I
promised a friend I'd make a list of surnames associated with the eastern
Siouan Peoples. Here is a beginning. It was taken from --
http://archive.org/stream/annualreportofbo1948smit/annualreportofbo1948smit_djvu.txt (1)
There are other lists of surnames not included in this list. I will add them in the next few months. Most of this writing starts with information taken from that 1948 Smithsonian article. Parts are added as seems appropriate.
1948
was before the state recognition process had begun. Some of these groups are
now state recognized and some aren’t. Many groups were known by different names in
1948 and some that are state recognized today were not even mentioned in 1948.
Although this article mentions the Catawba, they do not list any “Catawba”
surnames! It does list surnames of some of the bands associated with the Catawba, and I have other sources for the surnames they neglected to mention in that 1948 Smithsonian document.
Please
remember most ancestors of ALL the surnames are of European origin. The fact
that you share a surname is just an aid and not proof of Native American
ancestry. This report also lists the state and county where these people can be
found. I tell everyone that I help they must map a name, with a date and a
location. Once you can match through genealogical records your proven ancestor
was in a i.] location, with a ii.] surname associated with a
tribe during the iii.] timeframe they that tribe lived there, you still
haven’t proven you descend from them. There is one more thing you can do – you
can take an autosomal DNA test. If iv.] x-chromosomal DNA that is Native
American in origin is found in your DNA, there is a good chance you might have
had an ancestor from that tribe.
Some
groups I list as Siouan speakers (Catawban) may have been instead
Tuscaroran in the north or Cherokee or
Creek in the South. The Yamassee, Westo, Natchee, Apalachee and others vanished
from history, but it is known some survivors of many groups survived, and their
blood might also reside in many of these people. Many of the tribes that
disappeared were made into slaves, and their blood too, might reside in some of
the triracial peoples found amongst most of these groups. X-chromosomal DNA test
results might tell us a little about our lost ancestors, as well. We might be
able to prove a triracial ancestry, but this leave us with more questions that
answers.
If
you can map several ancestors to several locations with several surnames in your
family’s history, you might want to look at all the tribes involved. Unless you
can meet the criteria for tribal membership, you may not be able become a
tribal member. But you can learn their history and culture, if you like. This
is just the beginning. I have other surnames from other sources. From time to
time I’ll be adding them. This is just the first installment.
I. North/South Carolina Border
B. Catawbas (1).
The
remnants of this tribe are located at a small settlement on the banks of the
Catawba River in York County, about 9 miles southeast of Rockhill, the county
seat. The settlement is about 1 square mile in area, or 630 acres. The 1930
census returned 159 Indians in York County. Their blood seems to be mostly a mixture
of white and Indian.
Although
they are directly under the laws of South Carolina they maintain a semblance of
tribal government, electing a chief every 4 years. Conditions have long been
unsatisfactory with respect to economic and social matters. The State has
annually appropriated a sum of money to support the
local school, but there are no local social agencies to assist the Catawbas. These
Indians cut and haul wood and are employed as day laborers. The women often
make clay pottery and pipes. Federal assistance has been given to these Indians
in recent years.
Surnames:
Although no Catawban surnames were listed, I have other sources (2)
Blue
Brown
Canty
Clinton
Cook
Gordon
Harris
Heart
Joe
Kegg
Kennedy
Morrison
Mursh
Nettles
Owl
Patterson
Sanders
Stephens
Wahoo
(Screech Owl)
Williams
Muriel
H. Wright mentions some of these, plus a few others (3)
Scott
Redhead
Ayers
C 1. Croatans (North
Carolina) (1) :
South Carolina Counties: Marlboro, Dillon, Marion, Horry, along northeastern borders of
the State.
North Carolina Counties:They are found in greatest concentration in
Robeson County but occur in considerable numbers in the nearby counties of
Bladen, Columbus, Cumberland, Harnett, Sampson, and Scotland.
Siouans
or Croatans. — This group is estimated to number upwards of 16,000 persons and
is thought to be increasing with greater rapidity than either whites or
Negroes. Physical measurements indicate the presence of Indian, white, and
Negro types. There is said to be a tendency for the lighter individuals and
families to hold aloof from the darker ones just as in the case of the
Nanticokes and the Narragansetts.
