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Chickasaw

The Chickasaw (/ˈɪkəsɔː/ CHIK-ə-saw) are an indigenous people of the Southeastern Woodlands. Their traditional territory was in the Southeastern United States of Mississippi, Alabama, and Tennessee as well in southwestern Kentucky.[2] Their language is classified as a member of the Muskogean language family. In the present day, they are organized as the federally recognized Chickasaw Nation.

Chickasaw
Chikashsha
Chickasaw people
Total population
60,000[1]
Regions with significant populations
 United States (Oklahoma, formerly Mississippi, Alabama, and Tennessee)
Languages
English, Chickasaw
Religion
Traditional tribal religion, Christianity (Protestantism)
Related ethnic groups
Choctaw, Chakchiuma, Muscogee Creek, and Seminole peoples

Chickasaw people have a migration story in which they moved from a land west of the Mississippi River to reach present-day northeast Mississippi, northwest Alabama, and into Lawrence County, Tennessee.[3] They had interaction with French, English, and Spanish colonists during the colonial period. The United States considered the Chickasaw one of the Five Civilized Tribes of the Southeast, as they adopted numerous practices of European Americans. Resisting European-American settlers encroaching on their territory, they were forced by the U.S. government to sell their traditional lands in the 1832 Treaty of Pontotoc Creek and move to Indian Territory (Oklahoma) during the era of Indian removal in the 1830s.

Most of their descendants remain as residents of what is now Oklahoma.[3] The Chickasaw Nation in Oklahoma is the 13th-largest federally recognized tribe in the United States. Its members are related to the Choctaw and share a common history with them. The Chickasaw were divided into two groups (moieties): the Imosak Cha'a' (chopped hickory) and the Inchokka' Lhipa' (worn out house), though the characteristics of these groups in relation to Chickasaw villages, clans, and house groups is uncertain.[4] They traditionally followed a kinship system of matrilineal descent, in which inheritance and descent are traced through the maternal line. Children are considered born into the mother's family and clan, and gain their social status from her. Women controlled most property and hereditary leadership in the tribe passed through the maternal line.

Etymology

The name Chickasaw, as noted by anthropologist John Swanton, belonged to a Chickasaw minko', or leader.[5] "Chickasaw" is the English spelling of Chikashsha (Muskogee pronunciation: [tʃikaʃːa]), meaning "comes from Chicsa". In an 1890 extra census bulletin on the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Muskogee, and Seminole, a history of the Choctaw and Chickasaw was included that was written by R.W. McAdam. McAdam claimed that the word "Chikasha" meant "rebel" in the Choctaw language.[6] Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto had recorded the people as Chicaza when his expedition came into contact with them in 1540; the Spanish were the first known Europeans to explore the North American Southeast.[7][8]

History

 
A c. 1724 English copy of a deerskin Catawba map of the tribes between Charleston (left) and Virginia (right) following the displacements of a century of disease and enslavement and the 1715–7 Yamasee War. The Chickasaw are labeled as "Chickisa".

The origin of the Chickasaw is uncertain; 20th-century scholars, such as the archaeologist Patricia Galloway, theorize that the Chickasaw and Choctaw split into distinct peoples in the 17th century from the remains of Plaquemine culture and other groups whose ancestors had lived in the lower Mississippi Valley for thousands of years.[9] When Europeans first encountered them, the Chickasaw were living in villages in what is now northeastern Mississippi.

The Chickasaw are believed to have migrated into Mississippi from the west, as their oral history attests.[10] They and the Choctaw were once one people and migrated from west of the Mississippi River into present-day Mississippi in prehistoric times; the Chickasaw and Choctaw split along the way. The Mississippian Ideological Interaction Sphere spanned the Eastern Woodlands. The Mississippian cultures emerged from previous moundbuilding societies by 880 CE. They built complex, dense villages supporting a stratified society, with centers throughout the Mississippi and Ohio River Valleys and their tributaries.

In the 15th century, proto-Chickasaw people left the Tombigbee Valley after the collapse of the Moundville chiefdom. They settled into the upper Yazoo and Pearl River valleys in present-day Mississippi. Historian Arrell Gibson and anthropologist John R. Swanton believed the Chickasaw Old Fields were in Madison County, Alabama.[11]

These people (the Choctaw) are the only nation from whom I could learn any idea of a traditional account of a first origin; and that is their coming out of a hole in the ground, which they shew between their nation and the Chickasaws; they tell us also that their neighbours were surprised at seeing a people rise at once out of the earth.

— Bernard Romans, Natural History of East and West Florida

Another version of the Chickasaw creation story is that they arose at Nanih Waiya, a great earthwork mound built about 300 CE by Woodland peoples. It is also sacred to the Choctaw, who have a similar story about it. The mound was built about 1400 years before the coalescence of each of these peoples as ethnic groups.

 
The second leg of the de Soto Expedition, from Apalachee to the Chicaza

The first European contact with the Chickasaw ancestors was in 1540 when Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto encountered them and stayed in one of their towns, most likely near present-day Tupelo, Mississippi. After various disagreements, the Chickasaw attacked the De Soto expedition in a nighttime raid, nearly destroying the force. The Spanish moved on quickly.[12]

The Chickasaw began to establish trading relationships with English colonists in the Province of Carolina after that colony was established in 1670. After acquiring firearms from colonial merchants in Carolina, Chickasaw raiders began to attack settlements belonging to a rival tribe, the Choctaw, in order to acquire captives which they sold to the colonists. These raids largely subsided after the Choctaw acquired firearms of their own from the French.[13]

Allied with British colonists in the Southern Colonies, the Chickasaw were often at war with the French and the Choctaw in the 18th century, such as in the Battle of Ackia on May 26, 1736. Skirmishes continued until France ceded its claims to the region east of the Mississippi River after being defeated by the British in the Seven Years' War (called the French and Indian War in North America).

Following the American Revolutionary War, in 1793–94, the Chickasaw under Chief Piomingo fought as allies of the new United States under General Anthony Wayne against the Indians of the old Northwest Territory. The Shawnee and other, allied Northwest Indians were defeated in the Battle of Fallen Timbers on August 20, 1794.

A 19th-century historian, Horatio Cushman, wrote, "Neither the Choctaws nor Chicksaws ever engaged in war against the American people, but always stood as their faithful allies." Cushman believed the Chickasaw, along with the Choctaw, may have had origins in present-day Mexico and migrated north.[10] That theory does not have consensus; archeological research, as noted above, has revealed the peoples had long histories in the Mississippi area and independently developed complex cultures.

