Black Indians are
Native American people – defined as Native American due to being affiliated with Native American communities and being culturally Native American – who also have significant
African American heritage.
Historically, certain
Native American tribes have had close relations with African Americans, especially in regions where
slavery was prevalent or where
free people of color
In the context of the history of slavery in the Americas, free people of color (French: ''gens de couleur libres''; Spanish: ''gente de color libre'') were primarily people of mixed African, European, and Native American descent who were not ...
have historically resided. Members of the
Five Civilized Tribes participated in holding enslaved African Americans in the Southeast and some enslaved or formerly enslaved people migrated with them to the West on the
Trail of Tears in 1830 and later during the period of
Indian Removal
Indian removal was the United States government policy of forced displacement of self-governing tribes of Native Americans from their ancestral homelands in the eastern United States to lands west of the Mississippi Riverspecifically, to a de ...
.
In controversial actions, since the late 20th century, the Cherokee, Creek and Seminole nations tightened their rules for membership and at times excluded
Freedmen who did not have at least one ancestor listed as Native American on the early 20th-century
Dawes Rolls. This exclusion was later appealed in the courts, both because of the treaty conditions and in some cases because of possible inaccuracies in some of the Rolls. The
Chickasaw Nation never extended citizenship to Chickasaw Freedmen.
Overview
Until recently, historic relations between Native Americans and African Americans were relatively neglected in mainstream United States history studies.
At various times, Africans had varying degrees of contact with Native Americans, although they did not live together in as great number as with Europeans.
Enslaved Africans brought to the
United States and their descendants have had a history of cultural exchange and
intermarriage with Native Americans, as well as with other enslaved mixed-race persons who had some Native American and European ancestry.
Most interaction took place in
New England where contact was early and the
Southern United States, where the largest number of African-descended people were enslaved.
In the 21st century, a significant number of African Americans have some Native American ancestry, but most have not grown up within those cultures and do not have current social, cultural or linguistic ties to Native peoples.
Relationships among different Native Americans, Africans, and African Americans have been varied and complex. Some tribes or bands were more accepting of ethnic Africans than others and welcomed them as full members of their respective cultures and communities. Native peoples often disagreed about the role of ethnic African people in their communities. Other Native Americans saw uses for slavery and did not oppose it for others. Some Native Americans and people of African descent fought alongside one another in armed struggles of resistance against U.S. expansion into Native territories, as in the
Seminole Wars in
Florida.
After the
American Civil War, some African Americans became or continued as members of the US Army. Many were assigned to fight against Native Americans in the wars in the
Western frontier states. Their military units became known as the
Buffalo Soldiers, a nickname given by Native Americans.
Black Seminole
The Black Seminoles, or Afro-Seminoles are Native American-Africans associated with the Seminole people in Florida and Oklahoma. They are mostly blood descendants of the Seminole people, free Africans, and escaped slaves, who allied with Seminol ...
men in particular were recruited from Indian Territory to work as Native American scouts for the Army.
History
European colonization of the Americas
Records of contacts between Africans and Native Americans date to April 1502, when the first enslaved African arrived in
Hispaniola
Hispaniola (, also ; es, La Española; Latin and french: Hispaniola; ht, Ispayola; tnq, Ayiti or Quisqueya) is an island in the Caribbean that is part of the Greater Antilles. Hispaniola is the most populous island in the West Indies, and th ...
. Some Africans escaped inland from the colony of
Santo Domingo; those who survived and joined with the Native tribes became the first group of Black Indians.
[''Muslims in American History: A Forgotten Legacy'' by Dr. Jerald F. Dirks. Page 204.] In the lands which later became part of the
United States, the first recorded example of an enslaved African escaping from European colonists and being absorbed by Native Americans dates to 1526. In June of that year,
Lucas Vázquez de Ayllón
Lucas Vázquez de Ayllón (c. 1480 – 18 October 1526) was a Spanish magistrate and explorer who in 1526 established the short-lived San Miguel de Gualdape colony, one of the first European attempts at a settlement in what is now the United State ...
established a Spanish colony near the mouth of the
Pee Dee River
The Pee Dee River, also known as the Great Pee Dee River, is a river in the Carolinas of the United States. It originates in the Appalachian Mountains in North Carolina, where its upper course, above the mouth of the Uwharrie River
The Uwharri ...
in present-day
South Carolina. The Spanish settlement was named
San Miguel de Guadalupe; its inhabitants included 100 enslaved Africans. In 1526 the first enslaved African fled the colony and took refuge with local Native Americans.
In 1534
Pueblo peoples of the Southwest had contact with the Moroccan slave
Esteban de Dorantes before any contact with the remainder of survivors of his Spanish expedition. As part of the Spanish
Pánfilo de Narváez expedition, Esteban traveled from Florida in 1528 to what is now
New Mexico in 1539, with a few other survivors. He is thought have been killed by
Zuni. More than a century later, when the Pueblos united to rid their homelands of the Spanish colonists during the 1690
Pueblo Revolt, one of the organizers of the revolt,
Domingo Naranjo
Domingo may refer to:
People
*Domingo (name), a Spanish name and list of people with that name
*Domingo (producer) (born 1970), American hip-hop producer
*Saint Dominic (1170–1221), Castilian Catholic priest, founder of the Friars popularly cal ...
( – ) was a
Santa Clara Pueblo man of African ancestry.
In 1622 Algonquian Native Americans
attacked the colony of Jamestown in
Virginia. They massacred all the Europeans but brought some of the few enslaved Africans as captives back to their own communities, gradually assimilating them.
Interracial relationships continued to take place between Africans (and later African Americans) and members of Native American tribes in the coastal states. Although the colonists tried to enslave Native Americans in the early years, they abandoned the practise in the early 18th century.