Originally
dwellers in the swamplands of the Lumbee River, they have become successful
tenant farmers cultivating cotton, tobacco, and corn. The State has recognized
their special status and they are endowed with a separate school system from
both whites and Negroes. They have their own churches. Intermarriage with either
Negroes or whites is forbidden by law and custom.
Surnames:
Allen.
Bennett.
Berry.
Bridger.
Brooks.
Brown.
Butler.
Chapman,
Chavis.
Coleman.
Cooper.
Cumbo.
Dare.
Graham.
Harris,
Harvie.
Howe.
Johnson,
Jones.
Lasie.
Little.
Locklear.
Lowry.
Lucas.
Martin.
Oxendine,
Paine.
Patterson.
Powell.
Revels,
Sampson.
Scott.
Smith,
Stevens.
Taylor.
Viccars.
White.
Willis.
Williamson,
Wood.
Wright.
C 2. Today These People are Called Lumbee Indians
These people have been
known under many names. They were originally discovered living in the old homelands of the Cheraw and Pedee Indians. They were once called Cherokee, Croatan, Siouan, and
today are known as “Lumbee” Indians. In the days of “separate but equal”
schools they were given their own schools, that were known as “Indian” schools,
in North Carolina. They have been called “Indian” for generations. However some families claim a Tuscarora heritage. These
tribes are all mentioned during the French and Indian War in the 1750s and
60s. From the Revolutionary War on we
hear very little about them. A few surnames reappear as “Indian” during the Civil
War 1861-1865. In the 1880s more was written about them. They were called “Croatan”
by whites who wanted there to be survivors amongst the people of the lost
colony of Roanoke. Then they became recognized by the Congress of North
Carolina however they were called Cherokees. By now it was early in he 20th
century. The Cherokee in Western North Carolina protested to calling these Indians
in Robison County “Cherokee” and these Indians in Robison County also knew they
were not Cherokee – they were given that name by politicians. In 1933 they wanted to change the name to
Cheraw, with one man stating his grandmother was a Pedee Indians and his father’s
father was a Cheraw. But some said they were not Cheraw either, so the name “Siouan Indians” was used. A faction of the tribe
said they were NOT Siouan either, but rather Tuscarora. Eventually a name was chosen,
Lumbee Tribe. After the nearby Lumber River. (4)
D. Brass Ankles, etc.
(South Carolina):
Counties:
Charleston,
Colleton, Dorchester, Berkeley, Orangeburg, and Clarendon, coastal and adjacent
areas of the State.
Surnames:
Boone.
Braveboy
Bunch.
Chavis.
Criel.
Driggers.
Goins.
Harmon.
Russell.
Sammons.
Scott.
Shavis.
Swett.
Williams.
Other Surnames Not Listed here
Brayboy
II. Tribal People Along the Virginia/North Carolina Border, Usually Associated with the Saponi
A. Cubans (North
Carolina and Virginia):
In
northeastern Person County on the Virginia border is located a group called
Cubans who number
about
400 persons. They also occur just across the State line in Halifax County, Va.,
around Christie and Virgilina. The chief family names are Coleman, Eps, Martin,
Shepherd, Stewart, and Tally. The State of North Carolina maintains an Indian school
for these people near High Plains. Near the school the Cubans maintain their
own Baptist church. They also maintain their own social lodge. Marriage with
either whites or Negroes is unusual on the part of these people. These Person
County Indians may be descendants of a small band of Saponi Indians who,
according to early census reports, inhabited Granville County, N. C. (from
which Person County was later set off).
Surnames:
Coleman,
Epps.
Martin,
Shepherd,
Stewart.
Tally.