Tribal lands

In 1797, a general appraisal of the tribe and its territorial bounds was made by Abraham Bishop of New Haven, who wrote:

The Chickasaws are a nation of Indians who inhabit the country on the east side of the Mississippi, on the head branches of the Tombeckbe (sic), Mobille, and Yazoo rivers. Their country is an extensive plain, tolerably well watered from springs, and a pretty good soil. They have seven towns, and their number of fighting men is estimated at 575.[14]

United States relations

 
Sculpture of a stylized 18th-century Chickasaw warrior by Enoch Kelly Haney, at the Chickasaw Cultural Center in Oklahoma

George Washington (first U.S. President) and Henry Knox (first U.S. Secretary of War) proposed the cultural transformation of Native Americans.[15] Washington believed that Native Americans were equals, but that their society was inferior. He formulated a policy to encourage the "civilizing" process, and Thomas Jefferson continued it.[16] Historian Robert Remini wrote, "They presumed that once the Indians adopted the practice of private property, built homes, farmed, educated their children, and embraced Christianity, these Native Americans would win acceptance from white Americans."[17] Washington's six-point plan included impartial justice toward Indians; regulated buying of Indian lands; promotion of commerce; promotion of experiments to civilize or improve Indian society; presidential authority to give presents; and punishing those who violated Indian rights.[18] The government-appointed Indian agents, such as Benjamin Hawkins, who became Superintendent of Indian Affairs for all the territory south of the Ohio River. He and other agents lived among the Indians to teach them, through example and instruction, how to live like whites.[15] Hawkins married a Muscogee Creek woman and lived with her people for decades. In the 19th century, the Chickasaw increasingly adopted European-American practices, as they established schools, adopted yeoman farming practices, converted to Christianity, and built homes in styles like their European-American neighbors.

Due to settlers encroaching into Chickasaw territory, the United States constructed Fort Hampton in 1810 in present-day Limestone County, Alabama. The fort was designed to keep settlers out of Chickasaw territory and was one of the few forts constructed in the United States to protect Native American land claims.[19]

Treaty of Hopewell (1786)

 
A sketch of a Chickasaw by Bernard Romans, 1775

The Chickasaw signed the Treaty of Hopewell in 1786. Article 11 of that treaty states: "The hatchet shall be forever buried, and the peace given by the United States of America, and friendship re-established between the said States on the one part, and the Chickasaw nation on the other part, shall be universal, and the contracting parties shall use their utmost endeavors to maintain the peace given as aforesaid, and friendship re-established." Benjamin Hawkins attended this signing.

Treaty of 1818

In 1818, leaders of the Chickasaw signed several treaties, including the Treaty of Tuscaloosa, which ceded all claims to land north of the southern border of Tennessee up to the Ohio River (the southern border of Indiana and the Illinois Territory).[20] This was known as the "Jackson Purchase." The Chickasaw were allowed to retain a four-square-mile reservation but were required to lease the land to European immigrants.

Colbert legacy (19th century)

In the mid-18th century, an American-born trader of Scots and Chickasaw ancestry by the name of James Logan Colbert settled in the Muscle Shoals area of Mississippi. He lived there for the next 40 years, where he married three high-ranking Chickasaw women in succession.[21] Chickasaw chiefs and high-status women found such marriages of strategic benefit to the tribe, as it gave them advantages with traders over other groups. Colbert and his wives had numerous children, including seven sons: William, Jonathan, George, Levi, Samuel, Joseph, and Pittman (or James). Six survived to adulthood (Jonathan died young.)

The Chickasaw had a matrilineal system, in which children were considered born into the mother's clan; and they gained their status in the tribe from her family. Property and hereditary leadership passed through the maternal line, and the mother's eldest brother was the main male mentor of the children, especially of boys. Because of the status of their mothers, for nearly a century, the Colbert-Chickasaw sons and their descendants provided critical leadership during the tribe's greatest challenges. They had the advantage of growing up bilingual.

Of these six sons, William "Chooshemataha" Colbert (named after James Logan's father, Chief/Major William d'Blainville "Piomingo" Colbert) served with General Andrew Jackson during the Creek Wars of 1813–14. He also had served during the Revolutionary wars and received a commission from President George Washington in 1786 along with his namesake grandfather. His brothers Levi ("Itawamba Mingo") and George Colbert ("Tootesmastube") also had military service in support of the United States. In addition, the two each served as interpreters and negotiators for chiefs of the tribe during the period of removal. Levi Colbert served as principal chief, which may have been a designation by the Americans, who did not understand the decentralized nature of the chiefs' council, based on the tribe reaching broad consensus for major decisions. An example is that more than 40 chiefs from the Chickasaw Council, representing clans and villages, signed a letter in November 1832 by Levi Colbert to President Andrew Jackson, complaining about treaty negotiations with his appointee General John Coffee.[22] After Levi's death in 1834, the Chickasaw people were forced upon the Trail of Tears. His brother, George Colbert, reluctantly succeeded him as chief and principal negotiator, because he was bilingual and bicultural. George "Tootesmastube" Colbert never reached the Chickasaw's "Oka Homa" (red waters); he died on Choctaw territory, Fort Towson, en route.

Treaty of Pontotoc Creek and Removal (1832-1837)

In 1832 after the state of Mississippi declared its jurisdiction over the Chickasaw Indians, outlawing tribal self-governance, Chickasaw chiefs assembled at the national council house on October 20, 1832 and signed the Treaty of Pontotoc Creek, ceding their remaining Mississippi territory to the U.S. and agreeing to find land and relocate west of the Mississippi River. Between 1832 and 1837, the Chickasaw would make further negotiations and arrangements for their removal.[23]

 
Historic Marker in Marion, Arkansas for the Trail of Tears

Unlike other tribes who received land grants in exchange for ceding territory, the Chickasaw held out for financial compensation: they were to receive $3 million U.S. dollars from the United States for their lands east of the Mississippi River.[24] In 1836 after a bitter five-year debate within the tribe, the Chickasaw had reached an agreement to purchase land in Indian Territory from the previously removed Choctaw. They paid the Choctaw $530,000 for the westernmost part of their land. The first group of Chickasaw moved in 1837. For nearly 30 years, the US did not pay the Chickasaw the $3 million it owed them for their historic territory in the Southeast.

The Chickasaw gathered at Memphis, Tennessee, on July 4, 1837, with all of their portable assets: belongings, livestock, and enslaved African Americans. Three thousand and one Chickasaw crossed the Mississippi River, following routes established by the Choctaw and Creek.[24] During the journey, often called the Trail of Tears by all the Southeast tribes that had to make it, more than 500 Chickasaw died of dysentery and smallpox.

 
In the 1850s Holmes Colbert (Chickasaw) helped write the constitution of the nation in Indian Territory.

When the Chickasaw reached Indian Territory, the United States began to administer to them through the Choctaw Nation, and later merged them for administrative reasons. The Chickasaw wrote their own constitution in the 1850s, an effort contributed to by Holmes Colbert.

After several decades of mistrust between the two peoples, in the twentieth century, the Chickasaw re-established their independent government. They are federally recognized as the Chickasaw Nation. The government is headquartered in Ada, Oklahoma.