Several colonial advertisements for runaway slaves made direct reference to the connections which Africans had in Native American communities. "Reward notices in colonial newspapers now told of African slaves who 'ran off with his Indian wife' or 'had kin among the Indians' or is 'part-Indian and speaks their language good'."
[Katz, ''Black Indians'', p. 103.]
Several of the
Thirteen Colonies passed laws prohibiting the transportation of enslaved people into the frontier of the Cherokee Nation's territory to restrict interactions between the two groups.
European colonists told the Cherokee that the
smallpox epidemic of 1739 in the Southeast was due to disease brought by enslaved African.
Some tribes encouraged intermarriage with Africans, with the idea that stronger children would result from the unions.
Colonists in South Carolina felt so concerned about the possible threat posed by the mixed African and Native American population that they passed a law in 1725 prohibiting taking enslaved people to the frontier regions, and imposing a fine of 200 pounds if violated. In 1751, South Carolina passed a law against holding Africans in proximity to Native Americans, as the planters considered that detrimental to the security of the colony. Under Governor
James Glen
James Glen (1701 – July 18, 1777) was a politician in the Province of South Carolina. He was appointed Royal Governor of South Carolina in 1738, but did not arrive in the province until December 17, 1743. He served as governor until June 1, 175 ...
(in office 1743–1756), South Carolina promoted an official policy that aimed to create in Native Americans an "aversion" to African Americans in an attempt to thwart possible alliances between them.
In 1753, during the chaos of
Pontiac's War, a resident of
Detroit observed that the Native tribes revolting were killing any
whites they came across but were "saving and caressing all the Negroes they take."
The resident expressed fear that this practice could eventually lead to a
uprising amongst the enslaved people.
Similarly,
Iroquois chief Thayendanegea, more commonly known as
Joseph Brant
Thayendanegea or Joseph Brant (March 1743 – November 24, 1807) was a Mohawk people, Mohawk military and political leader, based in present-day New York (state), New York, who was closely associated with Kingdom of Great Britain, Great B ...
, similarly welcomed
runaway slaves and encouraged them to
intermarry in the tribe.
Native American adoptions system did not discriminate on the basis of color, and Indian villages would eventually serve as stations on the
Underground Railroad.
Historian
Carter G. Woodson believed that relations with Native American tribes could have provided an escape hatch from slavery: Native American villages welcomed fugitive slaves and, in the antebellum years, some served as stations on the
Underground Railroad.
There were varieties of attitude: some Native Americans resented the presence of Africans.
[''Red, White, and Black'', p. 99. ] In one account, the "Catawaba tribe in 1752 showed great anger and bitter resentment when an African American came among them as a trader."
European and European-American colonists tried to divide Native Americans and African Americans against each other.
Europeans considered both races inferior and tried to convince Native Americans that Africans worked against their best interests.
In the colonial period, Native Americans received rewards if they returned formerly enslaved people who had escaped . In the latter 19th century, African-American soldiers had assignments to fight with U.S. forces in
Indian Wars in the West.
European enslavement
European colonists created a new demand market for captives of raids when they founded what would go on to become the Thirteen Colonies.
Especially in the southern colonies, initially developed for resource exploitation rather than settlement, colonists purchased or captured Native Americans to be used as forced labor in cultivating tobacco, and, by the 18th century, rice and indigo.
To acquire trade goods, Native Americans began selling war captives to whites rather than integrating them into their own societies.
[Snyder (2010), "Indian Slave Trade" ]h. 2
H is the eighth letter of the Latin alphabet.
H may also refer to:
Musical symbols
* H number, Harry Halbreich reference mechanism for music by Honegger and Martinů
* H, B (musical note)
* H, B major
People
* H. (noble) (died after ...
in ''Slavery'', pp. 46-79. Traded goods, such as axes, bronze kettles, Caribbean rum, European jewelry, needles, and scissors, varied among the tribes, but the most prized were rifles.
The English copied the Spanish and Portuguese: they saw the enslavement of Africans and Native Americans as a moral, legal, and socially acceptable institution; a common rationale for enslavement was the taking of captives after a "
just war" and using slavery as an alternative to a death sentence.
The escape of Native American slaves was frequent, because they had a better understanding of the land, which African slaves did not. Consequently, the Natives who were captured and sold into slavery were often sent to the West Indies, or far away from their traditional homeland.
The oldest known record of a permanent Native American slave was a native man from Massachusetts in 1636.
By 1661 slavery had become legal in all of the thirteen colonies.
Virginia would later declare "Indians, Mulattos, and Negros to be real estate", and in 1682 New York forbade African or Native American slaves from leaving their master's home or plantation without permission.
European colonists also viewed the enslavement of Native Americans differently than the enslavement of Africans in some cases; a belief that Africans were "brutish people" was dominant. While both Native Americans and Africans were considered savages, Native Americans were romanticized as noble people that could be elevated into Christian civilization.
It is estimated that Carolina traders operating out of Charles Town exported an estimated 30,000 to 51,000 Native American captives between 1670 and 1715 in a profitable slave trade with the Caribbean, Spanish Hispaniola, and the Northern colonies.
[Krauthamer (2013), "Black Slaves, Indian Masters" ]h. 1
H is the eighth letter of the Latin alphabet.
H may also refer to:
Musical symbols
* H number, Harry Halbreich reference mechanism for music by Honegger and Martinů
* H, B (musical note)
* H, B major
People
* H. (noble) (died after 1279 ...
in ''Black Slaves'', pp. 17–45. It was more profitable to have Native American slaves because African slaves had to be shipped and purchased, while native slaves could be captured and immediately taken to plantations; whites in the Northern colonies sometimes preferred Native American slaves, especially Native women and children, to Africans because Native American women were agriculturalist and children could be trained more easily.