B. Machapunga (North Carolina)
:
In
northeastern North Carolina in Dare and Hyde Counties and in Roanoke Island are
to be found a few Indian remnants of the Machapunga Tribe mixed with white and
Negro blood. Their family names are Pugh, Daniels, Berry, and Westcott. Just
outside the town of Hertford, N. C, in Perquimans County there is a group of
mixed- bloods who are called the Laster Tribe from their most common surname. They
have a tradition of descent from a Moorish or Indian mixed-blood sea captain
who long before the Civil War married a white woman and settled in this
location. They maintain that they were never slaves and have held themselves
somewhat aloof from the neighboring Negroes. At the present time they number
several hundreds and many have gone westward to Indiana, Nebraska, and other
States. In their original settlement they have their own school, church, and
stores. Somewhat to the west of Person County in Rockingham County the census
of 1930 reports a considerable body of Indians. The identity of this group is
not known. Likewise in Nash County, eastward of Raleigh, a small Indian group
is recorded in the census of 1930. In
Macon County near the Cherokee country some Croatans are said to have settled.
Surnames:
Berry.
Daniels.
Pugh.
Westcott.
After the Saponi lost their reservation at Fort Christanna, they scattered in several directions. Many remained on the North Carolina/Virginia and still remain there to this day. There is a map I found online. It shows where many of these people now are. Many are in state recognized tribes. The 1948 document only showed two group, but there were others living in the same general area.
Forrest
Hazel lists several more surnames associated with the Indian peoples living in
North Carolina, on the North Carolina/Virginia border. (5)
Whitmore
Wtkins
Jefferies
Guy
Burnette
Stewart
Bunch
Gibson
Collins
Corn
Jones
Haithcock
Turner
Wilson
Goins
Hickman
Harris
Richardson
Kimmons
Bowden
White
Allen
III. People Associated with the Melungeons
A. Melungeons (Virginia and
Tennessee) (1):
Melungeons
or Ramps. — In the counties located in the extreme western corner of Virginia
are to be found scattered groups of mixed-bloods called Melungeons or Ramps.
These people roam the mountain regions of Virginia, southern West Virginia, Tennessee,
and Kentucky. [They have recently been shown to be Saponi]. The Virginia
Melungeons are found on the mountain ridges such as Copper Ridge, Clinch Ridge,
and Powell Valley in Lee and Scott Counties, in the vicinity of Coeburn and
Norton in Wise County, near Damascus in Washington County, and in the western Dismal
area of Giles County. No estimate of their numbers is available but they
probably amount to several thousands. They show dark skins with straight or
curly black hair and high cheek bones. Formerly they lived by raising a little
corn, hunting, fishing, digging roots, gathering herbs, and doing odd jobs for
their neigh- bors. In recent years theyhave taken to mining and cultivation in
the better areas of bottom lands. The chief family names of Melungeons in this area
are Bolen, Collins, Gibson or Gipson, Freeman, Goins, and Sexton.
Surnames:
Bolen.
Collins.
Denham.
Fields.
Freeman.
Gann.
Gibson.
Goins.
Gorvens.
Graham.
Lawson.
Maloney.
Mullins.
Noel.
Piniore.
Sexton.
Wright.
Lewis Jarvis article, as transcribed by William Grohse, historian of Hancock County, Tennessee
from the Hancock County Times, Sneedville, Tennessee, 17 April 1903. (11) In this article, Jarvis mentions the following Melungeon surnames;
Collins
Gibson
Bunch
Goodman
Bolin
“others not remembered”
Moore
Williams
Sullivan
Lewis Jarvis article, as transcribed by William Grohse, historian of Hancock County, Tennessee
from the Hancock County Times, Sneedville, Tennessee, 17 April 1903. (11) In this article, Jarvis mentions the following Melungeon surnames;
Collins
Gibson
Bunch
Goodman
Bolin
“others not remembered”
Moore
Williams
Sullivan
I can think of a few more off the top of my head --
Moore
Sizemore
Blevins
B. Magoffin County,
Kentucky
Some
234 Indians were recorded for Kentucky in 1910. Later census figures do not
enumerate as many. Most of the Indians enumerated were in Magoffin and Floyd
Counties in the eastern part of the State.
In
southern Kentucky on the Tennessee border (in Cumberland and Monroe Counties)
is the Coe Clan, a mixed group of part-Indian descent. These people live on Pea
Ridge along the Cumberland River in an area bounded partly by that river on the
south and west, by Kettle Creek on the east, and Gudio Creek on the north.