American Civil War (1861)

The Chickasaw Nation was the first of the Five Civilized Tribes to become allies of the Confederate States of America.[25] In addition, they resented the United States government, which had forced them off their lands and failed to protect them against the Plains tribes in the West. In 1861, as tensions rose related to the sectional conflict, the US Army abandoned Fort Washita, leaving the Chickasaw Nation defenseless against the Plains tribes. Confederate officials recruited the American Indian tribes with suggestions of an Indian state if they were victorious in the Civil War.

The Chickasaw passed a resolution allying with the Confederacy, which was signed by Governor Cyrus Harris on May 25, 1861.

Up to this time, our protection was in the United States troops stationed at Fort Washita, under the command of Colonel Emory. But he, as soon as the Confederate troops had entered our country, at once abandoned us and the Fort; and, to make his flight more expeditious and his escape more sure, employed Black Beaver, a Shawnee Indian, under a promise to him of

five thousand dollars, to pilot him and his troops out of the Indian country safely without a collision with the Texas Confederates; which Black Beaver accomplished. By this act the United States abandoned the Choctaws and Chickasaws. . .

Then, there being- no other alternative by which to save their country and property, they, as the less of the two evils that confronted them, went with the Southern Confederacy.

— Julius Folsom, September 5, 1891, letter to H. B. Cushman

At the beginning of the American Civil War, Albert Pike was appointed as Confederate envoy to Native Americans. In this capacity, he negotiated several treaties, including the Treaty with Choctaws and Chickasaws in July 1861. The treaty covered sixty-four terms, covering many subjects such as Choctaw and Chickasaw nation sovereignty, Confederate States of America citizenship possibilities and an entitled delegate in the House of Representatives of the Confederate States of America.[26] Because the Chickasaw sided with the Confederate States of America during the American Civil War, they had to forfeit some of their land afterward. In addition, the US renegotiated their treaty, insisting on their emancipation of slaves and offering citizenship to those who wanted to stay in the Chickasaw Nation. If they returned to the United States, they would have US citizenship.[24]

This was the first time in history the Chickasaws have ever made war against an English speaking people.

— Governor Cyrus Harris, As Chickasaw troops marched against the Union, 1860s.[25]

Government

The Chickasaws were first combined with the Choctaw Nation and their area was called the Chickasaw District. Although originally the western boundary of the Choctaw Nation extended to the 100th meridian, virtually no Chickasaw lived west of the Cross Timbers. The area was subject to continual raiding by the Indians on the Southern Plains. The United States eventually leased the area between the 100th and 98th meridians for the use of the Plains tribes. The area was referred to as the "Leased District".[27]

Treaties

Treaty Year Signed with Where Main Purpose Ceded Land
Treaty with the Chickasaw[28] 1786 United States Hopwell, SC Peace and Protection provided by the U.S. and Define boundaries N/A
Treaty with the Chickasaw[29] 1801 United States Chickasaw Nation Right to make wagon road through the Chickasaw Nation, Acknowledge the protection provided by the U.S. (Not Available yet)
Treaty with the Chickasaw[30] 1805 United States Chickasaw Nation Eliminate debt to U.S. merchants and traders (Not Available yet)
Treaty with the Chickasaw[31] 1816 United States Chickasaw Nation Cede land, provide allowances, and tracts reserved to Chickasaw Nation (Not Available yet)
Treaty of with the Chickasaw[32] 1818 United States Chickasaw Nation Cede land, payments for land cession, and Define boundaries (Not Available yet)
Treaty of Franklin[33] (un-ratified) 1830 United States Chickasaw Nation, See Hiram Masonic Lodge No. 7[34] Cede lands east of the Mississippi River and provide protection for the 'weak' tribe (Not Available yet)
Treaty of Pontotoc[35] 1832 United States Chickasaw Nation Removal and Monetary gain from the sale of land 6,422,400 acres (25,991 km2).[24]

Post–Civil War

 
Fred Tecumseh Waite, a cowboy and Chickasaw Nation statesman

Because the Chickasaw allied with the Confederacy, after the Civil War the United States government required the nation to make a new peace treaty in 1866. It included the provision that they emancipate the enslaved African Americans and provide full citizenship to those who wanted to stay in the Chickasaw Nation.

These people and their descendants became known as the Chickasaw Freedmen. Descendants of the Freedmen continue to live in Oklahoma. Today, the Choctaw-Chickasaw Freedmen Association of Oklahoma represents the interests of freedmen descendants in both of these tribes.[36]

But the Chickasaw Nation never granted citizenship to the Chickasaw freedmen.[37] The only way that African Americans could become citizens at that time was to have one or more Chickasaw parents or to petition for citizenship and go through the process available to other non-Natives, even if they were of known partial Chickasaw descent in an earlier generation. Because the Chickasaw Nation did not provide citizenship to their freedmen after the Civil War (it would have been akin to formal adoption of individuals into the tribe), they were penalized by the U.S. Government. It took more than half of their territory, with no compensation. They lost territory that had been negotiated in treaties in exchange for their use after removal from the Southeast.[citation needed]

State-recognized groups

The Chaloklowa Chickasaw Indian People, made up of descendants of Chickasaw who did not leave the Southeast, were recognized as a "state-recognized group" in 2005 by South Carolina. They are headquartered in Hemingway, South Carolina.[38] In 2003, they unsuccessfully petitioned the US Department of the Interior Bureau of Indian Affairs to try to gain federal recognition as an Indian tribe.[39]

Culture

The suffix -mingo (Chickasaw: minko) is used to identify a chief. For example, Tishomingo was the name of a famous Chickasaw chief. The towns of Tishomingo in Mississippi and Oklahoma were named for him, as was Tishomingo County in Mississippi. South Carolina's Black Mingo Creek was named after a colonial Chickasaw chief, who controlled the lands around it as a hunting ground. Sometimes the suffix is spelled minco, but this most often occurs in older literary references.

In 2010, the tribe opened the Chickasaw Cultural Center in Sulphur, Oklahoma. It includes the Chikasha Inchokka’ Traditional Village, Honor Garden, Sky and Water pavilion, and several in-depth exhibits about the diverse culture of the Chickasaw.[40]

