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Recent Articles
Monday, March 28
· Finding your Cherokee ancestors
· Census rolls and historical records that contain clues to Cherokee genealogy
· Where to start your Cherokee genealogy research
Saturday, December 11
· The Raven Mocker is the most dreaded of Cherokee witches
· Gathering and Using Medicinal Herbs in the Cherokee Tradition
Sunday, May 09
· Native American Roots, Once Hidden, Now Embraced
Sunday, January 11
· Cherokee Country - An original story
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· Northern Cherokee typically aren't associated with Kansas: Family histories say
Thursday, December 27
· The Cherokee War of 1839
Saturday, September 22
· Cherokee Legend of the Butterfly Dance

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Obama Upholds Rights of Cherokees, All Native American Tribes     
Posted on Tuesday, May 20 @ 21:50:06 PDT (553 reads)



Law & Politics




AUTHOR: First Americans Advocate

Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) has stated his opposition to H.R. 2824, an attempt by his fellow Congressional Black Caucus member Rep. Diane Watson (D-CA) to sever government-to-government relations with the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma because of an on-going dispute between the tribe and the "Cherokee Freedmen."

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Cherokee Center Puts Documentation Services Online     
Posted on Tuesday, May 13 @ 20:50:09 PDT (1622 reads)



NativeAmerican Genealogy

Anonymous writes


The Cherokee Heritage Documentation Center now provides a quick and simple way for people of Cherokee blood to register online, document their heritage, and learn more about who they are.

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Quarterback Sam Bradford is source of pride for the Cherokee Nation     
Posted on Saturday, December 01 @ 20:18:24 PST (1696 reads)



US Tribes, Nations & Bands




AUTHOR: Vahe Gregorian

J.R. Cook, executive director of United National Indian Tribal Youth in Oklahoma City, believes Bradford is the first quarterback with American Indian heritage to start for a major college program since Sonny Sixkiller at Washington in 1972.

"Obviously, Oklahoma football is huge all over the state, and in the Cherokee Nation it's the same," Miller said. "The quarterback on an Oklahoma team who's done as well as he has is a rock star in Oklahoma, and now we feel like he's our rock star."

Sports, of course, aren't always the most meaningful endeavor, Cook said. But he understands their visibility and likes to note an old American Indian saying: "The honor of one is the honor of all."

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma is trying to break a treaty signed in 1866     
Posted on Thursday, June 21 @ 15:44:33 PDT (2679 reads)



US Tribes, Nations & Bands




AUTHOR: George Wickliffe

Federally-recognized tribal governments are in a better position with the United States than ever before. And because of that, I am concerned that the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma is trying to break a treaty signed in 1866 with the original Cherokees. It is dangerous to try and break a treaty. It opens doors for Congress to abolish their government-to-government relationship with the tribes.

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Cherokee healer says to remember and follow the traditions     
Posted on Tuesday, April 24 @ 23:08:45 PDT (3088 reads)



US Tribes, Nations & Bands




AUTHOR: Betty Smith

Crosslin Smith, Cherokee Traditionalist
Cherokee traditionalist Crosslin Smith explains the principles set down by the creator. "Maintaining the spiritual tradition handed down through centuries is vital to a person’s health in today’s society," Smith said Friday.

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Old Indians mounds claimed by Eastern Cherokee tribe     
Posted on Tuesday, April 24 @ 22:57:33 PDT (3276 reads)



US Tribes, Nations & Bands




The Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians on Monday officially reclaimed one of the few undisturbed Indians mounds remaining in Western North Carolina. “This property is not just about a mound,” said Principal Chief Michell Hicks. “It is about a way of life.”

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Eastern Band of Cherokee announces new art school     
Posted on Friday, March 30 @ 19:13:39 PDT (3526 reads)



Art & Artists


AUTHOR: Lynne Harlan

Art is a term foreign in the Cherokee language and many other native languages because art does not exist in the Cherokee life view. However, the expression of creativity has long held deep significance and has transcended the mere construction of an art object.

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Cherokees Vote Out Slaves' Descendants     
Posted on Sunday, March 04 @ 19:10:06 PST (2709 reads)



US Tribes, Nations & Bands


AUTHOR: Murray Evans

Cherokee Nation members voted Saturday to revoke the tribal citizenship of an estimated 2,800 descendants of the people the Cherokee once owned as slaves.

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Cherokees to Vote: Can Freedmen be Native American?     
Posted on Saturday, March 03 @ 19:05:12 PST (2272 reads)



US Tribes, Nations & Bands


AUTHOR: Frank Morris

Next month, members of the Cherokee Nation will vote on whether to amend the tribal constitution to make Indian blood a requirement for citizenship.
American Indian tribes are considered sovereign nations within the United States, and their citizens are entitled to tribal benefits, including subsidized housing and health care.