They also lived in Breathett, Floyd, Lawrence and Johnson Counties in eastern Kentucky. (12)
Surnames:
Sizemore (12)
Mullins
Perkins
Cole
They also lived in Breathett, Floyd, Lawrence and Johnson Counties in eastern Kentucky. (12)
Surnames:
Sizemore (12)
Mullins
Perkins
Cole
C. Carmel Indians
(Ohio):
There
were 435 Indians in Ohio in 1930, 6 percent pure-blood, 20.9 percent mixed, and
73.1 percent not recorded, according to the census. These returns show their
presence mainly in the cities of the State, as in Cleveland (Cuyahoga County),
Columbus (Franklin County), Cincinnati (Hamilton County), Toledo (Lucas
County), and Akron (Summit County) . There were also a few Indians in rural
Hardin County who may represent a survival from early times (a few refugees),
in the Scioto marshes, and the settlement at Carmel.
There
are a number of mixed-blood groups of part-Indian descent in Ohio who are not
recorded in the census. The most notable of those is the Darke County
mixed-blood group located near Tampico on the Indiana border about 40 miles
northeast of Dayton, Ohio. This settlement dates back to the early nineteenth
century, and members of the group still hold themselves apart from both Negroes
and whites. At present they are said to number about 60 families, and they have
their own schools and churches (Methodist).
Near
the village of Carmel, Ohio, about 65 miles east of Cincinnati, there is a
small group of mixed-blood Indians. They dated back to 1858, when a white man
moved here from Virginia with a dozen Negro retainers about the time of the
Civil War. The latter mixed with other people who had arrived not long before
from Magoffin County in eastern Kentucky and who were reputedly of Indian
descent. The present-day Carmel Indians live in shacks on the farmers' lands,
where they provide occasional labor and subsist by hunting, sale of ginseng and
yellow root, and by their scant stock of chickens and pigs. A few own small plots
but the rest have been said to be on relief recently. Many migrated from the
area during World War II, but about 50 still remain in the neighborhood. The
family names are Nichols, Gibson, and Perkins.
Surnames:
Gibson.
Nichols.
Perkins.A source listed the following surnames online --
CORE FAMILY NAMES: Burnett, Chavis/Chavers/Shavers, Coker, Croker, Craddolph, Dungey, Harris, Howell, Long, Marsh, McKeel/Keel/Keels, Scott, Stewart.
Core simply meaning most prominent and frequent surnames in our Ohio, Indiana, Michigan communities.
EXTENDED FAMILY NAMES (partial list): Allen, Anderson, Archer, Artis, Ayers, Bass, Beverly, Bolling/Bowling, Branham/Brandon, Bray, Brown, Bunch, Byrd/Bird, Canaday/Kennedy, Cole, Collins, Corn, Cousins, Croston, Dalton/Dorton, Day, Dempsey, Dixon, Evans/Epps, Gallimore (associated Peppers), Garland, Gibson, Goings/Goins/Gowens, Griffin, Guy, Haithcock, Hart, Haskins, Hawk, Hawkins, Hawley, Hedgepeth, Henson, Holly, Hughes, James, Jeffries/Jeffreys, Johnson, Jones, Keeton, Kersey, Liggins, Locklear, Lucas, Lynch, Martin, Mason, Matthews, Male (Mayle, Mail), Mayo, McDaniel, McKinney, Minor, Moss, Newman, Nichols, Norman, Norris, Oxendine, Parker, Perkins, Pettiford, Penn/Pinn, Pompey, Powell, Ragland, Redman, Rickman, Richardson, Robbins, Robinson, Saunders, Sanders, Sexton, Shepherd, Shumake, Simmons, Sizemore, Spears, Stills, Taborn, Tan, Thacker, Tyler, Upthegrove, Valentine, Vaughn, Viney, Watkins, Watson, Whitt, Winborn.
D. Guineas (West
Virginia):
As
in previous cases mentioned, the census does not recognize any Indian groups in
West Virginia. However, there is a fair-size group of people centering in
northern Barbour and southern Taylor Counties in the northeastern part of the
State who may lay claim to at least part-Indian ancestry. These are the "Guineas" whose numbers may range up to 6,000 or 7,000. Small groups of these people are to be found in six or seven other counties in northern West Virginia, in parts of western Maryland, in cities of eastern and northern Ohio (such as Zanes- ville) and in Detroit.
