The Blackfoot Tribe of the MidsouthPosted in Anthropology, History, Identity Development/Psychology, Media Archive, Native Americans/First Nation, Papers/Presentations, United States on 2011-06-30 02:33Z by Steven |
The Blackfoot Tribe of the Midsouth
American Society of Ethnohistory Conference
“Blackfoot, Redbones, Brass Ankles and Pied Noir: Colorful Identities, Creative Strategies American Society of Ethnohistory conference”
Santa Fe, New Mexico
2005-11-18 through 2005-11-20
2005-11-19
Carol A. Morrow, Professor of Anthropology
Southeast Missouri State University
Over the years, I have had a number of African-American students identify themselves as having Native American heritage. Occasionally they claim descent from the ‘Blackfoot tribe’, but they always have a southern heritage. Most students don’t know much more than just the term, Blackfoot, but one student explained that Blackfoot meant a blend of African and Cherokee heritage. Given our location on the Trail of Tears, Cherokee heritage is common; the Blackfoot tribe is something else entirely. This paper reviews the use of the Blackfoot term throughout the Midsouth.
Over the years, I have had a number of students in my North American Indians classes who have self-identified as Blackfoot, or Cherokee and Blackfoot, or in one case, Choctaw and Blackfoot. I would always ask them if they had ties or relatives in Montana, and with one exception, they all said NO. The one exception is the blond blue-eyed young man, who in fact, did have relatives in Montana.
I teach at Southeast Missouri State, which is in Cape Girardeau and the Cherokee Trail of tears passed through our community in 1838-1839. Additionally, there was a large community of Cherokee Indians that lived to the sound of our area in Arkansas territory, and many pushed north into Missouri when they were moved in 1828 West into Indian territory (these were the Old Settlers). So we have always had a number of people in the area of Cherokee ancestry. But Blackfoot Indian is another story entirely. Finally, I realized that the Blackfoot students were African-American. My African-American students almost always had Indian blood, but it took me a while to figure out that they were the only ones that claimed Blackfoot blood…
Read the entire paper here.