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         Genealogy Native Americans:     more books (74)
  1. A Student's Guide to Native American Genealogy (Oryx American Family Tree Series) by E. Barrie Kavasch, 1996-07-22
  2. Native American Genealogical Sourcebook (Genealogy Sourcebook)
  3. Native American Flags by Donald T. Healy, Peter J. Orenski, 2003-09
  4. Who's Looking for Whom in Native American Ancestry, Volume 2 by Laurie Beth Roman, 2004-07
  5. Native American Directory: Vital Records of Maine, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York and Wisconsin
  6. Heritage Papers: The Role of Native Americans in Military Engagements From the 17th Century to the 19th Century (Heritage Papers) by Karen L. T. Ackermann, 2003-07-01
  7. We Are Cowlitz: A Native American Ethnicity by Darleen A. Fitzpatrick, 2004-10
  8. French and Native North American Marriages, 1600-1800 by Paul J. Bunnell, 2004-11
  9. Indians from New York in Ontario & Quebec: A Genealogy Reference
  10. 1998 Blackfeet Genealogy, Treasures, and Gifts
  11. Creek Indian History: A Historical Narrative of the Genealogy, Traditions and Downfall of the Ispocoga or Creek Indian Tribe of Indians by One of the Tribe, George Stiggins (1788-1845) by Geoge Stiggins, 2003-01-22
  12. Ife of Paa Peh: Reflections of a Pueblo Indian Elder by Joe S. Sando, 2008-05
  13. Our Native Americans and Their Records of Genealogical Value, Vol. 2 by E. Kay Kirkham, 1984-02
  14. Cherokee Proud: A Guide for Tracing and Honoring Your Cherokee Ancestors by Tony Mack McClure, 1998-12-15

1. Native American Indian Genealogy
Native Americans, 1823 Minnesota Native Indian Affairs, Laws and Treaties Native American Indian Genealogy Indian Tribes of the United
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

2. Native American Genealogy
Native American Genealogy Guide to Oklahoma by Paul Sarrett Jr. (added 20 June 96) How To Guide for Native Americans by Paul Sarrett Jr
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

3. Native American Genealogy
Native American Genealogy. There are many unique challenges encountered when researching Native or black, if living with African Americans.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

4. Cyndi's List Native American Genealogy
USGenWeb Project ~ Native Americans Related Categories AfricanAmerican Genealogy-Native Genealogy-Native Channel on AfterNET.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

5. Index Of Native American Resources On The Internet - WWWVL
Index of Native American Resources on the Internet. The iTunes shop has again been updated. Genealogy Legal Books. NonProfits Government
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

6. WWWVL American Indian - Native American Genealogy Resources On The
Index of Native American Genealogy Resources on the Internet Minnesota Native Americans, 1823. Minnesota Native Americans, 1851
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

7. Native Americans Of Columbia County, New York, USA
NATIVE AMERICANS OF COLUMBIA COUNTY Kinderhook and and its Indians Native American Genealogy These beautiful graphics have been supplied by
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

8. ShadCat's Free Genealogy Listings - NATIVE AMERICAN
Native American Genealogy Native American Genealogy and History Native American Indian Resources Native American Resources Native Americans
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

9. Native American Ancestry - Indian Heritage Genealogy - American
NATIVE AMERICAN ANCESTRY AMERICAN INDIAN GENEALOGY benefits awarded by the U.S. Court of Claims, Indians and Native Americans were required to
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

10. Native American Genealogy Links
Genealogy by Lee Sultzman, First Nations Historian Massachusett's State Archives microfilm card index of Native Americans (link site added 31
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

11. People Of The Three Fires Native Genealogy
Native Americans in Michigan GenWeb Project needs your records. My name isRose Edwards and I m responsible for Native Genealogy in Michigan.
http://www.rootsweb.com/~minatam/
"People of the Three Fires": There are three major tribal groups in Michigan today: the Chippewa (Ojibwe), the Ottawa, and the Potawatomi. They comprise what is called the Three Fires Council. Although these three tribes have similar cultures and share the same territory, there are still some differences. Ottawa are found in the northern reaches of the Great Lakes; in michigan they occupy the western half of the Lower Peninsula. The Ottawa people were seasonal wanderers of the land and sailors of the Great Lakes gathering wild rice, netting fish, trapping both large and small game, and hunting large game such as moose, deer, and caribou. Ottawa people continue to be great traders and craftsmen. One hallmark of Ottawa life is the birch bark canoe. When the French came, the Ottawa people adapted well to the fur-trading economy and managed to avoid major military entanglements with the European colonial powers competing with each other for North American land and resource dominance. They did, however, fight with the Iroquois throughout the early 1600's.