The Guineas present the usual variety found in mixed-bloods, but the white and Indian seem to be most prominent. They have their own Methodist churches and attend segregated schools which are locally classed as "colored." As a class they stay apart from both whites and Negroes and are characterized by the following family names: Adams, Collins, Croston, Dalton, Kennedy, Mayle, Newman, Norris, and Prichard. Their racial classification has furnished considerable difficulty to the local authorities.
Surnames:
Adams.
Collins.
Croston.
Dalton (Dorton).
Kennedy.
Male or Mayle.
Miner or Minear.
Newman.
Norris.
Pritchard.
IV. Monacans
A. Issues (Virginia):
Piedmont
and Blue Ridge Indian mixed-bloods. — Beginning with Rappahannock County in the
north and continuing southward along the Blue Ridge through Rockbridge and
Amherst Counties and striking directly southward to Halifax County on the North
Carolina border we find small colonies of mixed people who claim Indian descent
and are most generally called Issues.
This
group of about 500 or 600 mixed-bloods is located in the central part of
Amherst County about 4 or 5 miles west of the county seat. The principal settlements
are on Bear Mountain and Tobacco Row Mountain in the Blue Ridge. At the extreme
western end of the county is another mixed group of similar origin derived from
Indian, white, and, in some localities, Negro blood. An Episcopal mission for
the Issues is located 3 miles west of Sweet Briar College and comprises a
school and other facilities.
The
typical Issue is a very rich brunette with straight black hair and Caucasian
features. The chief family names are Adcox, Branham, Johns, Redcross, and
Willis. In the bottoms the Issues raise tobacco, while on the slopes corn and
oats are cultivated. They are mostly renters and truck farmers. The white neighbors
of these people are said to regard them as mulattoes. The term
"Issue" is applied to mixed-bloods of the same type in many of the
counties of Virginia.
Surnames:
Adcox.
Branham.
Johns.
Redcross.
Willis.
B. Brown People of
Rockbridge County, Virginia
To
the northwest of Amherst County in Rockbridge County is a small group located
on Irish Creek, not more than 12 miles east of Lexington, Va., and called Brown
People. Their number is estimated as over 300 and they show a mixture of white,
Indian, and occasionally Negro blood. Like the Issues of Amherst County they
are a group apart from both whites and Negroes.
Surnames:
No
surnames mentioned
Catawban
Peoples Surnames in Indian Territory/Oklahoma and Arkansas
Morgan
(6)
Lerblanche
-- Indian Pioneer Papers (7)Gentry – Indian Pioneer Papers (7)
Kegg – (8)
Morrison (3)
Redhead
Heart
Ayers
Kegg/Keggo
LeBlanche
Scott
Heads
of 42 families in Qualla in 1848 (8)
Morrison
(chief); 1 familyKegg 4 families
Stevens 3 families
Heart 2 families
Scott 2 families
Kenty 3 families
George 6 families
Harris 8 families
Redhead 2 families
Ayers 5 families
Brown 3 families
Joe 3 families
Catawba
in Georgia (8)
Guy
Jefferies
Kentucky
Melungeon Family Surnames Who Came or wanted to Come to Oklahoma Hoping to Be Treated
as Indians (9)
PerkinsBaldwin
Cole
Howard
Shepherd
Fletcher
Forrest
Hazel listed some Occoneechhi/Saponi tried to sign up on Dawes or Guion-Miller
as Cherokee (10)
GuyJefferies
Wilson
Gibson
The Research of
Richard Haithcock
Richard
Haithcock has done some excellent work researching the Saponi Indians. The
following was gleaned from his writings.
Therefore
I am just going to leave the surnames he came up with in one section alone. It
is mostly in chronological order, and not by location
1677 Second
Plantation Treaty
Saponi
ChiefsMastegone
Tachapoake
Monacan Chief
Shurenough
In 1714, Chiefs of
the Saponi at Fort Christanna.