However, Carolinians had more of a preference for African slaves but also capitalized on the Indian slave trade combining both.
By the late 1700s records of slaves mixed with African and Native American heritage were recorded.
[Lauber (1913), "The Number of Indian Slaves" ]h. IV
H is the eighth letter of the Latin alphabet.
H may also refer to:
Musical symbols
* H number, Harry Halbreich reference mechanism for music by Honegger and Martinů
* H, B (musical note)
* H, B major
People
* H. (noble) (died after 1279 ...
in ''Indian Slavery'', pp. 105-117. In the eastern colonies it became common practice to enslave Native American women and African men with a parallel growth of enslavement for both Africans and Native Americans.
This practice also lead to large number of unions between Africans and Native Americans.
This practice of combining African slave men and Native American women was especially common in South Carolina.
During this time records also show that many Native American women bought African men but, unknown to the European traders, the women freed and married the men into their tribe.
The Indian wars of the early 18th century, combined with the growing availability of African slaves, essentially ended the Indian Slave trade by 1750.
Numerous colonial slave traders had been killed in the fighting, and the remaining Native American groups banded together, more determined to face the Europeans from a position of strength rather than be enslaved.
Though the Indian Slave Trade ended the practice of enslaving Native Americans continued, records from June 28, 1771, show Native American children were kept as slaves in
Long Island, New York
Long Island is a densely populated island in the southeastern region of the U.S. state of New York, part of the New York metropolitan area. With over 8 million people, Long Island is the most populous island in the United States and the 18th ...
.
Native Americans had also married while enslaved creating families both native and some of partial African descent.
Occasional mentioning of Native American slaves running away, being bought, or sold along with Africans in newspapers is found throughout the later colonial period.
There are also many accounts of former slaves mentioning having a parent or grandparent who was Native American or of partial descent.
Advertisements asked for the return of both African American and Native American slaves. Records and slave narratives obtained by the WPA (Works Progress Administration) clearly indicate that the enslavement of Native Americans continued in the 1800s mostly through kidnappings.
The abductions showed that even in the 1800s little distinction was still made between African Americans and Native Americans.
Both Native American and African-American slaves were at risk of sexual abuse by slaveholders and other white men of power.
During the transitional period of Africans' becoming the primary race enslaved, Native Americans had been sometimes enslaved at the same time. Africans and Native Americans worked together, lived together in communal quarters, along with white indentured servants, produced collective recipes for food, and shared herbal remedies, myths and legends.
Some intermarried and had mixed-race children.
The exact number of Native Americans who were enslaved is unknown because vital statistics and census reports were at best infrequent.
Andrés Reséndez estimates that between 147,000 and 340,000 Native Americans were enslaved in North America, excluding Mexico.
Among the Cherokee, interracial marriages or unions increased as the number of slaves held by the tribe increased.
The Cherokee had a reputation for having slaves work side by side with their owners.
The Cherokee resistance to the Euro-American system of
chattel slavery created tensions between them and European Americans.
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 against African slaves.
Cultural assimilation among the tribes, particularly the Cherokee, created pressure to be accepted by European Americans.
After Indian slavery was ended in the colonies, some African men chose Native American women as their partners because their children would be born free. Beginning from 1662 in Virginia, and soon followed by other colonies, they had established a law, known as ''
partus sequitur ventrem'', that said a child's status followed that of the mother. Separately, according to the
matrilineal system among many Native American tribes, children were considered to be born to and to belong to the mother's people, so were raised as Native American. As European expansion increased in the Southeast, African and Native American marriages became more common.
1800s through the Civil War
In the early 19th century, the US government believed that some tribes had become extinct, especially on the East Coast, where there had been a longer period of European settlement, and where most Native Americans had lost their communal land. Few reservations had been established and they were considered landless.
At that time, the government did not have a separate census designation for Native Americans. Those who remained among the European-American communities were frequently listed as
mulatto
(, ) is a racial classification to refer to people of mixed African and European ancestry. Its use is considered outdated and offensive in several languages, including English and Dutch, whereas in languages such as Spanish and Portuguese is ...
, a term applied to Native American-white, Native American-African, and African-white mixed-race people, as well as
tri-racial people.
The Seminole people of Florida formed in the 18th century, in what is called
ethnogenesis, from
Muscogee (Creek) and
Florida tribes. 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. Much intermarriage took place. African Americans living near the Seminole were called
Black Seminole
The Black Seminoles, or Afro-Seminoles are Native American-Africans associated with the Seminole people in Florida and Oklahoma. They are mostly blood descendants of the Seminole people, free Africans, and escaped slaves, who allied with Seminol ...
. Several hundred people of African descent traveled with the Seminole when they were removed to
Indian Territory. Others stayed with the few hundred Seminole who remained in Florida, undefeated by the Americans.
By contrast, an 1835 census of the Cherokee showed that 10% were of African descent.
In those years, censuses of the tribes classified people of mixed Native American and African descent as "Native American".
[Knickmeyer, Ellen. "Cherokee Nation To Vote on Expelling Slaves' Descendants", ''Washington Post'', 3 March 2007 (Accessible as of July 13, 2007 her]
But during the registration of tribal members for the Dawes Rolls, which preceded land allotment by individual heads of household of the tribes, generally Cherokee Freedmen were classified separately on a Freedmen roll. Registrars often worked quickly, judging by appearance, without asking if the freedmen had Cherokee ancestry, which would have qualified them as "Cherokee by blood" and listing on those rolls.
This issue has caused problems for their descendants in the late 20th and 21st century. The nation passed legislation and a constitutional amendment to make membership more restrictive, open only to those with certificates of blood ancestry (CDIB), with proven descent from "Cherokee by blood" individuals on the Dawes Rolls. Western frontier artist
George Catlin described "Negro and North American Indian, mixed, of equal blood" and stated they were "the finest built and most powerful men I have ever yet seen."
