The Lumbee, also known as People of the Dark Water, are a mixed-race Indigenous peoples of the Americas who comprise the federally recognized Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina. Primarily located in Robeson County, North Carolina, the Lumbee claim to be descended from numerous Indigenous peoples of the Southeastern Woodlands who once inhabited the region and have been shown to have connections with other tri-racial isolate groups, such as the and Louisiana Redbones.
The Lumbee take their name from the Lumber River, which winds through Robeson County. Pembroke, North Carolina, in Robeson County, is their economic, cultural, and political center. According to the 2000 United States census report, 89% of the population of the town of Pembroke identified as Lumbee; 40% of Robeson County's population identified as Lumbee. The Lumbee Tribe was recognized by North Carolina in 1885. In 1956, the U.S. Congress passed the Lumbee Act, which recognized the Lumbees as being American Indians but denied them the benefits of a federally recognized tribe.
In 2025, President Donald Trump signed an executive order to advance the tribe's recognition. On December 18, 2025, he signed the Lumbee Fairness Act into law, making them a federally recognized tribe.
A 1772 proclamation by the governor of North Carolina, Arthur Dobbs — derived from a report by his agent, Colonel Griffith Rutherford, head of a Bladen County militia — listed the names of inhabitants who took part in a "Mob Raitously Assembled together," composed of "Free black and Mullatus" apparently defying the efforts of colonial officials to collect taxes. The proclamation declared the "Above list of Rogus is all living upon the Kings Land without title." The Chavis, Grooms, Ivey, Kersey, Locklear, and Sweat families were all included on this list. A later colonial military survey described "50 families a mixt crew, a lawless People possess the Lands without Patent or paying quit Rents." Geneaologist Paul Heinegg claims this proclamation is referring to the first free Black people in what was then Bladen County.
Hamilton McMillan wrote that Lumbee ancestor James Lowrie had received sizable land grants early in the century, and, by 1738, possessed combined estates of more than 2,000 acres (810 ha). Adolph Dial and David Eliades claimed that another Lumbee ancestor, John Brooks, held the title to over 1,000 acres (400 ha) in 1735 and that Robert Lowrie gained possession of almost 700 acres (280 ha).
A state archivist noted in the late 20th century that no land grants were issued during these years in North Carolina. The first documented land grants made to individuals claimed to be Lumbee ancestors did not take place until the 1750s, more than a decade later. None of the various petitions for federal recognition by the Lumbee people relied on the McMillan, Dial, or Eliades claims.
Land records show that in the second half of the 18th century, persons since identified as ancestral Lumbees began to take titles to land near Drowning Creek (Lumber River) and prominent swamps such as Ashpole, Long, and Back. One example is William Driggers, who improved land on a swamp east of Drowning Creek. He was of the Driggers family, stated by Lumbee historians to be one of the founding Lumbee families in Drowning Creek. According to James Campisi, an anthropologist retained by the Lumbee tribe to aid their petition for federal recognition, the area "is located in the heart of the so-called old field of the Cheraw documented in land records between 1737 and 1739." In 1771 William's brother, a Black outlaw by the name of Winslow Driggers, was reported in the South Carolina Gazette as captured by "Settlers near the Cheraws" and hanged under the Negro Act for cow theft, after his gang had "committed all Manner of Depredations upon the industrious settled Inhabitants". On the same page, the horses he stole were shown to be available to their previous owners in Charaws, South Carolina, where a heavy Regulator presence existed. This could possibly suggest the settlement of Free blacks in the area descended from the former African slaves Emanuel Driggus, who were the great-grandparents of William and Winslow according to geneaological analysis.