Notable Chickasaw

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^
  2. ^ Gibson, Karen Bush (2017-01-26). The Chickasaw Nation. Capstone. ISBN 9780736813655.
  3. ^ a b Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Chickasaws" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 130.
  4. ^ Swanton, John (1928). Chickasaw Society and Religion. U.S. Bureau of American Ethnology. pp. 22–26. ISBN 978-0-8032-9349-6.
  5. ^ Swanton, John (1931). Source Material for the Social and Ceremonial Life of the Choctaw Indians. The University of Alabama Press. p. 29. ISBN 0-8173-1109-2.
  6. ^ United States. Bureau of the Census. Eleventh Census of the United States, 1890. Extra Census Bulletin: The Five Civilized Tribes in Indian Territory: The Cherokee, Choctaw, Creek, and Seminole Nations. Washington, D.C.: United States Census Printing Office, 1894. Page 29.
  7. ^ WISSLER, Clark (1993) Los Indios de Estados Unidos de América, Paidós Studio, nº 104 Barcelona
  8. ^ HALE, Duane K & GIBSON, Arrell M. (1989) The Chickasaw, Frank W. Porter III General Editor, Chelsea House, New York.
  9. ^ Galloway, Patricia (1995). Choctaw Genesis, 1500–1700. Indians of the Southeast. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. pp. 49–54. ISBN 9780803270701. OCLC 32012964. Retrieved August 31, 2013.
  10. ^ a b Cushman, Horatio (1899). "Choctaw, Chickasaw, and Natchez". History of the Choctaw, Chickasaw and Natchez Indians. University of Oklahoma Press. pp. 18–19. ISBN 0-8061-3127-6.
  11. ^ Clark, Blue (2009). Indian Tribes of Oklahoma: A Guide. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. p. 95. ISBN 978-0-8061-4060-5.
  12. ^ Hudson, Charles M. (1997). Knights of Spain, Warriors of the Sun. University of Georgia Press. ISBN 9780820318882.
  13. ^ Gallay, Alan (2009-01-01). Indian Slavery in Colonial America. U of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0803222007.
  14. ^ Bishop, Abraham (1797). Georgia Speculation Unveiled; in two numbers. Hartford, CT: Elisha Babcock. Retrieved 13 December 2022 – via Evans Early American Imprint Collection Text Creation Partnership.
  15. ^ a b Perdue, Theda (2003). "Chapter 2 "Both White and Red"". Mixed Blood Indians: Racial Construction in the Early South. University of Georgia Press. p. 51. ISBN 0-8203-2731-X.
  16. ^ Remini, Robert. ""The Reform Begins"". Andrew Jackson. History Book Club. p. 201. ISBN 0-9650631-0-7.
  17. ^ Remini, Robert. ""Brothers, Listen ... You Must Submit"". Andrew Jackson. History Book Club. p. 258. ISBN 0-9650631-0-7.
  18. ^ Miller, Eric (1994). "Washington and the Northwest War, Part One". George Washington And Indians. Eric Miller. Retrieved 2008-05-02.
  19. ^ Chandler, Tonya Johnson (2014). (PDF) (MA). University of West Florida. p. 25. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 June 2021. Retrieved 19 June 2021.
  20. ^ Pate, James C. Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture. "Chickasaw." Retrieved December 27, 2012.[1] 2009-10-01 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-11-12. Retrieved 2010-11-17.
  22. ^ "Levi Colbert to President Andrew Jackson, 22 NOV 1832" 2011-10-25 at the Wayback Machine, Chickasaw Letters -- 1832, Chickasaw Historical Research Website (Kerry M. Armstrong), accessed 12 December 2011
  23. ^ Gibson, Arrell M. (1972). The Chickasaws. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma. pp. 174–179. ISBN 978-0-8061-1042-4.
  24. ^ a b c d Jesse Burt & Bob Ferguson (1973). "The Removal". Indians of the Southeast: Then and Now. Abingdon Press, Nashville and New York. pp. 170–173. ISBN 0-687-18793-1.
  25. ^ a b Meserve, John Bartlett (December 1937). . Oklahoma State/Kansas State. Archived from the original on 2008-05-18. Retrieved 2008-07-18.
  26. ^ Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture. . Archived from the original on 2008-10-09. Retrieved 2008-08-11.
  27. ^ Arrell Morgan Gibson (1981). "The Federal Government in Oklahoma". Oklahoma: A History of Five Centuries. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 112. ISBN 978-0806117584.
  28. ^ Kappler, Charles (1904). . Government Printing Office. Archived from the original on 2008-05-12. Retrieved 2008-07-02.
  29. ^ Kappler, Charles (1904). . Government Printing Office. Archived from the original on 2008-05-09. Retrieved 2008-07-02.
  30. ^ Kappler, Charles (1904). . Government Printing Office. Archived from the original on 2008-05-09. Retrieved 2008-05-02.
  31. ^ Kappler, Charles (1904). . Government Printing Office. Archived from the original on 2008-05-12. Retrieved 2008-07-02.
  32. ^ Kappler, Charles (1904). . Government Printing Office. Archived from the original on 2008-12-11. Retrieved 2008-07-02.
  33. ^ Kappler, Charles (1904). . Government Printing Office. Archived from the original on 2010-09-07. Retrieved 2011-03-27.
  34. ^ Ben Levy and Cecil N. McKithan (February 26, 1973). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Hiram Masonic Lodge No. 7 / Masonic Hall" (pdf). National Park Service. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help) and Accompanying one photo, exterior, undated (32 KB)
  35. ^ Kappler, Charles (1904). . Government Printing Office. Archived from the original on 2008-05-13. Retrieved 2008-07-15.
  36. ^ The Choctaw Freedmen of Oklahoma, african-nativeamerican.com. (accessed October 17, 2013)
  37. ^ Roberts, Alaina E. (September 7, 2017). "A federal court has ruled blood cannot determine tribal citizenship. Here's why that matters". The Washington Post. Retrieved July 18, 2020.
  38. ^ "South Carolina Indian Affairs Commission. 2013-01-11 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 19 September 2012.
  39. ^ "Receipt of Petitions for Federal Acknowledgment of Existence as an Indian Tribe." Federal Register. Volume 68, Number 54. 20 March 2003. Retrieved 19 September 2012.
  40. ^ "About the Center." 2011-09-02 at the Wayback Machine Chickasaw Cultural Center (accessed September 21, 2011)
  41. ^ "Native American Data for Jay J Fox". RootsWeb. Retrieved 10 June 2015.[permanent dead link]
  42. ^ "Carter, Charles David (1868–1929)." 2012-11-02 at the Wayback Machine Oklahoma Historical Society's Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture. Retrieved 6 May 2012.
  43. ^ Harris, Rodger. "Te Ata 2013-11-24 at the Wayback Machine," Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture. (accessed October 17, 2013)

Further reading

  • James F. Barnett, Jr., Mississippi's American Indians. Jackson, MS: University Press of Mississippi, 2012.
  • Colin G. Calloway, The American Revolution in Indian Country. Cambridge University Press, 1995.
  • Daniel F. Littlefield, Jr., The Chickasaw Freedmen: A People Without a Country. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1980.