By 1922
John Swanton's survey of the Five Civilized Tribes noted that half the Cherokee Nation consisted of 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 Indians". By 1860 in some areas of
the South, where race was considered binary of black (mostly enslaved) or white, white legislators thought the Native Americans no longer qualified as "Native American," as many were mixed and part black. They did not recognized that many mixed-race Native Americans identified as Indian by culture and family. Legislators wanted to revoke the Native American tax exemptions.
Freed African Americans, Black Indians, and Native Americans fought in the
American Civil War against the
Confederate Army
The Confederate States Army, also called the Confederate Army or the Southern Army, was the military land force of the Confederate States of America (commonly referred to as the Confederacy) during the American Civil War (1861–1865), fighting ...
. During November 1861, the
Muscogee Creek and Black Indians, 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.
Some Black Indians served in colored regiments with other African-American soldiers.
Black Indians 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.
Some Civil War battles occurred in Indian Territory.
The first battle in Indian Territory took place July 1 and 2 in 1863, and Union forces included the 1st Kansas Colored Infantry.
The first battle against the Confederacy outside Indian Territory occurred at Horse Head Creek, Arkansas on February 17, 1864. The 79th US Colored Infantry participated.
Many Black Indians returned to Indian Territory after the Civil War had been won by the Union.
When the Confederacy and its Native American allies were defeated, the US required new peace treaties with the
Five Civilized Tribes, requiring them to
emancipate
Emancipation generally means to free a person from a previous restraint or legal disability. More broadly, it is also used for efforts to procure Economic, social and cultural rights, economic and social rights, civil and political rights, pol ...
slaves and make those who chose to stay with the tribes full citizens of their nations, with equal rights in annuities and land allotments. The former slaves were called "Freedmen," as in
Cherokee Freedmen,
Chickasaw Freedmen
The Chickasaw ( ) 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. Their language is classified a ...
,
Choctaw Freedmen,
Creek Freedmen and
Seminole Freedmen. The pro-Union branch of the Cherokee government had freed their slaves in 1863, before the end of the war, but the pro-Confederacy Cherokee held their slaves until forced to emancipate them.
Native American slave ownership
Slavery had existed among
Native Americans, as a way to make use of war captives, before it was introduced by the
European
European, or Europeans, or Europeneans, may refer to:
In general
* ''European'', an adjective referring to something of, from, or related to Europe
** Ethnic groups in Europe
** Demographics of Europe
** European cuisine, the cuisines of Europe ...
s. It was not the same as the European style of
chattel slavery, in which slaves were counted as the personal property of a master. In Cherokee oral tradition, they enslaved war captives and it was a temporary status pending adoption into a family and clan, or release.
As the
United States Constitution
The Constitution of the United States is the Supremacy Clause, supreme law of the United States, United States of America. It superseded the Articles of Confederation, the nation's first constitution, in 1789. Originally comprising seven ar ...
and the laws of several states permitted
slavery after the American Revolution (while northern states prohibited it), Native Americans were legally allowed to own slaves, including those brought from Africa by Europeans. In the 1790s,
Benjamin Hawkins
Benjamin Hawkins (August 15, 1754June 6, 1816) was an American planter, statesman and a U.S. Indian agent He was a delegate to the Continental Congress and a United States Senator from North Carolina, having grown up among the planter elite. ...
was the federal agent assigned to the
southeastern tribes
Indigenous peoples of the Southeastern Woodlands, Southeastern cultures, or Southeast Indians are an ethnographic classification for Native Americans who have traditionally inhabited the area now part of the Southeastern United States and the nor ...
. Promoting assimilation to European-American mores, he advised the tribes to take up slaveholding so that they could undertake farming and plantations as did other Americans.
The Cherokee tribe had the most members who held black slaves, more than any other Native American nation.
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.
Federal Agent Hawkins considered the form of slavery as practiced by the Southern tribes to be inefficient because the majority didn't practice chattel slavery.
Travelers reported enslaved Africans "in as good circumstances as their masters". A white
Indian 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".
Though less than 3% of Native Americans owned slaves, the fact of a racial caste system and bondage, and pressure from European-American culture, created destructive cleavages in their villages. Some already had a class hierarchy based on "white blood", in part because Native Americans of mixed race sometimes had stronger networks with traders for goods they wanted.
Among some bands, Native Americans of mixed
white blood stood at the top, pure Native Americans next, and people of African descent were at the bottom.
Some of the status of partial white descent may have been related to the economic and social capital passed on by white relations.
Members of Native groups held numerous African-American slaves through the Civil War. Some of these slaves later recounted their lives for a
WPA oral history
Oral history is the collection and study of historical information about individuals, families, important events, or everyday life using audiotapes, videotapes, or transcriptions of planned interviews. These interviews are conducted with people wh ...
project during the
Great Depression
The Great Depression (19291939) was an economic shock that impacted most countries across the world. It was a period of economic depression that became evident after a major fall in stock prices in the United States. The economic contagio ...
in the 1930s.
Native American Freedmen
After the Civil War, in 1866 the United States government required new treaties with the Five Civilized Tribes, who each had major factions 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 "Freedmen," for instance, Muscogee 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.
["Delaware Tribe of Indians Supports Cherokee Freedmen Treaty Rights"](_blank)
, Descendants of Freedmen of the Five Civilized Tribes, 2004, accessed 6 October 2009. 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 Muscogee 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.
Some
Maroon
Maroon ( US/ UK , Australia ) is a brownish crimson color that takes its name from the French word ''marron'', or chestnut. "Marron" is also one of the French translations for "brown".