Pension records for veterans of the American Revolutionary War in Robeson County listed men with surnames later associated with Lumbee families, such as Samuel Bell, Jacob Locklear, John Brooks, Berry Hunt, Thomas Jacobs, Thomas Cummings, and Michael Revels. In 1790, other men with surnames since associated with Lumbee-identified descendants, such as Barnes, Braveboy (or Brayboy), Bullard, Chavers (Chavis), Cumbo, Hammonds, Lowrie (Lowry/Lowery), Oxendine, Strickland, and Wilkins, were listed as inhabitants of the Fayetteville District; they were all "Free Persons of Color" in the first federal census.U.S. Bureau of the Census, 1790 Some of these surnames, such as Chavis and Cumbo, are known to be shared in common with Melungeons. Author Tim Hashaw notes that Cannon Cumbo, who is claimed as a core Lumbee progenitor, was directly descended from Manuel Cumbo/Cambow, an African free Black man from Virginia. He notes he was initially recognized as white in Bladen County, but as a free person of color in Robeson, and was sometimes regarded as Portuguese by his neighbors. He married Tabitha Newsom, who was related to one of the leaders of Nat Turner's Rebellion
In 1853, the North Carolina Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the state's restrictions to prevent free people of color from bearing arms without a license. Noel Locklear, identified as a free man of color in State v. Locklear, was convicted of being in illegal possession of firearms. In 1857, William Chavers from Robeson County was arrested and charged as a "free person of color" for carrying a shotgun without a license. His counsel argued that he was a white man due to being five generations removed from his black ancestor, but Chavers was ruled to be a "free Negro" and like Locklear, was convicted. Chavers promptly appealed, his lawyer arguing that there was no evidence Chavers was a "free Negro", and that the judge had misled the jury on what defines a "free Negro". The court noted the definition of "free person of color" was poorly defined and reversed the previous decision, finding that "The indictment then, in the present case, may embrace a person who is not a free Negro within the meaning of the act, and for that reason it cannot be sustained."
Despite the widespread sympathies among the Indian community for the plight of the participants in this guerilla warfare, nearly 150 Lumbee ancestors voluntarily enlisted in the Confederate Infantry, including the nephew-in-law of Henry Berry Lowry described below.
The Lowrie gang, as it became known, resorted to crime and conducting personal feuds, committing robberies and murders against white Robeson County residents and skirmishing with the Confederate Home Guard. They grew bolder as the war turned against the Confederacy. In December 1864, the Lowrie gang killed James P. Barnes after he had drafted workers, including the Lowries, for work on local defenses. Barnes had earlier accused Henry's father, Allen Lowrie, of stealing hogs. Next, the gang killed James Brantley Harris, a Confederate conscription officer who had killed a Lowrie relative.
After the Civil War, the Lowrie gang continued their insurgency, committing robberies and murders. The authorities' raids and attempts to capture gang members became known as the Lowry War. Lowrie's gang continued its activities into the Reconstruction Era. Republican governor William Woods Holden declared Lowrie and his men outlaws in 1869, and offered a $12,000 reward for their capture: dead or alive. Lowrie responded with more revenge killings. Eluding capture, the Lowrie gang persisted after Reconstruction ended and conservative white Democrats gained control of North Carolina government, imposing segregation and white supremacy.
In February 1872, shortly after a raid in which he robbed the local sheriff's safe of more than $28,000, Henry Berry Lowrie disappeared. It is claimed he accidentally shot himself while cleaning his double-barrel shotgun. As with many folk heroes, the death of Lowrie was disputed. He was reportedly seen at a funeral several years later.
In the 1880s, as the Democratic Party was struggling against the biracial Populist movement which combined the strength of poor whites (Populist and Democrats) and blacks (mostly Republicans), Democratic state representative Hamilton McMillan proposed to have the state recognize the "mulatto" people of Robeson County as the "Croatan Indians" and to create a separate system of Croatan Indian schools, and won legislation, shifting their legal status away from "mulatto". Mcmillan noted they had previously called themselves "Melungeans", and that some still did. By the end of the 19th century, the "Indians of Robeson County" (as they then identified) established schools in eleven of their principal settlements. They created a committee for each school to "verify that all pupils in these schools were Indians" to prevent "non-Indians" from attending them.
