delaware, who had earlier been given land on their reservation, but fought for the Union during the war.[25] Many of the Freedmen played active political roles in their tribal nations over the ensuing decades, including roles as interpreters and negotiators with the federal government. African Creek men, such as Harry Island and Silas Jefferson, helped secure land for their people when the government decided to make individual allotments to tribal members under the Dawes Act.

Freedmen of the "five civilized tribes" (Cherokee, Creek, Seminole, Choctaw, and Chickasaw Freedmen). In addition, some Maroon communities allied with the Seminole in Florida and intermarried. The Black Seminole included those with and without Native American ancestry.

In the late 20th century, the Cherokee Nation began to make its membership more restrictive, first requiring voters to be descended from Cherokee on the Dawes Rolls, then requiring members to be descended from Cherokee on the same rolls. At the time of registration, US government agents had classified people as Cherokee by blood, intermarried whites, and Cherokee Freedmen, regardless of whether the latter had Cherokee ancestry qualifying them as Cherokee by blood. They also removed the Delaware from the tribal rolls, except for those who had a Cherokee ancestor on the Dawes Roll. A political struggle over this issue has ensued since the 1970s. Cherokee Freedmen have taken cases to the Cherokee Supreme Court. The Cherokee later reinstated the rights of Delaware to be considered members of the Cherokee, but opposed their bid for independent federal recognition.[25]

By the tribal Supreme Court ruling of March 2006, the Cherokee Nation was required to reinstate as members about 1,000 African Americans (and descendants) whom they had dropped from the rolls in the mid-1970s. In response, leaders of the Cherokee Nation organized a referendum to amend their constitution to restrict requirements for citizenship in the tribe. The referendum established direct Cherokee ancestry as a requirement, unlike previous qualifications. Only such members were allowed to vote in the referendum. The measure passed in March 2007, thereby forcing out Cherokee Freedmen and their descendants unless they also had documented, direct Cherokee ancestry. This has caused much controversy.[26] The tribe has determined to limit membership only to those who can demonstrate Native American descent based on listing on the Dawes Rolls.[27]

Similarly, the Seminole nation of Oklahoma moved to exclude Black Seminoles from membership. In 1990 it received $56 million from the US government as reparations for lands taken in Florida. Because the judgment trust was based on tribal membership as of 1823, it excluded Seminole Freedmen, as well as Black Seminoles who held land next to Seminole communities. In 2000 the Seminole chief moved to formally exclude Black Seminoles unless they could prove descent from a Native American ancestor on the Dawes Rolls. Two thousand Black Seminoles were excluded from the nation.[28] Descendants of freedmen and Black Seminoles are working to secure their rights.

"There's never been any stigma about intermarriage," says Stu Phillips, editor of The Seminole Producer, a local newspaper in central Oklahoma. "You've got Native Americans marrying whites, Native Americans marrying blacks. It was never a problem until they got some money."

[28] An advocacy group representing Descendants of Freedmen of the Five Civilized Tribes claims that members are entitled to be citizens in both the Seminole and Cherokee nations, as many are indeed part Native American by blood, with records to prove it. Because of racial discrimination, their ancestors were classified and listed incorrectly, under only the category of freedmen, at the time of the Dawes Rolls. In addition, the group notes that post-Civil War treaties of these tribes with the US government required they give African Americans full citizenship upon emancipation, regardless of blood quantum. In many cases, Native American descent has been difficult for people to trace from historical records.[29] Twenty-five thousand descendants of freedmen of the Five Civilized Tribes may be affected by the legal controversies.[28]

The Dawes Commission enrollment records, intended to establish rolls of tribal members for land allocation purposes, were done under rushed conditions by a variety of recorders. Many tended to exclude Freedmen from Cherokee rolls and enter them separately, even when they claimed Cherokee descent, had records of it, and had Cherokee physical features. Descendants of Freedmen see the tribe's contemporary reliance on the Dawes Rolls as a racially based way to exclude them from citizenship.[30][31]

Before the Dawes Commission was established,

"(t)he majority of the people with African blood living in the Cherokee nation prior to the Civil war lived there as slaves of Cherokee citizens or as free black non-citizens, usually the descendants of Cherokee men and women with African blood...In 1863, the Cherokee government outlawed slavery through acts of the tribal council. In 1866, a treaty was signed with the US government in which the Cherokee government agreed to give citizenship to those people with African blood living in the Cherokee nations who were not already citizens. African Cherokee people participated as full citizens of that nation, holding office, voting, running businesses, etc."[32]