According to multiple dictionaries, there are var ...
communities allied with the Seminole in Florida and intermarried. The Black Seminole included those with and without Native American ancestry.
When the
Cherokee Nation
The Cherokee Nation (Cherokee: ᏣᎳᎩᎯ ᎠᏰᎵ ''Tsalagihi Ayeli'' or ᏣᎳᎩᏰᎵ ''Tsalagiyehli''), also known as the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, is the largest of three Cherokee federally recognized tribes in the United States. It ...
drafted its constitution in 1975, enrollment was limited to descendants of people listed on the Dawes "Cherokee By Blood" rolls. On the Dawes Rolls, 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. The Shawnee and Delaware gained their own
federal recognition as the
Delaware Tribe of Indians
The Delaware Tribe of Indians, formerly known as the Cherokee Delaware or the Eastern Delaware, based in Bartlesville, Oklahoma, is one of three federally recognized tribes of the Lenape people in the United States, the others being with the Dela ...
and the
Shawnee Tribe. 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.
The Cherokee Nation Supreme Court ruled in March 2006 that Cherokee Freedmen were eligible for tribal enrollment. In 2007, leaders of the Cherokee Nation held a special election to amend their constitution to restrict requirements for citizenship in the tribe. The referendum established direct Cherokee ancestry as a requirement. The measure passed in March 2007, thereby forcing out Cherokee Freedmen and their descendants unless they also had documented, direct "Cherokee by blood" ancestry. This has caused much controversy. The tribe has determined to limit membership only to those who can demonstrate Native American descent based on listing on the Dawes Rolls.
Similarly, the
Seminole Nation of Oklahoma moved to exclude Seminole Freedmen 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. 2,000 Black Seminoles were excluded from the nation.
[Brendan I. Koerner, "Blood Feud", ''Wired'' 13.09](_blank)
accessed 3 June 2008. Descendants of Freedmen and Black Seminoles are working to secure their rights.
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. Over 25,000 Freedmen descendants of the Five Civilized Tribes may be affected by the legal controversies.
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.
Before the Dawes Commission was established,
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 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.
Genealogy and genetics
African Americans looking to trace their genealogy can face many difficulties. While a number of the Native American nations are better-documented than the white communities of the era,
the destruction of family ties and family records during the human trafficking of the
Atlantic slave trade
The Atlantic slave trade, transatlantic slave trade, or Euro-American slave trade involved the transportation by slave traders of enslaved African people, mainly to the Americas. The slave trade regularly used the triangular trade route and i ...
has made tracking African American family lines much more difficult. In ''Black Indians: A Hidden Heritage'', William Katz writes that the number of Black Indians among the Native American nations were "understated by hundreds of thousands"; and that by comparing pictorial documentation to verbal and written accounts it is clear that when Black Indians were spotted in these settings, they were often simply not remarked upon or recorded by white chroniclers of the era.
Enslaved Africans were renamed by those who enslaved them, and usually not even recorded with surnames until after the
American Civil War. Historical records usually relied upon by genealogists, such as censuses, did not record the names of enslaved African Americans before the Civil war. While some major slavers kept extensive records, which historians and genealogists have used to create family trees, generally researchers find it difficult to trace African American families before the Civil War. Enslaved people were also forbidden to learn to read and write, and harshly punished or even killed if they defied this ban, making records kept by families themselves extremely rare.
Elder family members may have tried to keep an
oral history
Oral history is the collection and study of historical information about individuals, families, important events, or everyday life using audiotapes, videotapes, or transcriptions of planned interviews. These interviews are conducted with people wh ...
of the family, but due to these many difficulties, these accounts have not always been as reliable as hoped for. Knowing the family's geographic origins may help individuals know where to start in piecing together their genealogy.
Working from oral history and what records exist, descendants can try to confirm stories of more precise African origins, and any possible Native ancestry through genealogical research and even
DNA testing. However, DNA cannot reliably indicate Native American ancestry, and no DNA test can indicate tribal origin.
DNA testing and research has provided some data about the extent of Native American ancestry among African Americans, which varies in the general population. Based on the work of
geneticists,
Harvard University historian
Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
Henry Louis "Skip" Gates Jr. (born September 16, 1950) is an American literary critic, professor, historian, and filmmaker, who serves as the Alphonse Fletcher University Professor and Director of the Hutchins Center for African and African Amer ...
hosted a popular, and at times controversial,
PBS series, ''
African American Lives
''African American Lives'' is a PBS television miniseries hosted by historian Henry Louis Gates Jr., focusing on African American genealogical research. The family histories of prominent people of African American descent are explored using tradit ...
'', in which geneticists said DNA evidence shows that Native American ancestry is far less common among African Americans than previously believed.
Their conclusions were that while almost all African Americans are racially mixed, and many have family stories of Native heritage, usually these stories turn out to be inaccurate,
with only 5 percent of African American people showing more than 2 percent Native American ancestry.
[ Gates summarized these statistics to mean that, "If you have 2 percent Native American ancestry, you had one such ancestor on your family tree five to nine generations back (150 to 270 years ago)."][ Their findings also concluded that the most common "non-Black" mix among African Americans is English and Scots-Irish.] Some critics thought the PBS series did not sufficiently explain the limitations of DNA testing for assessment of heritage.