In 1888, the children of a local Black man, Nathan Mcmillan, and his wife were not allowed to enroll their children in the Croatan schools. They were denied even though his wife was the sister of one of the committee members, Preston Locklear, who was himself a "Croatan Indian". Mcmillan sued, arguing in court that his wife was "Croatan", and thus so were his children. One member of the defence admitted the "Croatans" used to be referred to as "Mulattos", but the court declined from considering this testimony. The court ruled that his children were "Negros" and thus could not attend, regardless of their "Croatan" parentage, stating
Meaning that someone with any "Negro" ancestor "to the fourth generation" would necessarily not be Croatan. This judgement mirrored State v. Chavers, where a person could not have a "Negro" ancestor within four generations to be classed as a Free person of color.
By the first decade of the 20th century, a North Carolina Representative introduced a federal bill to establish "a normal school for the Indians of Robeson County, North Carolina," to be paid for by the federal government. Charles F. Pierce, U.S. Supervisor of Indian Schools in the Bureau of Indian Affairs, opposed the legislation since, "at the present time it is the avowed policy of the government to require states having an Indian population to assume the burden and responsibility for their education, so far as is possible."Jefferson, NC: McFarland (1994), pages 179-186
From 1913 to 1932, North Carolina legislators introduced bills in Congress to change the name of the people to Cherokee and gain federal recognition, but did not succeed.
In 1915, the report of Special Indian Agent O.M. McPherson of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, was sent to the North Carolina legislature. He primarily reported on the Cherokee in the state. He noted that the Indians of Robeson County had developed an extensive system of schools and a political organization. He thought that, as state-recognized Indians, they were eligible to attend federal Indian schools. But, as they were highly assimilated, spoke English, and already worked in the common state culture, he doubted that the federal Indian schools could meet their needs. Congress did not provide any additional funding to support education for Indians in North Carolina.McPherson
In 1924, the Cherokee Indians of North Carolina petitioned for federal recognition as "Siouan Indians"; their request was rejected by the Bureau of Indian Affairs. That same year, representative Homer L. Lyon introduced legislation to federally recognize the Lumbee as the "Cherokee Indians of Robeson and Adjoining Counties," but the bill failed after opposition from Commissioner of Indian Affairs Charles H. Burke. In 1932, senator Josiah W. Bailey introduced a bill to recognize the Lumbee as Cherokee, but it failed after opposition from the Cherokee Nation and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians.
On April 28, 1914, the Senate called for an investigation into the status and conditions of the Indians of Robeson and adjoining counties. The Indian Office sent Special Indian Agent O.M. McPherson to the county to obtain information regarding the educational system of the tribe. In his report, submitted to the Senate on January 4, 1915, he wrote:
Anthropologist John R. Swanton reported on possible origins of the Indians of Robeson County in his work on Southeast Indians. He wrote:
In 1935, Indian Agent Fred Baker was sent to Robeson County in response to a proposed resettlement project for the Cherokee Indians of Robeson County. At the time, the people were attempting to organize as a tribe under the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934, which largely applied to Indians on reservations to encourage their self-government.
Baker reported:
D'Arcy McNickle, from the Bureau of Indian Affairs, came to Robeson County in 1936 to collect affidavits and other data from people registering as Indian under the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934. McNickle stated, "there are reasons for believing that until comparatively recently some remnant of language still persisted among these people."
In the 1960s, Smithsonian ethnologists William Sturtevant and Samuel Stanley described the Lumbee as "larger than any other Indian group in the United States except the Navajo", and estimated their population as 31,380 Lumbee (from North and South Carolina) in 1960.
At this time, the Indians of Robeson County renewed their petition for federal recognition as a tribe. The Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) sent John R. Swanton, an anthropologist from the Bureau of American Ethnology, and the Indian Agent Fred Baker to evaluate the claim of the Indians of Robeson County to historical continuity as an identified Indian community. In 1934, the future Lumbee revived their claim to Cherokee identity, joining the National Congress of American Indians under the name, "Cherokee Indians of Robeson County."
Swanton speculated that the group were more likely descended in part from Cheraw and other eastern Siouan tribes, as these were the predominant Native American peoples historically in that area. The Indians of Robeson County split in terms of how they identified as Native Americans: one group supported the Cheraw theory of ancestry. The other faction believed they were descended from the Cherokee, although the tribe had historically occupied territory in the mountains and western part of the state rather than the area of Robeson County. North Carolina's politicians abandoned support for the federal recognition effort until the tribal factions agreed on their identity.