12. Native American Genealogy Ancestor Cherokee Choctaw Chickasaw Creek Dawes Roll
Discusses history and genealogy of native americans in the Louisiana area.
http://www.angelfire.com/la/brantley/
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Search: Lycos Angelfire Movie Clips Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Next
NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN GENEALOGY CULTURE HERITAGE
NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN GENEALOGY HERITAGE
RED WOLF
PASKA OKALAS Amid the Murmurs of the Singing River live a tribe of contented people , the music heard in the still of evening, during late summer and autumn announce this tribe is not gone , but live on.We are here and will always be.
Welcome to Red Wolf Country. Your status is not important in this corner of America - enjoy the historical page
Choctaw, Natchez,Pascagoula ,Creek, Chickasaw, Tensa, Caddo and other Indian Tribes
SITE CONTENT:
  • You are on historical main page
    Historical Page two
    KID FRIENDLY SITE
    HELP PROTECT THEIR FUTURE
    Please sign guestbook at bottom of page. This is your Native genealogy and history page and its free. Check back as new information is added daily.I attempt to post historical information interesting to all, if you have a subject of interest please email and I will If possible retrieve it from my library and post to the web site. Email with questions or school projects
    A collection of American Indian literary and historical excerpts , observations Tales and Legends we hope an excellent source of information.
  • 13. Illinois History Resource Page
    A webliography of links to topics including the state's symbol and song, government information, genealogy, Chicago, Lincoln, native americans, the state's educational/historical/cultural institutions, and special topics. Compliled by the Assistant Director of the Illinois State Archive.
    http://alexia.lis.uiuc.edu/~sorensen/hist.html

    14. Creek Indian Researcher - Records And Links
    A collection of resources for those researching their Creek Indian ancestors, and native americans in general.
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~texlance/main.htm
    OAS_AD('Top');
    A collection of records and links for those researching their Creek - Muskogee Indian ancestors. Last updated Feb. 9, 2005. What's new or upcoming! Guestbook Contact-Email Custom background ... Search CIR
    CREEK INDIAN RECORDS @ CIR:
    [Press 'P' to make pages printer friendly]
    General:
    BIA Inventory (Oklahoma area)

    BIA Inventory (Wash., D.C. area)

    National Archives Microfilm
    - Indian Rolls
    Letters Received

    Creek Nation Tribal Records

    tribal town map

    (no date, some names clarified)
    Enrollment Records: Search the Dawes databases Creek "Enrollment Cases" Index Creek "Memorandums" Creeks "Not Entitled" Census Records: Creek Nation Census Rolls - List. 1832 Creek Nation Census - Alabama 1860 Creek Nation Census 1860 Census 1867 Census of the 1832 Creek Orphans 1870 Payroll 1883 Payroll to the 1832 Creek Orphans 1882 Creek Nation Census 1843 Creek Census - summary only. Emigration records: Emigration Records Emigration rolls and letters 1857 "Old Settlers" Roll 1870-71 "Self-Emigrant" roll 1886 Stidham Roll of "Self-Emigrants" Special File 207 Index to claims of property lost and services rendered during the Creek Emigration, 1827-38. War related records: Creek Indians who served in the "Indian Wars" A list of heirs of Creek soldiers who died during the Seminole War, 1836-7.

    15. Native Americans Of Columbia County, New York, USA
    Excerpts from genealogical and historical texts, local genealogy resources and links.
    http://www.usgennet.org/usa/ny/county/columbia/natives/index_natives.htm
    NATIVE AMERICANS OF COLUMBIA COUNTY Kinderhook and and its Indians From the book A History of Old Kinderhook By Edward A. Collier, D.D. G. P. Putnam's Sons New York and London Pages 8 to 21 The tradition of the Mahicans concerning their early history, which is essentially that of the Lenni-Lenapes, is given by Heckewelder in substance as follows: Their ancestral home was in the far West beside great waters that ebbed and flowed. Moved by the Great Spirit to seek new hunting grounds in the East, they started upon their journey. It was long and perilous and involved many bloody conflicts with hostile tribes through whose territory they must needs go. Years of privation and suffering came and went without their finding a place of rest. They came to many great waters but to none that ebbed and flowed until they reached the Hudson. These water were like those of their ancestral river. They named them Mahicanituck, the river of the Mahicans. Here the Great Spirit would have them "kindle a fire and hang a kettle whereof they and their children might dip out their daily refreshment."