External links

  • , official site
  • Chickasaw.tv The online video network of the Chickasaw Nation.
  • Chickasaw Nation Industries (government contracting arm of the Chickasaw Nation)
  • Tanshpashofa recipe

chickasaw, confused, with, chickasha, other, uses, disambiguation, ɔː, chik, indigenous, people, southeastern, woodlands, their, traditional, territory, southeastern, united, states, mississippi, alabama, tennessee, well, southwestern, kentucky, their, languag. Not to be confused with Chickasha For other uses see Chickasaw disambiguation The Chickasaw ˈ tʃ ɪ k e s ɔː CHIK e saw are an indigenous people of the Southeastern Woodlands Their traditional territory was in the Southeastern United States of Mississippi Alabama and Tennessee as well in southwestern Kentucky 2 Their language is classified as a member of the Muskogean language family In the present day they are organized as the federally recognized Chickasaw Nation ChickasawChikashshaChickasaw peopleTotal population60 000 1 Regions with significant populations United States Oklahoma formerly Mississippi Alabama and Tennessee LanguagesEnglish ChickasawReligionTraditional tribal religion Christianity Protestantism Related ethnic groupsChoctaw Chakchiuma Muscogee Creek and Seminole peoplesChickasaw people have a migration story in which they moved from a land west of the Mississippi River to reach present day northeast Mississippi northwest Alabama and into Lawrence County Tennessee 3 They had interaction with French English and Spanish colonists during the colonial period The United States considered the Chickasaw one of the Five Civilized Tribes of the Southeast as they adopted numerous practices of European Americans Resisting European American settlers encroaching on their territory they were forced by the U S government to sell their traditional lands in the 1832 Treaty of Pontotoc Creek and move to Indian Territory Oklahoma during the era of Indian removal in the 1830s Most of their descendants remain as residents of what is now Oklahoma 3 The Chickasaw Nation in Oklahoma is the 13th largest federally recognized tribe in the United States Its members are related to the Choctaw and share a common history with them The Chickasaw were divided into two groups moieties the Imosak Cha a chopped hickory and the Inchokka Lhipa worn out house though the characteristics of these groups in relation to Chickasaw villages clans and house groups is uncertain 4 They traditionally followed a kinship system of matrilineal descent in which inheritance and descent are traced through the maternal line Children are considered born into the mother s family and clan and gain their social status from her Women controlled most property and hereditary leadership in the tribe passed through the maternal line Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Tribal lands 3 1 United States relations 3 1 1 Treaty of Hopewell 1786 3 1 2 Treaty of 1818 3 1 3 Colbert legacy 19th century 3 2 Treaty of Pontotoc Creek and Removal 1832 1837 3 3 American Civil War 1861 3 3 1 Government 3 3 2 Treaties 3 3 3 Post Civil War 4 State recognized groups 4 1 Culture 5 Notable Chickasaw 6 See also 7 Footnotes 8 Further reading 9 External linksEtymology EditThe name Chickasaw as noted by anthropologist John Swanton belonged to a Chickasaw minko or leader 5 Chickasaw is the English spelling of Chikashsha Muskogee pronunciation tʃikaʃːa meaning comes from Chicsa In an 1890 extra census bulletin on the Cherokee Chickasaw Choctaw Muskogee and Seminole a history of the Choctaw and Chickasaw was included that was written by R W McAdam McAdam claimed that the word Chikasha meant rebel in the Choctaw language 6 Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto had recorded the people as Chicaza when his expedition came into contact with them in 1540 the Spanish were the first known Europeans to explore the North American Southeast 7 8 History Edit A c 1724 English copy of a deerskin Catawba map of the tribes between Charleston left and Virginia right following the displacements of a century of disease and enslavement and the 1715 7 Yamasee War The Chickasaw are labeled as Chickisa The origin of the Chickasaw is uncertain 20th century scholars such as the archaeologist Patricia Galloway theorize that the Chickasaw and Choctaw split into distinct peoples in the 17th century from the remains of Plaquemine culture and other groups whose ancestors had lived in the lower Mississippi Valley for thousands of years 9 When Europeans first encountered them the Chickasaw were living in villages in what is now northeastern Mississippi The Chickasaw are believed to have migrated into Mississippi from the west as their oral history attests 10 They and the Choctaw were once one people and migrated from west of the Mississippi River into present day Mississippi in prehistoric times the Chickasaw and Choctaw split along the way The Mississippian Ideological Interaction Sphere spanned the Eastern Woodlands The Mississippian cultures emerged from previous moundbuilding societies by 880 CE They built complex dense villages supporting a stratified society with centers throughout the Mississippi and Ohio River Valleys and their tributaries In the 15th century proto Chickasaw people left the Tombigbee Valley after the collapse of the Moundville chiefdom They settled into the upper Yazoo and Pearl River valleys in present day Mississippi Historian Arrell Gibson and anthropologist John R Swanton believed the Chickasaw Old Fields were in Madison County Alabama 11 These people the Choctaw are the only nation from whom I could learn any idea of a traditional account of a first origin and that is their coming out of a hole in the ground which they shew between their nation and the Chickasaws they tell us also that their neighbours were surprised at seeing a people rise at once out of the earth Bernard Romans Natural History of East and West Florida Another version of the Chickasaw creation story is that they arose at Nanih Waiya a great earthwork mound built about 300 CE by Woodland peoples It is also sacred to the Choctaw who have a similar story about it The mound was built about 1400 years before the coalescence of each of these peoples as ethnic groups The second leg of the de Soto Expedition from Apalachee to the Chicaza The first European contact with the Chickasaw ancestors was in 1540 when Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto encountered them and stayed in one of their towns most likely near present day Tupelo Mississippi After various disagreements the Chickasaw attacked the De Soto expedition in a nighttime raid nearly destroying the force The Spanish moved on quickly 12 The Chickasaw began to establish trading relationships with English colonists in the Province of Carolina after that colony was established in 1670 After acquiring firearms from colonial merchants in Carolina Chickasaw raiders began to attack settlements belonging to a rival tribe the Choctaw in order to acquire captives which they sold to the colonists These raids largely subsided after the Choctaw acquired firearms of their own from the French 13 Allied with British colonists in the Southern Colonies the Chickasaw were often at war with the French and the Choctaw in the 18th century such as in the Battle of Ackia on May 26 1736 Skirmishes continued until France ceded its claims to the region east of the Mississippi River after being defeated by the British in the Seven Years War called the French and Indian War in North America Following the American Revolutionary War in 1793 94 the Chickasaw under Chief Piomingo fought as allies of the new United States under General Anthony Wayne against the Indians of the old Northwest Territory The Shawnee and other allied Northwest Indians were defeated in the Battle of Fallen Timbers on August 20 1794 A 19th century historian Horatio Cushman wrote Neither the Choctaws nor Chicksaws ever engaged in war against the American people but always stood as their