In 1952, under the leadership of D.F. Lowrie, the tribe voted to adopt the name "Lumbee". The North Carolina legislature recognized the tribe's name change to the "Lumbee Indians of North Carolina" in 1953. The tribe petitioned again for federal recognition.
It provided further, "Nothing in this Act shall make such Indians eligible for any services performed by the United States for Indians because of their status as Indians.'" It also forbids a government-to-government relationship between the federal government and the Lumbee as well as forbidding them from applying through the BARS, the Bureau of Indian Affairs administrative process to gain recognition. This restriction as to eligibility for services was a condition which tribal representatives agreed to at the time in order to achieve status as a recognized tribe and have the Lumbee name recognized. The Lumbee had essentially assimilated into early colonial life prior to the formation of the United States. They lived as individuals, as did any other colonial and U.S. citizens. Lumbee spokesmen repeatedly testified at these hearings that they were not seeking federal financial benefits; they said they only wanted a name designation as Lumbee people.
The "Battle of Hayes Pond", also known as "the Klan Rout", made national news. Cole had predicted more than 5,000 Klansmen would show up for the rally, but fewer than 100 and possibly as few as three dozen attended. Approximately 500 Lumbee, armed with guns and sticks, gathered in a nearby swamp, and when they realized they possessed an overwhelming numerical advantage, attacked the Klansmen. The Lumbee encircled the Klansmen, opening fire and wounding four Klansmen in the first volley, none seriously. The remaining Klansmen panicked and fled. Cole was found in the swamps, arrested and tried for inciting a riot. The Lumbee celebrated the victory by burning Klan regalia and dancing around the open flames.
The Battle of Hayes Pond, which marked the end of Klan activity in Robeson County, is celebrated as a Lumbee holiday.
The Lumbee resumed lobbying Congress, testifying in 1988, 1989, 1991 and 1993 in efforts to gain full federal recognition by congressional action. All of these attempts failed in the face of opposition by the Department of Interior, the recognized Cherokee tribes (including North Carolina's Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians), some of the North Carolina Congressional delegation, and some representatives from other states with federally recognized tribes. Some of the North Carolina delegation separately recommended an amendment to the 1956 Act that would enable the Lumbee to apply to the Department of Interior under the regular administrative process for recognition. In 2004 and 2006 the tribe made renewed bids for full recognition, to include financial benefits.
In 2007, US Senator Elizabeth Dole from North Carolina introduced the Lumbee Recognition Bill. It was not enacted. Lumbee Tribal Chairman Jimmy Goins appeared before the United States Senate Committee on Indian Affairs in September 2007 to lobby for federal recognition of the tribe.
In January 2009, US Representative Mike McIntyre introduced legislation (H.R. 31) to grant the Lumbee full federal recognition. The bill gained support of more than 180 co-sponsors, including both North Carolina US Senators, Richard Burr and Kay Hagan. In June 2009, the United States House of Representatives voted 240 to 179 for federal recognition for the Lumbee tribe, acknowledging that they are descendants of the historic Cheraw tribe. The bill went to the United States Senate. In October 2009, the United States Senate Committee on Indian Affairs approved a bill for federal recognition of the Lumbee that also included a no-gaming clause. The Senate adjourned for 2010 without taking action on the bill.
In 2021, Senator Brian Schatz of Hawaii sought a hearing on Lumbee federal recognition. In April 2021, US Representative G. K. Butterfield introduced legislation to grant the Lumbee full federal recognition (H.R. 2758). The bill passed the House of Representatives in November 2021. The Senate never acted. Another attempt at federal recognition passed the House but not the Senate. On December 17, 2024 Bruce Westerman of Arkansas introduced a bill sponsored by David Rouzer of Wilmington, North Carolina. The House approved 311-96, but the Senate would not be able to take action if Congress adjourned as planned.
Historically most of Robeson County had trended Democratic, voting for Barack Obama by an 18 point margin in 2012. However, Donald Trump carried the county narrowly in 2016, winning by a 5 point margin over Hillary Clinton. In 2020, his margin of victory increased dramatically to an 18 point victory over Biden. Many attribute this swing in Trump's favor to his visit and explicit support for recognition of the tribe by the federal government.