    16. Native Americans Abenaki Indian Tribe (Abanaki, Abenakis, Abenaki
    genealogy information from an Abenaki descendant. native American genealogyDirection for those seeking Abenaki and other American Indian ancestors.
    http://www.native-languages.org/abenaki.htm
    Native American languages Native American tribes What's new on our site today!
    Native Languages of the Americas:
    Abenaki (Abanaki, Abenakis, Alnombak)
    Language: Abnaki, or Western Abenaki, is an Algonquian language spoken today by only a few elders in Canada. Native speakers call their language Alnombak, Aln´bak, or Aln8bak (the 8 was a Jesuit symbol for a nasalized, unrounded 'o'.) Penobscot or Eastern Abenaki, a dialect mutually comprehensible with Western Abenaki, was once spoken in Maine. Sadly, the last fully fluent speaker of Penobscot Abenaki has passed on, but several elders know something of the language and are working to revive the language in the Penobscot Nation today.
    People: The Abenaki tribe, together with the Maliseet Passamaquoddy Mi'kmaq , and Penobscot Indians , were members of the old Wabanaki Confederacy , adversaries of the Iroquois . These allies from the eastern seaboard spoke related languages, and Abenaki and Wabanaki have the same Algonquian root, meaning "people from the east." (The original Abenaki name for their specific tribe is Alnombak , "the people.") Today there are 2000 Abenaki Indians living on two reserves in Quebec, where they fled from British aggression in the 1600's, and another 10,000 descendants scattered throughout New England. The Abenaki tribe is only officially recognized in Canada, and only the Canadian population still speaks their ancestral language.

    17. Native American Genealogy
    native American Documents Project native American genealogy native Americangenealogy Group on America On Line native americans How to Guide
    http://members.amaonline.com/nrogers/native.htm
    Native American Genealogy This page is a collection of Native American resources Kathy wanted to start looking for her Indian ancestors but didn't know where to begin. I hope these links will help her and others in getting started on tracing their family history. Daily Horoscope Genealogy Treasure Chest Nancy's Kitchen Bisquick Recipes ... Brand Name Recipe s Abenaki Tribal Information American Indians: A Select Catalog of National Archives Microfilm Publications Assembly of First Nations Caddo Tribes of Oklahoma ... Brand Name Recipe s Email Me Siggy's Place has been online since November 29, 1996

    18. South Dakota Native American Genealogy
    native American genealogy Not strictly native American, but a significantnumber of records are about native americans! Pine Ridge Reservation
    http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Plains/8430/
    Native American Genealogy
    "A people without history is like wind on the buffalo grass" Lakota (Teton) saying
    About the Native Americans in SD in progress!
    Genealogy finding aids:

    19. Comanche Lodge - Native American Indian History Of The Comanche Indians, Quanah
    Comanche Lodge, native americans, Comanche Indians, Quanah Parker, American IndianNation Newsletter includes American Indian Issues, genealogy,
    http://www.comanchelodge.com/
    Maruawe! Welcome To
    Numuukahni Comanche Lodge
    This site is dedicated to the Comanche Indians.
    WWW. COMANCHELODGE .COM
    View Marketing Advertising Portfolio "We are all chiefs here"...Tochoway
    The "Lords of the Plains," as the Comanches became known, are Native American Indians that were originally part of the Shoshone tribe of eastern Wyoming. The Pueblo Rebellion (1680) forced the Spanish to abandon their settlements in New Mexico and gave the Comanche Tribe their first horses. Their riding skills quickly became legendary and changed their lives radically as buffalo became easy prey. They epitomized the mounted plains warrior and had no equal. As moving targets the Comanche were difficult to hit and could fire a flurry of arrows towards an enemy while hanging under the neck of a galloping horse. They rapidly developed the light cavalry tactics that became associated with plains warfare.
    Comanche Divisions:
    Hois (timber people), Jupe (or Hupene, Yupini), Kotsoteka (or Caschotethka, Koocheteka, Kotsai) (buffalo eaters), Kwahada (or Kwahadi, Kwahari, Kwaharior, Quahada) (antelopes), Parkeenaum (water people), Nokoni (or Detsanyuka, Naconee, Nakoni, Nawkoni, Nocony) (people who return), Pehnahterkuh (wasps), Penateka (or Penande, Penetethka) (honey eaters), Tahneemuh (or Dehaui, Tanima, Tevawish, Yanimna) (liver eaters), Tenawa (or Tahnahwah, Tenahwit) (those who stay downstream), Widyunuu (or Widyu Yapa) (awl people), and Yamparika (or Yamparack, Yapparethka) (root eaters).

    20. Native Americans - Genealogy - American Indian Records
    Index of native American genealogy Resources on the InternetUse the native American genealogy - There are many unique problems encountered when
    http://www.nativeamericans.com/Genealogy.htm
    Genealogy
    American Indian Records on Microfilm - A Select Catalog of NARA Microfilm
    Publications. http://www.nara.gov/publications/microfilm/amerindians/
    Ancestry.com - the largest collection of family history data online. We add
    new databases and reference materials to our library every day to provide
    the web's fastest, simplest and most complete resource for family history
    research.
    http://www.ancestry.com/

    Bureau of Indian Affairs: Establishing American Indian Ancestry - How do I
    begin the search for my ancestors? Where do I look for information?
    services provided? Contacting a Tribal Entity. http://www.doi.gov/bia/ancestry/ancestry.html Cherokee Messenger - So Your Grandmother Was a Cherokee Princess? - More and more frequently, more and more people are discovering their Cherokee ancestry. The first step is tracing your lineage. I have compiled information here to help you get started. You will need access to a genealogy library. Some church libraries also have these records. I hope you find this information useful.

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