After the Dawes Commission established tribal rolls, in some cases freedmen of the Cherokee and the other Five Civilized Tribes were treated more harshly. Degrees of continued acceptance into tribal structures were low during the ensuing decades. Some tribes restricted membership to those with a documented Native ancestor on the Dawes Commission listings, and many restricted officeholders to those of direct Native American ancestry. In the later 20th century, it was difficult for Black Native Americans to establish official ties with Native groups to which they genetically belonged. Many of the freedmen descendants believe that their exclusion from tribal membership, and the resistance to their efforts to gain recognition, are racially motivated and based on the tribe's wanting to preserve the new gambling revenues for fewer people.[25][33]

Genealogy

L to R: Mrs. Amos Chapman, her daughter, sister (all Cheyenne, and an unidentified girl of African American descent. 1886[34]

Tracing the genealogy of African Americans and Native Americans is a difficult process. Enslaved Africans were renamed by slaveholders and surnames were infrequently used until after the war. Historical records, such as censuses, did not record the names of enslaved blacks before the American Civil War. Some major slaveholders kept extensive records which historians and genealogists have used to create family trees, but generally researchers find it difficult to trace families before the Civil War. Slaves were forbidden to learn to read and write. A majority of Native Americans did not speak English, let alone read or write it.[35]

In some cases elder family members may withhold information about Native American heritage.[35] However, knowing the family's geographic origins is a key factor in helping individuals unravel Native American ancestry.[35] Many modern African Americans have taken an interest in genealogy and are learning about Native American heritage within their individual families. Some African Americans may work from oral history of the family and try to confirm stories of Native ancestry through genealogical research and DNA testing. Because of such findings, some have petitioned to be registered as members of Native American tribes. Each tribe controls the rules for membership. Most do not accept DNA tests as proof, especially since these cannot distinguish among the tribes.

DNA testing and research has provided more facts about the extent of Native American ancestry among African Americans, which varies in the general population. As Harvard University historian Henry Louis Gates, Jr. wrote in 2009,

"Here are the facts: Only 5 percent of all black Americans have at least 12.5 percent Native American ancestry, the equivalent of at least one great-grandparent. Those 'high cheek bones' and 'straight black hair' your relatives brag about at every family reunion and holiday meal since you were 2 years old? Where did they come from? To paraphrase a well-known French saying, “Seek the white man.”
African Americans, just like our first lady, are a racially mixed or mulatto people—deeply and overwhelmingly so. Fact: Fully 58 percent of African-American people, according to geneticist Mark Shriver at Morehouse College, possess at least 12.5 percent European ancestry (again, the equivalent of that one great-grandparent).

[36] In contradiction to Gates statement The Indigenous Peoples Council on Biocolonialism (IPCB) notes that:

"Native American markers" are not found solely among Native Americans. While they occur more frequently among Native Americans they are also found in people in other parts of the world.[37]

Geneticists also state:

not all Native Americans have been tested especially with the large number of deaths due to disease such as small pox, it is unlikely that Native Americans only have the genetic markers they have identified, even when their maternal or paternal bloodline does not include a non-Native American.[38][39]

It should be noted that most statisticians would not necessarily view the IPCB and Geneticists remarks directly above as preventing a sound analysis of genomic contributions from various continents to the make-up of an admixed individual. In general, these analyses are not based on the presence of markers, single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), that the sophisticated analyst would describe as African, Asian, European, or Amerind. Peeking under the hood, one would see that autosomal analysis, as opposed to mtDNA and Y-chromosome analysis discussed below, is based on the relative distribution of the SNPs in these populations coupled with their distribution in the genome being analyzed. Techniques such as maximum likelihood estimation and Bayesian re-estimation provide instruments for assessing ancestry, which also assign a level of confidence to the estimate. Relatively small segments of the genome can be analyzed with these techniques, which are well established, having been applied with great effect in many other areas.

The two common types of tests used are Y-chromosome and mtDNA (mitochondrial DNA) testing. The tests processes for direct-line male and female ancestors. Each follows only one line among many ancestors and thus can fail to identify others. Some critics thought the PBS series did not sufficiently explain the limitations of DNA testing for assessment of heritage.[38][39][39] In addition, while full testing may tell an individual if he or she has some Native American ancestry, it cannot distinguish among separate Native American tribes.[40] African Americans are using DNA testing to find out more about all their ancestry. Native American identity has historically been based on culture, not just biology.