Another study, published in the '' American Journal of Human Genetics'', also indicated that, despite how common these family stories are, relatively few African-Americans who have these stories actually turned out to have detectable Native American ancestry. A study reported in the ''American Journal of Human Genetics'' stated, "We analyzed the European genetic contribution to 10 populations of African descent in the United States (Maywood, Illinois; Detroit; New York; Philadelphia; Pittsburgh; Baltimore; Charleston, South Carolina; New Orleans; and Houston) ... mtDNA haplogroups analysis shows no evidence of a significant maternal Amerindian contribution to any of the 10 populations." Despite this, some still insist that most African Americans have at least some Native American heritage. Henry Louis Gates, Jr. wrote in 2009,
Geneticists from Kim Tallbear ( Dakota) to The Indigenous Peoples Council on Biocolonialism (IPCB) agree that DNA testing is not how tribal identity is determined, with Tallbear stressing that
and the IPCB noting that
Tallbear also stresses that tribal identity is based in political citizenship, culture, lineage and family ties, not "blood", "race", or genetics.[
Writing for ]ScienceDaily
''Science Daily'' is an American website launched in 1995 that aggregates press releases and publishes lightly edited press releases (a practice called churnalism) about science, similar to Phys.org and EurekAlert!.
The site was founded by mar ...
, Troy Duster wrote that 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. Though DNA testing for ancestry is limited, a paper in 2015 posited that ancestries can show different percentages based on the region and sex of one's ancestors. These studies found that on average, people who identified as African American in their sample group had 73.2-82.1% West African, 16.7%-29% European, and 0.8–2% Native American genetic ancestry, with large variation between individuals.Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
Henry Louis "Skip" Gates Jr. (born September 16, 1950) is an American literary critic, professor, historian, and filmmaker, who serves as the Alphonse Fletcher University Professor and Director of the Hutchins Center for African and African Amer ...
,
Exactly How 'Black' Is Black America?
, ''The Root'', February 11, 2013.
Autosomal DNA testing surveys DNA that has been inherited from parents of an individual. Autosomal tests focus on genetic markers which might be found in Africans, Asians, and people from every other part of the world. DNA testing still cannot determine an individual's full ancestry with absolute certitude.
Notable Black Native Americans
Claims of African American ''and'' Native American identity are often disputed. As Sharon P. Holland and Tiya Miles note, "Pernicious cultural definitions of race ... structure this divide, as blackness has been capaciously defined by various state laws according to the legendary one-drop rule, while Indianness has been defined by the US government according to the many buckets rule."
While many US states historically categorized a person as Black if they had even one Black ancestor (the "one drop rule
The one-drop rule is a legal principle of racial classification that was prominent in the 20th-century United States. It asserted that any person with even one ancestor of Black people, black ancestry ("one drop" of "black blood")Davis, F. Jame ...
"), Native Americans have been required to meet high blood quantum requirements. For example, the Indian Reorganization Act
The Indian Reorganization Act (IRA) of June 18, 1934, or the Wheeler–Howard Act, was U.S. federal legislation that dealt with the status of American Indians in the United States. It was the centerpiece of what has been often called the "Indian ...
of 1934 only recognized Native people with "one half or more Indian blood". It can sometimes be difficult for Native people to provide paper evidence of their ancestry, especially for Black Native Americans as their mixed race ancestors may have been recorded only as Black. Many tribes today still have blood quantum requirements as part of their criteria for tribal membership.
The list below contains notable individuals with African American ancestry who are tribal citizens or who have been recognized by their communities.
Historic
* William Apess (African- Pequot, 1798–1839), Methodist minister and author.
* Crispus Attucks
Crispus Attucks ( – March 5, 1770) was an American whaler, sailor, and stevedore of African and Native American descent, commonly regarded as the first person killed in the Boston Massacre and thus the first American killed in the Amer ...
(African- Wampanoag, 1723–1770) dockworker, merchant seaman, an icon in the anti-slavery movement, the first casualty of the Boston Massacre and the American Revolutionary War.[African American Trail Project - 18th Century]
at Tufts University. Accessed 5 May 2019
* George Bonga
George Bonga (August 20, 1802 – 1880) was a fur trader, entrepreneur and interpreter for the U.S. government, who was of Ojibwe and Black descent, fluent in French, Ojibwemowin and English. At the age of eighteen, he served as an interpreter ...
(African- Ojibwe, 1802–1880), fur trader and interpreter in what is now Minnesota, son of trader and interpreter Pierre Bonga
Pierre Chimakadewiiash Bonga (Ojibwe: ''Makadewiiyas'', "Black-skinned"; recorded as "Mukdaweos") (c. 1770 – 1831, Minnesota) was a black trapper and interpreter for the North West Company, based in Canada near Mackinac Island. He later worked ...
.
* Billy Bowlegs III
Billy Bowlegs III, Billy Fewell, aka Cofehapkee (1862–1965), was a Seminole elder, who was also of African-American descent. He was a tribal historian in Florida.
Early life and education
According to an interview with Bowlegs, he was born on ...
(African- Seminole, 1862–1965)
* Olivia Ward Bush
Olivia Ward Bush-Banks (née Olivia Ward; February 27, 1869 – April 8, 1944) was an American author, poet and journalist of African-American and Montaukett Native American heritage. Ward celebrated both of her heritages in her poetry and writi ...
, ( Montauk, 1869–1944), author, poet, journalist and tribal historian.
* Joseph Louis Cook
Joseph Louis Cook, or Akiatonharónkwen (died October 1814) (Mohawk), was an Iroquois leader and commissioned officer in the Continental Army during the American Revolution. Born to an African father and an Abenaki mother in what is now Schuylerv ...
( Mohawk tribal member of African- Abenaki descent, d. 1814) colonel in the Continental Army
The Continental Army was the army of the United Colonies (the Thirteen Colonies) in the Revolutionary-era United States. It was formed by the Second Continental Congress after the outbreak of the American Revolutionary War, and was establis ...
during the American Revolutionary War.[Darren Bonaparte, "Louis Cook: A French and Indian Warrior"](_blank)
''Wampum Chronicles'', 16 September 2005
* Paul Cuffee ( Ashanti/Wampanoag, 1759–1817)
* Pompey Factor
Pompey Factor (1849 – March 29, 1928) was a Black Seminole who served as a United States Army Indian Scout and received America's highest military decoration—the Medal of Honor—for his actions in the Indian Wars of the Western United ...