faithful allies Cushman believed the Chickasaw along with the Choctaw may have had origins in present day Mexico and migrated north 10 That theory does not have consensus archeological research as noted above has revealed the peoples had long histories in the Mississippi area and independently developed complex cultures Tribal lands EditIn 1797 a general appraisal of the tribe and its territorial bounds was made by Abraham Bishop of New Haven who wrote The Chickasaws are a nation of Indians who inhabit the country on the east side of the Mississippi on the head branches of the Tombeckbe sic Mobille and Yazoo rivers Their country is an extensive plain tolerably well watered from springs and a pretty good soil They have seven towns and their number of fighting men is estimated at 575 14 United States relations Edit Sculpture of a stylized 18th century Chickasaw warrior by Enoch Kelly Haney at the Chickasaw Cultural Center in Oklahoma George Washington first U S President and Henry Knox first U S Secretary of War proposed the cultural transformation of Native Americans 15 Washington believed that Native Americans were equals but that their society was inferior He formulated a policy to encourage the civilizing process and Thomas Jefferson continued it 16 Historian Robert Remini wrote They presumed that once the Indians adopted the practice of private property built homes farmed educated their children and embraced Christianity these Native Americans would win acceptance from white Americans 17 Washington s six point plan included impartial justice toward Indians regulated buying of Indian lands promotion of commerce promotion of experiments to civilize or improve Indian society presidential authority to give presents and punishing those who violated Indian rights 18 The government appointed Indian agents such as Benjamin Hawkins who became Superintendent of Indian Affairs for all the territory south of the Ohio River He and other agents lived among the Indians to teach them through example and instruction how to live like whites 15 Hawkins married a Muscogee Creek woman and lived with her people for decades In the 19th century the Chickasaw increasingly adopted European American practices as they established schools adopted yeoman farming practices converted to Christianity and built homes in styles like their European American neighbors Due to settlers encroaching into Chickasaw territory the United States constructed Fort Hampton in 1810 in present day Limestone County Alabama The fort was designed to keep settlers out of Chickasaw territory and was one of the few forts constructed in the United States to protect Native American land claims 19 Treaty of Hopewell 1786 Edit A sketch of a Chickasaw by Bernard Romans 1775 The Chickasaw signed the Treaty of Hopewell in 1786 Article 11 of that treaty states The hatchet shall be forever buried and the peace given by the United States of America and friendship re established between the said States on the one part and the Chickasaw nation on the other part shall be universal and the contracting parties shall use their utmost endeavors to maintain the peace given as aforesaid and friendship re established Benjamin Hawkins attended this signing Treaty of 1818 Edit In 1818 leaders of the Chickasaw signed several treaties including the Treaty of Tuscaloosa which ceded all claims to land north of the southern border of Tennessee up to the Ohio River the southern border of Indiana and the Illinois Territory 20 This was known as the Jackson Purchase The Chickasaw were allowed to retain a four square mile reservation but were required to lease the land to European immigrants Colbert legacy 19th century Edit In the mid 18th century an American born trader of Scots and Chickasaw ancestry by the name of James Logan Colbert settled in the Muscle Shoals area of Mississippi He lived there for the next 40 years where he married three high ranking Chickasaw women in succession 21 Chickasaw chiefs and high status women found such marriages of strategic benefit to the tribe as it gave them advantages with traders over other groups Colbert and his wives had numerous children including seven sons William Jonathan George Levi Samuel Joseph and Pittman or James Six survived to adulthood Jonathan died young The Chickasaw had a matrilineal system in which children were considered born into the mother s clan and they gained their status in the tribe from her family Property and hereditary leadership passed through the maternal line and the mother s eldest brother was the main male mentor of the children especially of boys Because of the status of their mothers for nearly a century the Colbert Chickasaw sons and their descendants provided critical leadership during the tribe s greatest challenges They had the advantage of growing up bilingual Of these six sons William Chooshemataha Colbert named after James Logan s father Chief Major William d Blainville Piomingo Colbert served with General Andrew Jackson during the Creek Wars of 1813 14 He also had served during the Revolutionary wars and received a commission from President George Washington in 1786 along with his namesake grandfather His brothers Levi Itawamba Mingo and George Colbert Tootesmastube also had military service in support of the United States In addition the two each served as interpreters and negotiators for chiefs of the tribe during the period of removal Levi Colbert served as principal chief which may have been a designation by the Americans who did not understand the decentralized nature of the chiefs council based on the tribe reaching broad consensus for major decisions An example is that more than 40 chiefs from the Chickasaw Council representing clans and villages signed a letter in November 1832 by Levi Colbert to President Andrew Jackson complaining about treaty negotiations with his appointee General John Coffee 22 After Levi s death in 1834 the Chickasaw people were forced upon the Trail of Tears His brother George Colbert reluctantly succeeded him as chief and principal negotiator because he was bilingual and bicultural George Tootesmastube Colbert never reached the Chickasaw s Oka Homa red waters he died on Choctaw territory Fort Towson en route Treaty of Pontotoc Creek and Removal 1832 1837 Edit Main article Treaty of Pontotoc CreekIn 1832 after the state of Mississippi declared its jurisdiction over the Chickasaw Indians outlawing tribal self governance Chickasaw chiefs assembled at the national council house on October 20 1832 and signed the Treaty of Pontotoc Creek ceding their remaining Mississippi territory to the U S and agreeing to find land and relocate west of the Mississippi River Between 1832 and 1837 the Chickasaw would make further negotiations and arrangements for their removal 23 Historic Marker in Marion Arkansas for the Trail of Tears Unlike other tribes who received land grants in exchange for ceding territory the Chickasaw held out for financial compensation they were to receive 3 million U S dollars from the United States for their lands east of the Mississippi River 24 In 1836 after a bitter five year debate within the tribe the Chickasaw had reached an agreement to purchase land in Indian Territory from the previously removed Choctaw They paid the Choctaw 530 000 for the westernmost part of their land The first group of Chickasaw moved in 1837 For nearly 30 years the US did not pay the Chickasaw the 3 million it owed them for their historic territory in the Southeast The Chickasaw gathered at Memphis Tennessee on July 4 1837 with all of their portable assets belongings livestock and enslaved African Americans Three thousand and one Chickasaw crossed the Mississippi River following routes established by the Choctaw and Creek 24 During the journey often called the Trail of Tears by all the Southeast tribes that had to make it more than 500 Chickasaw died of dysentery and smallpox In the 1850s Holmes Colbert Chickasaw helped write the constitution of the nation