Autosomal DNA tests survey all the DNA that has been inherited from the parents of an individual.[41] Autosomal tests focus on SNPs, which might of course be found in Africans, Asians, and people from every other part of the world.[41] DNA testing will not determine an individual's full ancestry with absolute certitude.[41]

Notable Black Native Americans

Historic

Contemporary

See also

References

  1. ^ "DP-1. Profile of General Demographic Characteristics: 2000 Data Set: Census 2000 Summary File 2 (SF 2) 100-Percent Data Geographic Area: United States Racial or Ethnic Grouping: Black or African American; American Native American and Alaska Native". Census 2000 Quicktables. US Census Bureau. Retrieved 2008-06-10.
  2. ^ William Loren Katz (2008). Americans.htm "Black Native Americans". AfricanAmericans.com. Retrieved 2008-08-11. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  3. ^ a b Muslims in American History : A Forgotten Legacy by Dr. Jerald F. Dirks. ISBN 1-59008-044-0 Page 204.
  4. ^ a b c Angela Y. Walton-Raji (2008). "Tri-Racials: Black Native Americans of the Upper South". Design © 1997. Retrieved 2008-08-20.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n William Loren Katz (2008). Americans.php "Africans and Native Americans: Only in America". William Loren Katz. Retrieved 2008-09-20. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  6. ^ a b William Loren Katz, Black Native Americans: a Hidden Heritage, New York: Aladdin Paperbacks, 1997, p. 103
  7. ^ National Park Service (2009). "Park Ethnography: Work, Marriage, Christianity". National Park Service. Retrieved 2009-05-30.
  8. ^ a b Red, White, and Black, pg. 99. ISBN 0-8203-0308-9
  9. ^ Red, White, and Black, pg. 99, ISBN 0-8203-0308-9
  10. ^ Red, White, and Black, pg. 105, ISBN 0-8203-0308-9
  11. ^ a b c Dorothy A. Mays (2008). American+women+married+black+men&source=bl&ots=1E_JSZAfDk&sig=RzwOe3U5dehXn0DbTHVKxLSX9ws&hl=en&ei=xbwhSu-rKKPYMdG79ZkJ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=6#PPA214,M1 Women in early America. ABC-CLIO. p. 214. Retrieved 2008-05-29. {{cite book}}: Check |url= value (help)
  12. ^ Art T. Burton (1996). "CHEROKEE SLAVE REVOLT OF 1842". LWF COMMUNICATIONS. Retrieved 2009-05-29.
  13. ^ Fay A. Yarbrough (2007). Americans+married+blacks&source=bl&ots=o5ga2rKI09&sig=cz5hedbtyxCcWH3L8lrBkqz4_0U&hl=en&ei=JekhSuqwIIOgNd7AzLEJ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=7 Race and the Cherokee Nation. Univ of Pennsylvania Press. Retrieved 2009-05-30. {{cite book}}: Check |url= value (help)
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Tiya Miles (2008). Ties That Bind: The Story of an Afro-Cherokee Family in Slavery and Freedom. University of California Press. Retrieved 2009-10-27. Cite error: The named reference "afch" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  15. ^ Nomad Winterhawk (1997). "Black Native Americans want a place in history". Djembe Magazine. Retrieved 2009-05-29.
  16. ^ a b Angela Y. Walton-Raji (1999). "Tri-Racials: Black Native Americans of the Upper South". GenealogyToday. Retrieved 2009-10-27.
  17. ^ Knickmeyer, Ellen. "Cherokee Nation To Vote on Expelling Slaves' Descendants", Washington Post, 3 March 2007 (Accessible as of July 13, 2007 here [1])
  18. ^ a b c Angela Y. Walton-Raji (2008). "Oklahoma Freedmen in the Civil War". Oklahoma's Black Native Americans. Retrieved 2008-10-24.
  19. ^ a b c Angela Y. Walton-Raji (2008). "Battles Fought in Native American Territory and Battles Fought by I.T. Freedmen outside of Native American Territory". Oklahoma's Black Native Americans. Retrieved 2008-10-24.
  20. ^ Taylor, Quintard. "Cherokee Emancipation Proclamation (1863)", The Black Past: Remembered and Reclaimed. (retrieved 10 January 2010)
  21. ^ Russell, Steve (2002). "Apples are the Color of Blood", Critical Sociology Vol. 28, 1, 2002, p.70
  22. ^ Littlefield, Daniel F. Jr. The Cherokee Freedmen: From Emancipation to American Citizenship, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1978 p68
  23. ^ Lucinda Davis
  24. ^ Hudson, Charles. The Southeastern Native Americans, 1976, pg. 479
  25. ^ a b c "Delaware Tribe of Native Americans Supports Cherokee Freedmen Treaty Rights", Descendants of Freedmen of the Five Civilized Tribes, 2004, accessed 6 October 2009
  26. ^ "Cherokees eject slave descendants". BBC News. 2007-03-04. Retrieved 2010-04-26.
  27. ^ Tulsa World: News
  28. ^ a b c Brendan I. Koerner, "Blood Feud", Wired 13.09, accessed 3 June 2008
  29. ^ "History", Descendants of Freedmen of the Five Civilized Tribes, 2 August 2005, accessed 6 October 2009
  30. ^ "Myths", Descendants of Freedmen of the 5 Civilized Tribes, 2 August 2005, accessed 6 October 2009
  31. ^ "History", Descendants of Freedmen of the 5 Civilized Tribes, 2 August 2005, accessed 6 October 2009
  32. ^ Marilyn Vann, "Why: Cherokee Freedmen Story", Descendants of Freedmen of the Five Civilized Tribes, 2 August 2005, accessed 6 October 2009
  33. ^ William Loren Katz, "Racism and the Cherokee Nation", Final Call.com, 8 April 2007
  34. ^ "Czarina Conlan Collection: Photographs". Oklahoma Historical Society Star Archives. Retrieved 2010-08-23.
  35. ^ a b c Cite error: The named reference lin was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  36. ^ Henry Louis Gates, Jr., "Michelle's Great-Great-Great-Granddaddy - and Yours", The Root.com, 8 October 2009, accessed 8 October 2009
  37. ^ Kim TallBear, Phd., Associate, Red Nation Consulting (2008). AmericanAncestry.html "Can DNA Determine Who is American Native American?". The WEYANOKE Association. Retrieved 2009-05-11. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  38. ^ a b ScienceDaily (2008). "Genetic Ancestral Testing Cannot Deliver On Its Promise, Study Warns". ScienceDaily. Retrieved 2008-10-02.
  39. ^ a b c Troy Duster (2008). "Deep Roots and Tangled Branches". Chronicle of Higher Education. Retrieved 2008-10-02.
  40. ^ Brett Lee Shelton, J.D. and Jonathan Marks, Ph.D. (2008). "Genetic Markers Not a Valid Test of Native Identity". Counsel for Responsible Genetics. Retrieved 2008-10-02.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  41. ^ a b c John Hawks (2008). "How African Are You? What genealogical testing can't tell you". Washington Post. Retrieved 2010-06-26.
  42. ^ Edmonia Lewis, Edmonia Lewis. Accessed 2008-01-05.
  43. ^ Martha Redbone Interview
  44. ^ “Curriculum Vitae.” . Retrieved 10 July 2010. [dead link]