(African-Seminole, 1849–1928) Black Seminole Scout, Medal of Honor recipient.
* John Horse, Juan Caballo (Black Seminole
The Black Seminoles, or Afro-Seminoles are Native American-Africans associated with the Seminole people in Florida and Oklahoma. They are mostly blood descendants of the Seminole people, free Africans, and escaped slaves, who allied with Seminol ...
, 1812–1882), war chief in Florida, also the leader of African-Seminole in Mexico.
* Edmonia Lewis
Mary Edmonia Lewis, also known as "Wildfire" (c. July 4, 1844 – September 17, 1907), was an American sculptor, of mixed African-American and Native American ( Mississauga Ojibwe) heritage. Born free in Upstate New York, she worked for most of ...
(African-Haitian-Mississauga
Mississauga ( ), historically known as Toronto Township, is a city in the Canadian province of Ontario. It is situated on the shores of Lake Ontario in the Regional Municipality of Peel, adjoining the western border of Toronto. With a popul ...
, c. 1845–1911) sculptor.
* Adam Paine
Adam Paine, or Adam Payne, (1843 – January 1, 1877) was a Black Seminole who served as a United States Army Indian Scout and received America's highest military decoration—the Medal of Honor—for his actions in the Indian Wars of the weste ...
(African-Seminole, 1843–1877) Black Seminole Scout, Medal of Honor recipient.
* Charlie Patton (African- Cherokee descent, 1887–1934), founding father of the blues
Blues is a music genre and musical form which originated in the Deep South of the United States around the 1860s. Blues incorporated spirituals, work songs, field hollers, shouts, chants, and rhymed simple narrative ballads from the Afr ...
in the Mississippi Delta
The Mississippi Delta, also known as the Yazoo–Mississippi Delta, or simply the Delta, is the distinctive northwest section of the U.S. state of Mississippi (and portions of Arkansas and Louisiana) that lies between the Mississippi and Yazoo ...
.
* Isaac Payne
Isaac Payne, or Isaac Paine, (1854–1904) was a Black Seminole who served as a United States Army Indian Scout and received America's highest military decoration—the Medal of Honor—for his actions in the Indian Wars of the western United ...
(African-Seminole, 1854–1904) Black Seminole Scout, Medal of Honor recipient.
* Marguerite Scypion (African- Natchez, c. 1770s–after 1836), freedwoman who won her freedom from slavery in court.
* John Ward (Medal of Honor)
John Ward (1847 or 1848 – March 24, 1911) was a Black Seminole who served as a United States Army Indian Scout and received America's highest military decoration—the Medal of Honor—for his actions in the Indian Wars of the western United ...
(African-Seminole, 1847 or 1848–1911) Black Seminole Scout, Medal of Honor recipient.
Contemporary
* Natalie Ball
Natalie Ball (born 1980) is a Klamath/ Modoc interdisciplinary artist based in Chiloquin, Oregon.
Background
Born in Portland, Oregon, Ball is enrolled in the Klamath Tribes. She is also of African-American, Modoc, and Anglo-American descent ...
(Klamath Klamath may refer to:
Ethnic groups
*Klamath people, a Native American people of California and Oregon
**Klamath Tribes, a federally recognized group of tribes in Oregon
*Klamath language, spoken by the Klamath people
Places in the United States
* ...
/Modoc
Modoc may refer to:
Ethnic groups
*Modoc people, a Native American/First Nations people
** Modoc language
**Modoc Tribe of Oklahoma, a federally recognized tribe of Modoc
*Modoc War, the last armed resistance of the Modoc people in 1873
*The "Mo ...
), born 1980, interdisciplinary artist
* Joe Burton
Joe Burton (born ), is a retired Americans, American professional ice hockey player, most notably for the Oklahoma City Blazers (1992–2009), Oklahoma City Blazers of the Central Hockey League. He is not only the career leader in almost every ...
( Soboba Luiseño, basketball player
* Radmilla Cody
Radmilla A. Cody born 1975 is a Navajo model, singer, and anti- domestic violence activist who was the 46th Miss Navajo from 1997 to 1998.
She was the first biracial Miss Navajo and thus so far the only Miss Navajo partially of African-Americ ...
(Diné
The Navajo (; British English: Navaho; nv, Diné or ') are a Native American people of the Southwestern United States.
With more than 399,494 enrolled tribal members , the Navajo Nation is the largest federally recognized tribe in the United ...
), 46th Miss Navajo
Miss Navajo Nation is a pageant that has been held annually on the Navajo Nation, United States, since 1952.
The first Miss Navajo was Beulah Melvin Allen, in 1952. She was crowned at the Navajo Nation Fair, the largest fair held on the Navaj ...
Nation (1998), traditional singer, enrolled member of the Navajo Nation with African-American ancestry, first bi-racial Miss Navajo, and advocate against domestic violence in both the Navajo Nation and the state of Arizona
* Angel Goodrich
Angel Goodrich (born February 24, 1990) is an American former professional basketball player, who played for the Tulsa Shock and Seattle Storm in the WNBA.
Background and family
Goodrich was born in Glendale, Arizona to Jonathan and Fayth (G ...
(Cherokee Nation
The Cherokee Nation (Cherokee: ᏣᎳᎩᎯ ᎠᏰᎵ ''Tsalagihi Ayeli'' or ᏣᎳᎩᏰᎵ ''Tsalagiyehli''), also known as the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, is the largest of three Cherokee federally recognized tribes in the United States. It ...