in Indian Territory When the Chickasaw reached Indian Territory the United States began to administer to them through the Choctaw Nation and later merged them for administrative reasons The Chickasaw wrote their own constitution in the 1850s an effort contributed to by Holmes Colbert After several decades of mistrust between the two peoples in the twentieth century the Chickasaw re established their independent government They are federally recognized as the Chickasaw Nation The government is headquartered in Ada Oklahoma American Civil War 1861 Edit The Chickasaw Nation was the first of the Five Civilized Tribes to become allies of the Confederate States of America 25 In addition they resented the United States government which had forced them off their lands and failed to protect them against the Plains tribes in the West In 1861 as tensions rose related to the sectional conflict the US Army abandoned Fort Washita leaving the Chickasaw Nation defenseless against the Plains tribes Confederate officials recruited the American Indian tribes with suggestions of an Indian state if they were victorious in the Civil War The Chickasaw passed a resolution allying with the Confederacy which was signed by Governor Cyrus Harris on May 25 1861 Up to this time our protection was in the United States troops stationed at Fort Washita under the command of Colonel Emory But he as soon as the Confederate troops had entered our country at once abandoned us and the Fort and to make his flight more expeditious and his escape more sure employed Black Beaver a Shawnee Indian under a promise to him offive thousand dollars to pilot him and his troops out of the Indian country safely without a collision with the Texas Confederates which Black Beaver accomplished By this act the United States abandoned the Choctaws and Chickasaws Then there being no other alternative by which to save their country and property they as the less of the two evils that confronted them went with the Southern Confederacy Julius Folsom September 5 1891 letter to H B Cushman At the beginning of the American Civil War Albert Pike was appointed as Confederate envoy to Native Americans In this capacity he negotiated several treaties including the Treaty with Choctaws and Chickasaws in July 1861 The treaty covered sixty four terms covering many subjects such as Choctaw and Chickasaw nation sovereignty Confederate States of America citizenship possibilities and an entitled delegate in the House of Representatives of the Confederate States of America 26 Because the Chickasaw sided with the Confederate States of America during the American Civil War they had to forfeit some of their land afterward In addition the US renegotiated their treaty insisting on their emancipation of slaves and offering citizenship to those who wanted to stay in the Chickasaw Nation If they returned to the United States they would have US citizenship 24 This was the first time in history the Chickasaws have ever made war against an English speaking people Governor Cyrus Harris As Chickasaw troops marched against the Union 1860s 25 Government Edit Main article Chickasaw Nation The Chickasaws were first combined with the Choctaw Nation and their area was called the Chickasaw District Although originally the western boundary of the Choctaw Nation extended to the 100th meridian virtually no Chickasaw lived west of the Cross Timbers The area was subject to continual raiding by the Indians on the Southern Plains The United States eventually leased the area between the 100th and 98th meridians for the use of the Plains tribes The area was referred to as the Leased District 27 Treaties Edit Treaty Year Signed with Where Main Purpose Ceded LandTreaty with the Chickasaw 28 1786 United States Hopwell SC Peace and Protection provided by the U S and Define boundaries N ATreaty with the Chickasaw 29 1801 United States Chickasaw Nation Right to make wagon road through the Chickasaw Nation Acknowledge the protection provided by the U S Not Available yet Treaty with the Chickasaw 30 1805 United States Chickasaw Nation Eliminate debt to U S merchants and traders Not Available yet Treaty with the Chickasaw 31 1816 United States Chickasaw Nation Cede land provide allowances and tracts reserved to Chickasaw Nation Not Available yet Treaty of with the Chickasaw 32 1818 United States Chickasaw Nation Cede land payments for land cession and Define boundaries Not Available yet Treaty of Franklin 33 un ratified 1830 United States Chickasaw Nation See Hiram Masonic Lodge No 7 34 Cede lands east of the Mississippi River and provide protection for the weak tribe Not Available yet Treaty of Pontotoc 35 1832 United States Chickasaw Nation Removal and Monetary gain from the sale of land 6 422 400 acres 25 991 km2 24 Post Civil War Edit Fred Tecumseh Waite a cowboy and Chickasaw Nation statesman Because the Chickasaw allied with the Confederacy after the Civil War the United States government required the nation to make a new peace treaty in 1866 It included the provision that they emancipate the enslaved African Americans and provide full citizenship to those who wanted to stay in the Chickasaw Nation These people and their descendants became known as the Chickasaw Freedmen Descendants of the Freedmen continue to live in Oklahoma Today the Choctaw Chickasaw Freedmen Association of Oklahoma represents the interests of freedmen descendants in both of these tribes 36 But the Chickasaw Nation never granted citizenship to the Chickasaw freedmen 37 The only way that African Americans could become citizens at that time was to have one or more Chickasaw parents or to petition for citizenship and go through the process available to other non Natives even if they were of known partial Chickasaw descent in an earlier generation Because the Chickasaw Nation did not provide citizenship to their freedmen after the Civil War it would have been akin to formal adoption of individuals into the tribe they were penalized by the U S Government It took more than half of their territory with no compensation They lost territory that had been negotiated in treaties in exchange for their use after removal from the Southeast citation needed State recognized groups EditThe Chaloklowa Chickasaw Indian People made up of descendants of Chickasaw who did not leave the Southeast were recognized as a state recognized group in 2005 by South Carolina They are headquartered in Hemingway South Carolina 38 In 2003 they unsuccessfully petitioned the US Department of the Interior Bureau of Indian Affairs to try to gain federal recognition as an Indian tribe 39 Culture Edit The suffix mingo Chickasaw minko is used to identify a chief For example Tishomingo was the name of a famous Chickasaw chief The towns of Tishomingo in Mississippi and Oklahoma were named for him as was Tishomingo County in Mississippi South Carolina s Black Mingo Creek was named after a colonial Chickasaw chief who controlled the lands around it as a hunting ground Sometimes the suffix is spelled minco but this most often occurs in older literary references In 2010 the tribe opened the Chickasaw Cultural Center in Sulphur Oklahoma It includes the Chikasha Inchokka Traditional Village Honor Garden Sky and Water pavilion and several in depth exhibits about the diverse culture of the Chickasaw 40 Notable Chickasaw EditBill Anoatubby Governor of the Chickasaw Nation since 1987 Jack Brisco and Jerry Brisco pro wrestling tag team Jodi Byrd Literary and political theorist Edwin Carewe 1883 1940 movie actor and director 41 Charles David Carter Democratic U S Congressman from Oklahoma 42 Levi Colbert Chickasaw language translator Tom Cole Republican U S Congressman from Oklahoma Don Cheadle Chickasaw Freedmen actor Molly Culver actress Kent DuChaine American Blues singer and guitarist Hiawatha Estes architect Bee Ho Gray actor John Herrington astronaut first Native American in space Linda Hogan Writer in Residence of the Chickasaw Nation Miko Hughes actor Julia Jones