Further reading

  • Amir Nashid Ali Muhammad; Muslims in America - Seven Centuries of History ISBN 0-915957-75-2
  • Bonnett, A. "Shades of difference: African Native Americans", History Today, December 2008, 58, 12, Pages 40–42
  • Sylviane A. Diouf (1998); Servants of Allah - African Muslims Enslaved in the Americas ISBN 0-8147-1905-8
  • Allan D. Austin (1997); African Muslims in Antebellum America ISBN 0-415-91270-9
  • --
  • Tiya Miles (2006); Ties that Bind : the Story of an Afro-Cherokee Family in Slavery and Freedom ISBN 0-520-24132-0
  • J. Leitch Wright (1999); The Only Land They Knew : American Native Americans in the Old South ISBN 0-8032-9805-6
  • Patrick Minges (2004); Black Native American Slave Narratives ISBN 0-89587-298-6
  • Jack D. Forbes (1993); Africans and Native Americans: The Language of Race and the Evolution of Red-Black Peoples ISBN 0-252-06321-X
  • James F. Brooks (2002); Confounding the Color Line: The Native American - Black Experience in North America ISBN 0-8032-6194-2
  • Claudio Saunt (2005); Black, White, and Native American: Race and the Unmaking of an American Family ISBN 0-19-531310-0
  • Valena Broussard Dismukes (2007); The Red-Black Connection: Contemporary Urban African-Native Americans and their Stories of Dual Identity ISBN 978-0-9797153-0-3