Senator Lisa Murkowski questioned Hicks on why Congress should not be the channel the Lumbee should take, to which Hicks responded that the Lumbee case required expertise due to "clear gaps" in their history which Congress would not possess the ability to resolve. No action was taken as a result of the hearing.
MacMillan's theory may have been part of a cynical effort to woo Lumbee voters to the Democratic Party by creating a segregated Indian school system separate from the school system for African Americans.
By the early 1900s, Robeson County whites used "Cro" as a racial epithet to describe their "Indian" neighbors. The Lost Colony theory of origins fell out of favor in the early twentieth century. "Croatan" was dropped from their name and they became known as the "Indians of Robeson County" in 1911.
Lumbee historian Adolph Dial continued to advocate for the lost colony theory until his death in the 1990s. Lumbee historian Malinda Maynor Lowery "is highly skeptical" of the theory.
In his unpublished 1934 master's thesis, graduate student Clifton Oxendine theorized that the Lumbee descended from Cherokee. Citing "oral traditions," Oxendine suggested that the Lumbee were the descendants of Cherokee warriors who fought with the British under Colonel John Barnwell of South Carolina in the Tuscarora campaign of 1711–1713. He claimed the Cherokee settled in the swamps of Robeson County when the campaign ended.Oxendine, p. 4
The Oxendine theory of Cherokee origin has been uniformly rejected by mainstream scholars. First, no Cherokee warriors are listed in the record of Barnwell's company. The Lumbee do not speak Cherokee or any other Native American language, and Oxendine's claims of oral traditions are completely unsubstantiated; no such oral traditions survive or are documented by any other scholar.
The Lumbee have abandoned this theory in their documentation supporting their effort to obtain federal tribal recognition. The federally recognized Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians categorically rejects any connection to the Lumbee, dismissing the Oxendine claims as "absurd" and disputing even that the Lumbee qualify as Native American.
The 1915 McPherson Report said in reference to the Cheraw (quoting the Handbook of American Indians, 1906):
The Catawba people are a federally recognized tribe. The McPherson Report does not explain how or when the remaining four or five dozen Cheraw identified in 1768 separated from the Catawba and became the ancestors of the Lumbee.
Swanton traced the migration of Southeast tribes. In addition to the Keyauwee, Cheraw, Bear River, Waccamaw, and Woccon already mentioned, he noted that the Eno people and Waxhaw people migrated from Piedmont South Carolina northeast to the north-central part of North Carolina, then back south again to a point on the Pee Dee River just south of the border of the two Carolinas.
After repeated rejections under the Croatan, Cherokee and Cheraw labels, the proto Lumbee petitioned the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs in 1924 for recognition as "Siouan" Indians. This refers to groups speaking Siouan languages, not the Sioux, an Indigenous people of the Great Plains. This petition was rejected largely on the grounds that Siouan-Catawban is a language family, not a tribe. Moreover, there was no record of the Lumbee or their ancestors having ever spoken a Siouan-Catawban or any other Native American language.
Lumbee historian Malinda Mayor Lowery, as well as the Lumbee tribe of North Carolina propose that the Lumbee people were most likely descended from the members of several other tribes who settled in the swamplands around Robeson County. Lowery argues that Cheraw, Saponi, Hatteras Indians, Tuscarora people and Cape Fear Indians settled in the area during the 18th and 19th centuries and adopted English as a lingua franca.
Historian Karen Blu mentions Swanton's thesis that remnant Indians from the once distinct tribal communities of the Cheraw, Keyauwee, Hatteras, Waxhaw, Sugaree, Eno and Shakori gathered together, and over time in a process of ethnogenesis, identified as a common people - but that this assumption is speculative, and based on the documentation of which tribes had lived in the area before. She states that there are no firm links between the groups mentioned and the Lumbee.
According to genealogical analysis, over 80% of "other free persons" in North Carolina during the census of 1790-1810 were of free Black immigrants from communities in Virginia. By 1790, while free Black people were only 1.7% of North Carolina, they had become 5% of Northampton, Halifax, Bertie, Craven, Granville, Hertford, and Robeson Counties. Some families, such as the Bunch, Chavis, Gibson, and Gowen families, owned large amounts of slaves and land.
