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Researching Indian
Ancestry
(Used with permission of
Coastal
Carolina Indian Center.)
One of the number one questions Coastal
Carolina Indian Center gets via e-mail is how to find Indian ancestors, or how
to determine the tribe of certain ancestors who were said to be Indian. This
article was written to help people get started on finding those answers.
by Sara Whitford
If you are embarking on a search for Indian ancestors, there are several tips to
consider:
- Very rarely in the southeastern states
will you ever see Indian people actually listed as Indian after the early
colonial period. They are occasionally listed in census records as Free
People of Color or Other Free. Often they are classified as white, black or
mulatto.
- Because of the wars between the Indian
communities and the colonists in the early colonial period, those Indians
who chose to remain in areas that had been ravaged by war often tried to
hide their identities, or just blend in with the population at large, for
survival sake. It was typical that these families intermarried with other
families like there own so that there still remained a strong indigenous
bloodline, while the culture and language were in some cases almost
completely lost.
Many of these families also moved together, so let's say that in 1760
several Indian families are living in one county, as more white settlers
came in, these same families would feel the urge to move usually slightly
south or west to stay ahead of the colonial expansion, so perhaps by 1780 or
1790, these same families are not showing up much in the original county,
but all the same names show up one or more counties south or west.
- A very good clue for starting in
researching Indian ancestry (or an ancestor who is "rumored" as being Indian
in your family tree) is to try to focus on that person's line. Go back as
far as you can and do not be discouraged if you don't find anyone
specifically named as Indian. Make a list of all the related surnames you
can find, and try to keep in mind the surnames you see witnessing deeds,
wills, etc for these individuals. What families do your family surnames
marry into? Try to keep a list of these other surnames because this will be
key to establishing connections to known Indian families.
- Investigate what tribes were living in the
area at any given time. If the history has it that the tribe no longer
existed in a particular area after such-and-such a time, know that this only
means that the tribe no longer existed as a force to be reckoned with. The
people, were in most cases, still living in the area, perhaps only in a
quieter fashion (for survival's sake). Try to learn what you can about when
the tribe WAS known to live in the area. Try to find out what names were
associated with that tribe when they WERE still vibrant in the area. Perhaps
there were deeds or court records where Indian people in a given area are
named. You'll start seeing trends with certain surnames showing up as
related to a tribe at an early point in history, and these same names are
still living in the same area later, but usually identified as "colored",
"other free", or in many cases, even just white or black. The relationships
with these families stay very interconnected. Obviously, when dealing with
some very common surnames such as Smith, Johnson, Jones, etc, this can be a
little misleading, but at that point, you can start looking at given names
of children and you'll see evidence tying people to either the native
branches or the non-native branches of that surname. Please note: Just
because someone has a surname that was a known surname for Indian people in
a particular area does NOT guarantee that the individual was Indian. There
are a number of other variables that will need to come together to establish
proof, or at least a likelihood that the individual was, in fact, Indian.
Researching Indian ancestry is not an exact science. In fact, more often
than not, it has to do with uncovering what is referred to as a
"preponderance of evidence" that certain individuals were Indian, or at
least were dealing a great deal with families with known Indian surnames.
In eastern North Carolina, one fantastic example of uncovering Indian
surnames comes from researching the reservation that was established at Lake
Mattamuskeet in 1727 (in the period following the Tuscarora War).
There are a number of families that are identified as being Indian on this
reservation including (but not limited to): Squires, Longtom, Mackey,
Barber, Brooks and Russell. These families are VERY interconnected with
other families at Mattamuskeet that may or may not be Indian, themselves,
such as Gibbs, Spencer, Prescott, Brinson, Delamar, etc.. You'll find at
some point that individuals once specifically identified as Indian are no
longer referred to in official documents as Indian, but are identified as
other races, or not described by race at all.
You'll also see that a lot of these families move together to other
counties. For example, there were a large number of Squires, Brinsons,
Delamars, Prescotts, etc, who begin showing up along the Bay River in what
is known today as Pamlico County in the same period that the reservation
starts being sold off in large pieces.
These same families also have many interactions with other families
identified on early census records as "Other Free" or "Free People of Color"
such as the Mackelroys. There were Prescotts living on the Mattamuskeet
reservation during the reservation period, and they had intermarried with
the Russell family, who were known to be Indian. You start finding enough
bits and pieces of information like this and a very clear picture starts to
emerge.
It's a lot like detective work, solving a mystery. Sometimes frustrating,
sometimes very time consuming and tedious, but whenever answers are
uncovered, always very rewarding.
©2007 by Sara Whitford for
Coastal
Carolina Indian Center. All Rights Reserved.
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