actress Kyle Keller Head Men s Basketball Coach Stephen F Austin Lumberjacks Neal A McCaleb Assistant U S Secretary for Indian Affairs overseeing the BIA under George W Bush Wahoo McDaniel pro wrestler American Football League player Leona Mitchell opera singer Rodd Redwing actor Rebecca Sandefur Sociologist and MacArthur Fellow Jerod Impichchaachaaha Tate composer and pianist Te Ata traditional Indian storyteller and actress 43 Fred Waite cowboy and Chickasaw Nation statesman Kevin K Washburn Assistant U S Secretary for Indian Affairs under Barack Obama Montford Johnson famous cattle rancher In April 2020 Montford was inducted into the Hall of Great Westerners of the National Cowboy amp Western Heritage Museum 35 See also Edit Indigenous peoples of the Americas portalChickasaw Nation Chickasaw language List of sites and peoples visited by the Hernando de Soto Expedition Chickasaw Wars Pashofa Perry CoheaFootnotes Edit No Job Name Gibson Karen Bush 2017 01 26 The Chickasaw Nation Capstone ISBN 9780736813655 a b Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Chickasaws Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 130 Swanton John 1928 Chickasaw Society and Religion U S Bureau of American Ethnology pp 22 26 ISBN 978 0 8032 9349 6 Swanton John 1931 Source Material for the Social and Ceremonial Life of the Choctaw Indians The University of Alabama Press p 29 ISBN 0 8173 1109 2 United States Bureau of the Census Eleventh Census of the United States 1890 Extra Census Bulletin The Five Civilized Tribes in Indian Territory The Cherokee Choctaw Creek and Seminole Nations Washington D C United States Census Printing Office 1894 Page 29 WISSLER Clark 1993 Los Indios de Estados Unidos de America Paidos Studio nº 104 Barcelona HALE Duane K amp GIBSON Arrell M 1989 The Chickasaw Frank W Porter III General Editor Chelsea House New York Galloway Patricia 1995 Choctaw Genesis 1500 1700 Indians of the Southeast Lincoln NE University of Nebraska Press pp 49 54 ISBN 9780803270701 OCLC 32012964 Retrieved August 31 2013 a b Cushman Horatio 1899 Choctaw Chickasaw and Natchez History of the Choctaw Chickasaw and Natchez Indians University of Oklahoma Press pp 18 19 ISBN 0 8061 3127 6 Clark Blue 2009 Indian Tribes of Oklahoma A Guide Norman University of Oklahoma Press p 95 ISBN 978 0 8061 4060 5 Hudson Charles M 1997 Knights of Spain Warriors of the Sun University of Georgia Press ISBN 9780820318882 Gallay Alan 2009 01 01 Indian Slavery in Colonial America U of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0803222007 Bishop Abraham 1797 Georgia Speculation Unveiled in two numbers Hartford CT Elisha Babcock Retrieved 13 December 2022 via Evans Early American Imprint Collection Text Creation Partnership a b Perdue Theda 2003 Chapter 2 Both White and Red Mixed Blood Indians Racial Construction in the Early South University of Georgia Press p 51 ISBN 0 8203 2731 X Remini Robert The Reform Begins Andrew Jackson History Book Club p 201 ISBN 0 9650631 0 7 Remini Robert Brothers Listen You Must Submit Andrew Jackson History Book Club p 258 ISBN 0 9650631 0 7 Miller Eric 1994 Washington and the Northwest War Part One George Washington And Indians Eric Miller Retrieved 2008 05 02 Chandler Tonya Johnson 2014 An Archaeological and Historical Study of Fort Hampton Limestone County Alabama 1809 1816 PDF MA University of West Florida p 25 Archived from the original PDF on 10 June 2021 Retrieved 19 June 2021 Pate James C Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Chickasaw Retrieved December 27 2012 1 Archived 2009 10 01 at the Wayback Machine James Logan Colbert Archived from the original on 2010 11 12 Retrieved 2010 11 17 Levi Colbert to President Andrew Jackson 22 NOV 1832 Archived 2011 10 25 at the Wayback Machine Chickasaw Letters 1832 Chickasaw Historical Research Website Kerry M Armstrong accessed 12 December 2011 Gibson Arrell M 1972 The Chickasaws Norman OK University of Oklahoma pp 174 179 ISBN 978 0 8061 1042 4 a b c d Jesse Burt amp Bob Ferguson 1973 The Removal Indians of the Southeast Then and Now Abingdon Press Nashville and New York pp 170 173 ISBN 0 687 18793 1 a b Meserve John Bartlett December 1937 Chronicles of Oklahoma Volume 15 No 4 Oklahoma State Kansas State Archived from the original on 2008 05 18 Retrieved 2008 07 18 Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Choctaw Archived from the original on 2008 10 09 Retrieved 2008 08 11 Arrell Morgan Gibson 1981 The Federal Government in Oklahoma Oklahoma A History of Five Centuries University of Oklahoma Press p 112 ISBN 978 0806117584 Kappler Charles 1904 INDIAN AFFAIRS LAWS AND TREATIES Vol II Treaties Government Printing Office Archived from the original on 2008 05 12 Retrieved 2008 07 02 Kappler Charles 1904 INDIAN AFFAIRS LAWS AND TREATIES Vol II Treaties Government Printing Office Archived from the original on 2008 05 09 Retrieved 2008 07 02 Kappler Charles 1904 INDIAN AFFAIRS LAWS AND TREATIES Vol II Treaties Government Printing Office Archived from the original on 2008 05 09 Retrieved 2008 05 02 Kappler Charles 1904 INDIAN AFFAIRS LAWS AND TREATIES Vol II Treaties Government Printing Office Archived from the original on 2008 05 12 Retrieved 2008 07 02 Kappler Charles 1904 INDIAN AFFAIRS LAWS AND TREATIES Vol II Treaties Government Printing Office Archived from the original on 2008 12 11 Retrieved 2008 07 02 Kappler Charles 1904 INDIAN AFFAIRS LAWS AND TREATIES Vol II Treaties Government Printing Office Archived from the original on 2010 09 07 Retrieved 2011 03 27 Ben Levy and Cecil N McKithan February 26 1973 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Hiram Masonic Lodge No 7 Masonic Hall pdf National Park Service a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help and Accompanying one photo exterior undated 32 KB Kappler Charles 1904 INDIAN AFFAIRS LAWS AND TREATIES Vol II Treaties Government Printing Office Archived from the original on 2008 05 13 Retrieved 2008 07 15 The Choctaw Freedmen of Oklahoma african nativeamerican com accessed October 17 2013 Roberts Alaina E September 7 2017 A federal court has ruled blood cannot determine tribal citizenship Here s why that matters The Washington Post Retrieved July 18 2020 South Carolina Indian Affairs Commission Archived 2013 01 11 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 19 September 2012 Receipt of Petitions for Federal Acknowledgment of Existence as an Indian Tribe Federal Register Volume 68 Number 54 20 March 2003 Retrieved 19 September 2012 About the Center Archived 2011 09 02 at the Wayback Machine Chickasaw Cultural Center accessed September 21 2011 Native American Data for Jay J Fox RootsWeb Retrieved 10 June 2015 permanent dead link Carter Charles David 1868 1929 Archived 2012 11 02 at the Wayback Machine Oklahoma Historical Society s Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Retrieved 6 May 2012 Harris Rodger Te Ata Archived 2013 11 24 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture accessed October 17 2013 Further reading EditJames F Barnett Jr Mississippi s American Indians Jackson MS University Press of Mississippi 2012 Colin G Calloway The American Revolution in Indian Country Cambridge University Press 1995 Daniel F Littlefield Jr The Chickasaw Freedmen A People Without a Country Westport CT Greenwood Press 1980 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chickasaw Wikisource has the text of the 1921 Collier s Encyclopedia article Chickasaw The Chickasaw Nation of Oklahoma official site Chickasaw tv The online video network of the Chickasaw Nation Chickasaw Nation Industries government contracting arm of the Chickasaw Nation Chickasaws The Unconquerable People a brief history by Greg O Brien Ph D Tishomingo Pashofa recipe Tanshpashofa recipe Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Chickasaw Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chickasaw amp oldid 1146270500, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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