Opinions in Robeson County began to shift on the free Negro population, with one paper posting that "The County of Robeson is cursed with a free-coloured population that migrated originally from the districts round about the Roanoke River and Neuse River Rivers. They are generally indolent, roguish, improvident, and dissipated." According to genealogist Paul Heinegg, these aforementioned free Black settlers had migrated to historic Bladen County, which later split into a smaller Bladen County, and modern Robeson County. He states many families listed as "other free" in the census of 1790-1810 in Robeson are genealogically traceable back to families previously listed as "Negro" and "Mulatto" in Virginia and North Carolina, following the trend of other counties. These families include the Branch, Braveboy, Brooks, Carter, Chavis, Cumbo, Dunn, Evans, Gowen, Hammond, Hogg, Hunt, Jacobs, James, Johnston, Kersey, Locklear, Manuel, Newsom, Oxendine, Revell, Roberts, Sweat and Wilkins families.
In 1875 Mary C. Norment, a resident of Robeson wrote that the mixed-race population of Robeson County consisted of "free Negros or Mulattos" who had "married and intermixed with each other so often that the distinctive features of one was representative of all", which informed her belief that Robeson County was one of the largest free Black settlements in North Carolina. Free Black people in Robeson initially went to school, voted, and to church with the white population, until the Free Negro Codes of 1826-1850 in North Carolina curtailed their rights. In 1885, Hamilton McMillan helped them pass a law to have their own schools, as "Indians" rather than "free Negros". A parallel grant occurred in Person County where "old issue negros" (free Black people freed before the Civil War) were granted their own school, under the successive names "Mongolian", "Cuban", and finally "the Indian Race". This allowed them to maintain a school apart from the recent descendants of slaves. Legal scholar Daniel Sharfstein notes that "Native American identity came to represent a bridge to freedom and to whiteness, with the result that many people of African descent deliberately became Indians." Heinegg states that via genealogical analysis, the families seeking their own "Indian" schools in Robeson County were formerly labelled as free African American populations before the Free Negro Codes took effect.
Several tribes from the Western United States also promulgate the belief that the Lumbee are a mixed, mostly African-descent group. Some Lumbee report that they do not show any Native American ancestry on commercial genealogical DNA tests, with it being reported that according to this testing many families in Robeson County have no Native ancestry at all. Sharfstein states that widespread claims of Native American lineage in African-Americans are uncorroborated by admixture studies, also noting that the very large amount of white people who claim Native ancestry could plausibly suggest an entirely different ancestry. Historian Malinda Maynor Lowery, a member of the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina, criticized the usefulness of such tests, stating that the testing companies lack base samples of the Lumbee's Indigenous ancestors' DNA with which the results can be compared. Some Lumbee report that the doubts about their status have caused emotional and psychological harm in their community.
Lumbee ancestors encountered English-speaking European settlers and adopted their language much earlier than other Native American groups. Unlike neighboring groups, Lumbee spoke English at the time of contact, and they have showed no evidence of a language tradition other than English. The Lumbee Act of 1956 specifically mentioned the dialect as a defining attribute of the people. English settlers were surprised at the presence of a large civilized, slave-owning, English-speaking tribe of Indians. The Lumbees' lack of a Native American language led to extra difficulty in gaining federal recognition.
Lumbee dialectal English descends from the English spoken by the British English, Highland Scots, and Scots-Irish. Probably due to this heritage, it shares similarities with the High Tider accent found in the Outer Banks, namely in use of the sound where other English speakers use , the use of the word ('to mess up'), and the grammatical use of weren't (e.g. "she weren't here"). Lumbee dialect also makes use of several unique words and phrases: chauld ('embarrassed'); on the swamp ('in the neighborhood'); (sling shot); and bog (a serving of chicken and rice). Grammatically, Lumbee dialect employs the word bes as a verb form (e.g. "it bes really crowded"). There is a variation in the use of these elements among Lumbee people; some frequently use most of the vernacular's unique characteristics, while others use few of them but easily understand their meaning. The vernacular has also evolved over time, with older speakers frequently using the sound and a-prefixing verbs, while the grammatical use of weren't has been retained and strengthened in use among younger speakers.