At issue in the March 3 vote is the status of thousands of descendants of African slaves once owned by tribal members. The people known as Cherokee freedmen say a 140-year-old treaty protects their citizenship in the Cherokee Nation.

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Cherokee Chief not ready to end fight to keep out Freedmen     
Posted on Friday, March 17 @ 00:49:04 PST (4161 reads)



US Tribes, Nations & Bands



AUTHOR: Donna Hales, Phoenix Staff Writer

The chief of the Cherokees is advocating the tribal council reverse the highest tribal court's ruling that freedmen were illegally denied tribal citizenship.

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Tribal court rules in favor of “Freedmen”     
Posted on Friday, March 10 @ 16:46:27 PST (3314 reads)



US Tribes, Nations & Bands



AUTHOR: Sam Lewin, Native Times

Justices say Cherokees must grant membership to descendants of slaves

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Cherokees must recognize Freedmen, tribunal rules     
Posted on Tuesday, March 07 @ 21:19:50 PST (5089 reads)



Law & Politics



AUTHOR: Donna Hales, Phoenix Staff Writer

Cherokee Freedman retain tribal citizenship under the tribe's 1975 constitution and are legally entitled to vote, the tribe's highest court ruled 2-1 Tuesday.

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Wilma Mankiller, Cherokee (1945-?)     
Posted on Monday, April 18 @ 01:27:25 PDT (10709 reads)



Women of Note



Wilma Pearl Mankiller was both the first woman deputy chief and the first woman principal chief of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma.

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Nancy Ward, (Nanye-hi) Cherokee (ca. 1738-ca. 1824)     
Posted on Monday, April 18 @ 00:06:31 PDT (6108 reads)



Women of Note



From the English rendition of Nanye-hi, "One Who Goes About," named from the mythological Spirit People, Nancy Ward was a major Cherokee figure of the Southern frontier who became an almost legendary person due largely to her queenly manner and resolute personality. Nanye-hi was born into the Wolf clan about 1738 at Chota, near Fort Loudon, Tennessee. Her father was Fivekiller, a Cherokee-Delaware man, and her mother was Tame Deer (sometimes recorded as Tame Doe) the sister of Attakullakulla, known popularly as Catherine.

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Arkansas Cherokee Indians     
Posted on Wednesday, March 30 @ 04:23:48 PST (4206 reads)



US Tribes, Nations & Bands



There have been many very notable and honored Chiefs that lived in the Arkansas Territory. Some have claimed Dangerous Man from the Cherokee legend of the Lost Cherokee resided in Arkansas for a time, however we will stick to what we know as fact, as that is usually the best policy when doing legitimate research.

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Finding your Cherokee ancestors     
Posted on Monday, March 28 @ 00:53:57 PST (8385 reads)



NativeAmerican Genealogy

In 1976, Cherokee voters ratified a new Cherokee Constitution, which changed the ways of measuring tribal membership. At that time, it was determined that anyone who could trace direct descent from the Dawes Rolls, a census taken between 1902-1907, could become a registered citizen of the Cherokee Nation. There are now over 165,00 registered Cherokee citizens.

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Census rolls and historical records that contain clues to Cherokee genealogy     
Posted on Monday, March 28 @ 00:45:13 PST (11780 reads)



NativeAmerican Genealogy

The different Census Rolls are given control numbers by the National Archives so they may be ordered, such as M-1234. The rolls are usually named for the person taking the census. Each roll pertains to a particular year so it is important to select the year that applies to the individual whom you are looking to find. I usually like to start with the Guion Miller Roll. The claims had to be on file by August 31, 1907. In 1909 Miller stated that 45,847 separate applications had been filed representing a total of about 90,000 individuals; 3436 resided east, and 27,384 were residing West of the Mississippi.

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Where to start your Cherokee genealogy research     
Posted on Monday, March 28 @ 00:28:51 PST (8112 reads)



NativeAmerican Genealogy



The Cherokee Indians have had continuing dealings with the U.S. Government since the 1700’s through treaties, legislation, and the courts. There are probably more federal records concerning the Cherokees than any other tribe.

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: The Raven Mocker is the most dreaded of Cherokee witches     
Posted on Saturday, December 11 @ 04:18:38 PST (8491 reads)



Religion & Spirituality

The Raven Mocker is the most dreaded of Cherokee witches.. KEYWORDS: raven mocker cherokee witches cherokee religious beliefs

The most dreaded of all Cherokee witches is the Raven Mocker, who robs the dying of their life. A Raven Mocker can be of either sex, and there is no real way to know one. They usually look old and withered, because they have added so many lives to their own.