), WNBA basketball player for the Tulsa Shock
The Tulsa Shock were a professional basketball team based in Tulsa, Oklahoma, playing in the Western Conference in the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA). The team was founded in Detroit, Michigan before the 1998 WNBA season began; ...
and the Seattle Storm
The Seattle Storm are an American professional basketball team based in Seattle. The Storm competes in the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) as a member club of the league's Western Conference. The team was founded by Ginger Ackerl ...
* Mary Ann Green
Mary Ann Green (1964 – January 8, 2017) was an American tribal leader and politician who served as the Chairwoman of the Augustine Band of Cahuilla Indians, a federally recognized Cahuilla band of Native Americans based in Coachella, California ...
(Augustine Cahuilla
The Augustine Band of Cahuilla Indians is a federally recognized Cahuilla band of Native Americans based in Coachella, California. They are one of the smallest tribal nations in the United States, consisting of only 16 members, seven of whom ...
, 1964–2017), chairperson who reestablished the Augustine Cahuilla reservation and tribal government
* Lisa Holt Lisa or LISA may refer to:
People
People with the mononym
* Lisa Lisa (born 1967), American actress and lead singer of the Cult Jam
* Lisa (Japanese musician, born 1974), stylized "LISA", Japanese singer and producer
* Lisa Komine (born 1978), ...
( Cochiti Pueblo), ceramic artist
*Mwalim
Mwalim (Morgan James Peters I, born June 6, 1968), also known as "Mwalim *7" and "Mwalim DaPhunkee Professor" is an American performing artist, writer, and educator. He is a tenured associate professor of English and former director of Black Stud ...
(Mashpee Wampanoag
The Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe (formerly Mashpee Wampanoag Indian Tribal Council, Inc.) is one of two federally recognized tribes of Wampanoag people in Massachusetts. Recognized in 2007, they are headquartered in Mashpee on Cape Cod. The other ...
), musician, writer, and educator
* Harlan Reano (Kewa Pueblo
Kewa Pueblo ( Eastern Keres , Keres: ''Díiwʾi'', Navajo: ''Tó Hájiiloh'') is a federally-recognized tribe of Native American Pueblo people in northern New Mexico, in Sandoval County southwest of Santa Fe. The pueblo is recorded as the Santo ...
), ceramic artist
* Angel Haze ( Cherokee), born 1991, a Two-Spirit rapper and singer
* Kyrie Irving ( Lakota), born 1992, NBA basketball player
* France Winddance Twine
France Winddance Twine is a Black and Native American sociologist, ethnographer, visual artist. and documentary filmmaker. Twine's research has made significant contributions to interdisciplinary research in gender and sexuality studies, racism ...
( Muscogee (Creek) Nation, born 1960), sociologist
* William S. Yellow Robe Jr. ( Assiniboine), playwright and educator
* Nyla Rose (Oneida
Oneida may refer to:
Native American/First Nations
* Oneida people, a Native American/First Nations people and one of the five founding nations of the Iroquois Confederacy
* Oneida language
* Oneida Indian Nation, based in New York
* Oneida Na ...
descent), professional wrestler, martial artist, and actress
* Kelvin Sampson ( Lumbee), college basketball coach
* Santiago X
Santiago X is an indigenous multidisciplinary artist and architect working in land art, architecture, new media, and hip hop music. Born in Phoenix, Arizona in 1982, he is an enrolled citizen of the Coushatta Tribe of Louisiana (Koasati) and Indi ...
, Louisiana Coushatta multidisciplinary artist and architect
* Powtawche Valerino
Powtawche N. Valerino is an American mechanical engineer at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory. She worked as a navigation engineer for the Cassini mission.
Early life and education
Valerino was born to a Mississippi Choctaw mother and African ...
( Mississippi Choctaw), NASA engineer
* Delonte West ( Piscataway), retired NBA basketball player Delonte West Player Mailbox
NBA.com. February 3, 2009. Retrieved on October 3, 2010.
See also
* Black Seminoles
* Creek Freedmen
* Cherokee freedmen controversy
* Dawes Rolls
* Mardi Gras Indians
* Native American name controversy
The Native American name controversy is an ongoing discussion about the changing terminology used by the Indigenous peoples of the Americas to describe themselves, as well as how they prefer to be referred to by others. Preferred terms vary pri ...
* One-drop rule
Notes
References
* Katz, William Loren
''Black Indians: A Hidden Heritage''
New York: Atheneum, 1986. .
Further reading
* Bonnett, A. "Shades of Difference: African Native Americans", ''History Today'', 58, 12, December 2008, pp. 40–42
* Sylviane A. Diouf (1998), ''Servants of Allah: African Muslims Enslaved in the Americas''.
* Allan D. Austin (1997), ''African Muslims in Antebellum America''.
* Tiya Miles (2006), ''Ties that Bind: the Story of an Afro-Cherokee Family in Slavery and Freedom''.
* J. Leitch Wright (1999), ''The Only Land They Knew: American Indians in the Old South''.
* Patrick Minges (2004), ''Black Indians Slave Narratives''.
* Jack D. Forbes (1993), ''Africans and Native Americans: The Language of Race and the Evolution of Red-Black Peoples''.
* James F. Brooks (2002), ''Confounding the Color Line: The (American) Indian–Black Experience in North America''.
* Claudio Saunt (2005), ''Black, White, and Indian: Race and the Unmaking of an American Family''.
* Valena Broussard Dismukes (2007), ''The Red-Black Connection: Contemporary Urban African-Native Americans and their Stories of Dual Identity''.
External links
''Ancestors Know Who We Are''
(2022), NMAI virtual art exhibition of Black-Indigenous women artists
"Aframerindian Slave Narratives,"
by Patrick Minges
{{DEFAULTSORT:Black Indians In The United States
African-American society
Ethnic groups in the United States
Multiracial affairs in the United States
Native American history
Social history of the United States