Tanhee
Soka Hoontsky
A 1722 treaty
mentions the following Saponi
Great
George
John
SauanoBen Harrison
Captain Tom
Pyah (probably Pryor, who is elsewhere mentioned)
Saponey Tom
Tony Mack
Harry Irvin
Manehip
1738 -- Carlson says the following in his PhD Dissertation: “From
1738 on, the Orange County Court records mention various petitions from
Alexander Maurchtoon, John Sauna, John Collins, John Bowling, and others, all
of whom are described there specifically as “Christian Saponey Indians.” John Sauano/Sauna is mentioned in both the 1722 and 1738 accounts. (14)
1739 -- Saponi
camp is mentioned, s. side Nuese River in Craven County, NC
1740 – Tutelo start
their migration to Six Nations1742 -- Saponi are mentioned on Orange County, Virginia
Maniassa
Captain Tom
Blind Tom
Foolish Zach
Little Zach
John Collins
Charles Griffen
Alexander Machartoon
John Bowling
Isaac
Tom.
1743 -- Per Carlson; "The Christian Saponi went south to live near Catawba lands,
however by in 1745 they were back in Virginia, in Louisa County, near to their
former lands in Orange County, in the mountains south of Rapidan
Station. The Christian Saponi would reside in the area for some time and would
be noted as “Nassayn” (Saponi for ‘the People’) on 1749-1750 era maps. Names
listed living in this area are Sam and William Collins, along men named George
and Thomas Gibson, Sam Bunch, Ben Branham, and a few others were charged with
by Louisa County court of ‘concealing tithables’
1749 -- Johnson
County, North Carolina, on the south side of the Nuese River, at a place called
Powell's Run, a 'Saponi Camp' is mentioned
1753 – Tutelo join
Six Nations.
1755 – Saponi Indians
mentioned in Person Co., NC
1777 -- Saponi
mixed bloods who are mentioned on militia rosters in 1777 during the American
Revolution. surnames:
Riddle
Collins
Bunch
Bollin
Goins
Gibson
Sizemore.
In 1784, some old
Saponi families are still living in Brunswick County, Virginia, near the
location of the former Fort Christana. Surnames:Robinson
Haithcock
Whitmore
Carr
Jeffreys
Guy.
1827 -- Hathcock mentions the following:
“The Saponi/Christanna Indians by 1827 were being documented or recorded as Catawba by their friends, neighbors and officials in the Department of the interior. He provides 2 quotes. I.] “If they descended from Indians at all, they were likely Catawba and lived in Eastern North Carolina.” and ii.] “It is a region much more likely to have been occupied by Indians from Virginia or by the Catawba Indians who ranged from South Carolina up through North Carolina into Virginia.” He mentions the surnames of these families;
Hathcock
Dempsey
Jefferies
Guy
Johnson
Collins
Mack
Richardson
Lynch
Silvers
Mills
Riddle
Austin
Hedgepath
Copeland
Stewart
Harris
Nichols
Shepherd
Gibson
Coleman
Martin
Branham
Johns
Taylor
Ellis
Anderson
Tom
Ervin
Bowling
Valentine
Goens
Sizemore
Bunch
Coker
Rickman,
Whitmore
Mullins
Perkins
Harrison
Holley
Pettiford.
Saponi names
mentoned by Richard Hathcock
Heathcock
mentions some 79 Saponi names. Some are full names, some are just given, and
some are just surnames. Here is that list: Chief Mastegonoe, Chief Manehip, Chief Chawka, Chief Tanhee, Seko, Chief Tom, Chief John Harris, Captain Harrry, Captain Tom (Chief Tom and Captain Tom are perhaps the same person), Ned Bearskin, Ben Bear Den, Pyah, Pryor (probably the same), Manniassa, Dick, Harry (perhaps the same as Captain Harry), Isaac, Tom (perhaps the same as captain or Chief Tom), Lewis Anderson, Thomas Anderson,Isham Johnson, Will Matthews, Isaac White) perhaps the same as 'Isaac'), John Hart, Carter Hedge Beth, Sepunis, Cornelious Harris, John Collins, Lewis Collins, Mullins, Charles Griffin, Absalon Griffin, Hannah Griffin, John Sauano, Saponey Tom, Alexander Marchartoon, John Bowlinig, Ben Harrison, Tony Mack, Great George, Little Zach, Blind Tom, Foolish Zach, Hary Irwin, Tom Irwin, John Austin, Sr and Jr, Richard Austin, Tutterow, Dempsey, Miles Bunch, William Thims, Christopher Thims, John Head, Isaac Head, Heathcock, Jeffryes, Guy, Whitmore, Robinson, Carr, Ford, Long, Rickman, Coker, Jones, Richardson, Mills, Stewart, Going, Jackson, Thore, Williams, Branham, Johns, and Coleman. Now these are in addition to some of those already mentioned that are not mentioned here. (13)
Sources:
(1) "Annual Report of the Board of Regents of THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION Showing the Operations y Expenditures , and Condition of the Institution for the Year Ended June 30, 1948; APPENDIX III. FAMILY NAMES OF EASTERN INDIAN GROUPS.