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Gathering and Using Medicinal Herbs in the Cherokee Tradition     
Posted on Saturday, December 11 @ 03:56:34 PST (11614 reads)



Wildcrafting & Herbs

Gathering and Using Medicinal Herbs in the Cherokee Tradition.. KEYWORDS: cherokee medicinal herbs gathering use preservation of medicinal herbs cherokee herbalists

The Cherokee have been gifted by the Creator with an understanding of the gathering, use and preservation of medicinal herbs. The Cherokee believe that these plants were put on this earth to provide not only healing methods, but preventative measures, as well.

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Native American Roots, Once Hidden, Now Embraced     
Posted on Sunday, May 09 @ 21:11:53 PDT (12617 reads)



NativeAmerican Genealogy

KEYWORDS: american indian ancestry Cherokee genealogy blood quantum census 2000 cherokee enrollment

AUTHOR: Carol Morello

Nearly every day, some determined person with pale skin and blue eyes comes to Lela Ummerteskee from far away, ready to fulfill a dream and register as an American Indian.

Not everyone has a rock-solid pedigree. The tribal enrollment officer for the Cherokee Nation has been presented with everything from an X-ray of a head purporting to show Indian cheekbones to scraped-off patches of skin -- all offered as proof that a distant ancestor was Native American.

Only those with an unbroken chain of family documents are enrolled, and even many of those people first knew of their Indian past only by way of a great-great-grandparent whose story they learned as children.

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Cherokee Country - An original story     
Posted on Sunday, January 11 @ 22:50:50 PST (12035 reads)



Books & Stories

teddy writes KEYWORDS: Cherokee relocation story cherokee family story cherokee country tsa la gi

For a long time she heard her parents and Grandparents arguing. It was not so much personal, as it had to do with what was happening to the Cherokee people and how there were rumors and such. Talk of the whiteman forcing us from our land, talk of deceit, which Grandpa always said was the way with most white men, with few exceptions. White politicians? Grandpa would get so angry at even the word politicians and told us to never trust anything they said and did. All they wanted was Indian land and to kill every Indian they could.

This arguing was serious. As I listened from the loft, I could hear Grandma nearly pleading with Grandpa to sign the rolls of the Cherokee. He refused. I will not sign anything to prove who I am! He nearly shouted and Grandpa was always so tender with Grandma. “If we sign onto those rolls,” Grandpa said, we are signing our death warrant

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Northern Cherokee typically aren't associated with Kansas: Family histories say     
Posted on Saturday, February 16 @ 17:17:41 PST (6745 reads)



NativeAmerican Genealogy

Keywords: northern cherokee genealogy Cherokee genealogy resources We Are Not Yet Conquered Beverly Baker Northup Cherokees in Kansas book about cherokee genealogy CHEROKEE genealogical records state recognized tribes unrecognized Indian tribes Kansas indians Northern Cherokee Nation of the Old Louisiana Territory

Author: Philip Carlson/The Capital-Journal

In a just-released book on the Northern Cherokee Nation of the Old Louisiana Territory, a chapter recounts the American Indian tribe's history in Kansas.

For some people, that account may come as a surprise, as the Northern Cherokee typically aren't associated with the Sunflower State.

Records and family histories speak otherwise.

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: The Cherokee War of 1839     
Posted on Thursday, December 27 @ 00:50:57 PST (6172 reads)



History

The Cherokee War of 1839 was the culmination of friction between the Cherokee, Kickapoo, and Shawnee Indians and the white settlers in Northeast Texas.

The Indians, who had obtained squatters' rights to the land from Spanish authorities, were promised title to the land by the Consultation, and on February 23, 1836, a treaty made by Sam Houston and John Forbes, who represented the provisional government, gave title to the lands between the Angelina and Sabine rivers and northwest of the Old San Antonio Road to the Cherokees and their associated bands.

The treaty was tabled by the Texas Senate on December 29, 1836, and was declared null and void by that body on December 16, 1837, despite Houston's insistence that it be ratified.

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Cherokee Legend of the Butterfly Dance     
Posted on Saturday, September 22 @ 04:04:21 PDT (6989 reads)



Crafts and Culture

Raven SiJohn writes Some say the modern day Pow Wow competition dance known as the Ladies Fancy Shawl Dance has its roots in a ceremonial dance called the Butterfly Dance. Here is a Cherokee account of how that dance came to be.

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 TNB->Cherokee Indian: Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians of North Carolina     
Posted on Friday, July 20 @ 20:50:30 PDT (12168 reads)



US Tribes, Nations & Bands

Of all the injustices done to Native Americans, none equals the cruelty and betrayal culminating in the tragic "Trail of Tears" when the Cherokee Nation was forcefully driven out of the North Carolina mountains and marched 1,200 miles to Oklahoma.

Those who survived the journey to Oklahoma are known as the Western Band. Descendants of those who hid in the Great Smoky Mountains to avoid removal are known as the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians.

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