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The Tuscarora Chief James Blount's 11th Great Granddaughter: The Untold History of the Tuscaroras Who Remained in NC by Kawe`ne?h? A?ha?

Free downloadable books online The Tuscarora Chief James Blount's 11th Great Granddaughter: The Untold History of the Tuscaroras Who Remained in NC (English Edition) iBook by Kawe`ne?h? A?ha?

Download The Tuscarora Chief James Blount's 11th Great Granddaughter: The Untold History of the Tuscaroras Who Remained in NC PDF

  • The Tuscarora Chief James Blount's 11th Great Granddaughter: The Untold History of the Tuscaroras Who Remained in NC
  • Kawe`ne?h? A?ha?
  • Page: 152
  • Format: pdf, ePub, mobi, fb2
  • ISBN: 9798765525289
  • Publisher: Barnes & Noble Press

Download The Tuscarora Chief James Blount's 11th Great Granddaughter: The Untold History of the Tuscaroras Who Remained in NC




Free downloadable books online The Tuscarora Chief James Blount's 11th Great Granddaughter: The Untold History of the Tuscaroras Who Remained in NC (English Edition) iBook by Kawe`ne?h? A?ha?

Overview

The Indigenous research is to study, confirm, and certify the tribal ancestry of Catherine Anderson, a Tuscarora Indian, who was born on December 29, 1960, and resides on the Tuscarora Nation Federal Reservation in Lewiston-Sanborn, Niagara County, New York. The research is very complex given the historical presence and demographic migrations of the historic Tuscarora Nation in North Carolina during the colonial and revolutionary time periods in North Carolina. Catherine Anderson's mother is the direct tribal descendant of the historic Tuscarora Chief James Blount, through his son, Chief John Blount according to many genealogical data records and govern records who signed for Tuscarora Indian lands in Bertie County, North Carolina in 1748, and in 1766; however, due to the ongoing abuse of colonial settlers and the military, the principal Tuscarora Chief James Blount and his band of Tuscaroras later were forced to migrate away from the historic Tuscarora main body on Tuscarora Reservation lands in North Carolina during the colonial time period, and survived in the swamps of Bladen County, North Carolina with federal military sundry land grants creating a another large base of Tuscarora tribal lands which adjoined lands with other Tuscarora Chiefs who created isolated settlements and tribal communities under Chief James Blount's sovereignty in Bladen County which in part, in 1787 formed and created the present day Robeson County, North Carolina from the parent county. This research report will examine the factual records of the Tuscarora Treaties, Tuscarora Chief James Blount, tribal migration, tribal descendancy, DNA genetic tribal mapping and Sovereignty post the Tuscarora War in the colonial era with the tribal migration to the Drowning Creek Settlement in Bladen County, North Carolina with the other historic Tuscarora Chiefs who also unfairly forced to migrate after Chief Blount from the Tuscarora Indian Reservation in Indian Woods, Bertie County, North Carolina. Additionally, the research explores the scattered history of the Tuscarora and the historical divide between the Tuscaroras since colonial times after the two Treaties were issued in 1712, and 1713 regarding Tuscarora Treaties quest for peace and how the Treaties were signed with a total of nine Tuscarora Chiefs which represented nine separate and divided Tuscarora Indian bands in the Treaty agreements, but later in 1715 through 1717, only one band of Tuscaroras, King Tom Blount was acknowledged by the colonial government, obscuring the other Tuscarora bands' Treaty Sovereign rights who signed the Treaties but have always been unidentified for centuries. The research discipline will further solidify the intimate details of the Tuscarora Chief James Blount and his tribal movements as the Tuscarora Chief with his tribal lands, petitions, lineal heirs, and influence before the North Carolina Government during colonial times. Further research will analyze and conclude DNA genetic tribal mapping data of Catherine M. Anderson and her Iroquois ancestors' survival as Indigenous People in the present day location in Robeson County, North Carolina.

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