(2) "Catawba
Indian Genealogy"; by Ian Watson; The
Geneseo Foundation and the Department of Anthropology State University of New
York at Geneseo; Geneseo, New York 14454 Series Editor: Russell A. Judkins; Copyright © Ian Watson 1995
(3) “A Guide to the Indian Tribes of Oklahoma”, by Muriel Hazel Wright; published by University of Oklahoma Press; copyright © by University of Oklahoma Press, 1951, 1986.
4. “The Lumbee Problem – The Making of an American Indian People”; by Karen I. Blu; © 1980 by Karen I. Blu; originally published 1980 Cambridge University Press; afterwards © Nebraska University Press 2001, all rights reserved.
(3) “A Guide to the Indian Tribes of Oklahoma”, by Muriel Hazel Wright; published by University of Oklahoma Press; copyright © by University of Oklahoma Press, 1951, 1986.
4. “The Lumbee Problem – The Making of an American Indian People”; by Karen I. Blu; © 1980 by Karen I. Blu; originally published 1980 Cambridge University Press; afterwards © Nebraska University Press 2001, all rights reserved.
5.
OCCANEECHI-SAPONI
DESCENDANTS IN THE NORTH CAROLINA PIEDMONT: THE TEXAS COMMUNITY by
Forest Hazel.
Of Mr. Hazel, the following has been written; “The first paper is by Forest Hazel, a health education advisor with a
background in anthropology. Hazel
examines the historical records pertaining to the Occaneechi Indians, known to
have lived in the vicinity of present-day Hillsborough, North Carolina, at the
beginning of the eighteenth century. As
such, his research has direct ties to the archaeological studies of the Siouan
Project conducted by the Research Laboratories of Anthropology, UNC-Chapel Hill
(Dickens et al. 1987; Ward and Davis 1988).
Hazel traces the Occaneechi from 1701 to the present, providing a link
between the archaeological and living populations.”
6. go here -- https://www.galileo.usg.edu/welcome/?Welcome
and enter as “guest”. Scroll down to #86, “Native American documents”. Southeastern
Native American Documents, 1730-1842, contains approximately 2,000 documents
and images relating to the Native American population of the Southeastern
United States from the collections of the University of Georgia Libraries, the
University of Tennessee at Knoxville Library, the Frank H. McClung Museum, the
Tennessee State Library and Archives, the Tennessee State Museum, the Museum of
the Cherokee Indian, and the LaFayette-Walker County Library. The documents are
comprised of letters, legal proceedings, military orders, financial papers, and
archaeological images relating to Native Americans in the Southeast. About the
image at left.
7. In the 1930s a Dust Bowl era project was begun to record what life was like in
the Indian Territory (Oklahoma) before Oklahoma became a state.
8. 54th Congress; Senate Document #144, 1897
9. “Whose
Your People?” – Dr. Richard Carlson PhD dissertation
10.
“Various Eastern Siouan Communities” by Forest Hazel
12. Monday, 7th of October, 1901, “The Tennessean”, page 8, a newspaper out of Nashville, Tn.
13. “Tutelo, Saponi,Nahyssan, Monacan; a.k.a.; Piedmont Catawba Tribe of the Ohio Valley, Virginia, Carolina, New York, Pennsylvania, and Six Nations, Ontario, Canada” by Richard Haithcock, publication date November 11, 2004.
14. "Where's Your People?"; a PhD Dissertation given by Dr. Richard Carlson.