In 1993, Hayes Alan Locklear designed a dress, which was sewn by Kat Littleturtle for Miss Lumbee Natascha Wagoner, who was chosen as the 8th Miss Indian USA. The dress featured a pinecone patchwork pattern inspired by Maggie Lowry Locklear's quilt. Since then, Lumbee women have adopted this pinecone patchwork dress style as the signature Lumbee dress.
A study has documented Lumbee Methodism back to 1787. Lumbees created two church conferences of Indian congregations — the Burnt Swamp Baptists Association, founded around 1880, and the Lumbee River Conference of the Holiness Methodist Association in 1900. In 1984 Bruce Barton documented 104 Lumbee churches. Prospect Community Church, with 1,008 members in 2017, has purportedly the largest congregation of Native Americans in the United States.
According to its constitution, adopted in 2000, the Lumbee tribal government is organized into three branches: the tribal chairperson (executive), the 21-member Tribal Council (legislative), and Supreme Court (judicial). The tribal chairperson and the Tribal Council are elected to three-year terms.
The current administration includes:
History
18th century
Antebellum
Civil War
Lowry War
State recognition as "Croatan Indians"
Separate Indian school system
Early efforts to gain federal recognition
Federally commissioned reports
"While these Indians are essentially an agricultural people, I believe them to be as capable of learning the mechanical trades as the average white youth. The foregoing facts suggest the character of the educational institution that should be established for them, in case Congress sees fit to make the necessary appropriation, namely the establishment of an agricultural and mechanical school, in which domestic science shall also be taught."
"The evidence available thus seems to indicate that the Indians of Robeson County who have been called Croatan and Cherokee are descended mainly from certain Siouan tribes of which the most prominent were the Cheraw and Keyauwee, but they probably included as well remnants of the Eno, and Shakori, and very likely some of the coastal groups such as the Waccamaw and Cape Fears. It is not improbable that a few families or small groups of Algonquian or Iroquoian may have cast their lot with this body of people, but contributions from such sources are relatively insignificant. Although there is some reason to think that the Keyauwee tribe actually contributed more blood to the Robeson County Indians than any other, the name is not widely known, whereas that of the Cheraw has been familiar to historians, geographers and ethnologists in one form or another since the time of De Soto and has a firm position in the cartography of the region. The Cheraws, too, seem to have taken a leading part in opposing the colonists during and immediately after the Yamasee uprising. Therefore, if the name of any tribe is to be used in connection with this body of six or eight thousand people, that of the Cheraw would, in my opinion, be most appropriate."
I find that the sense of racial solidarity is growing stronger and that the members of this tribe are cooperating more and more with each other with the object in view of promoting the mutual benefit of all the members. It is clear to my mind that sooner of later government action will have to be taken in the name of justice and humanity to aid them.
Indian New Deal
Lumbee Act
Ku Klux Klan conflict
Petitioning for full federal recognition
2020 presidential election
Recognition process
Senate hearing on the Lumbee Fairness Act
NDAA bill and Federal recognition
Theories of origins
Native American descent
Lost Colony of Roanoke
Cherokee descent
Cheraw descent
Their numbers in 1715, according to Rivers, was 510, but this estimate probably included the Keyauwee. Being still subject to attack by the Iroquois, they finally—between 1726 and 1739—became incorporated with the Catawba people ... They are mentioned as with the Catawba but speaking their own distinct dialect as late as 1743 (Adair). The last notice of them in 1768, when their remnant, reduced by war and disease to 50 or 60, were still living with the Catawba. Handbook of American Indians (1906)
Descent from multiple tribes
Free Black descent
Authenticity and doubts of origins
Culture and traditions
Surnames
Language
Lumbee Homecoming
Communities
Lumbee patchwork
Cuisine
Religion
Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina
Unrecognized organizations
See also
Notes
Works cited
Books
Journal articles
Primary sources
Further reading
External links
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