Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: a response from a Wampanoag about the Brown/Warren Indian ancestry controversy [View all]SDjack
(1,448 posts)26. My grandfather Durham told me that his grandfather
joined the Cherokee expulsion ("Trail of Tears"
as a missionary in Georgia. He made the journey to Oklahoma and lived the rest of life with the Cherokees. I was told that I have Cherokee heritage, but got no details. This year, I met another Durham (in GA) who has a similar oral history. Neither of us can find any family records, and we agree that Andrew Jackson was an evil SOB.
Edit history
Please sign in to view edit histories.
Recommendations
0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):
67 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
RecommendedHighlight replies with 5 or more recommendations
a response from a Wampanoag about the Brown/Warren Indian ancestry controversy [View all]
flyingfysh
Sep 2012
OP
I've found very little about my grandfather and nothing about my great-grandfather
William Seger
Sep 2012
#7
I've been researching my great-grandfather in the Oklahoma Dawes Roll records
flyingfysh
Sep 2012
#11
Including me. I believe her. And whether I do or not makes no difference. She knows her heart.
nolabear
Sep 2012
#2
Agree. And I have a similar story to hers--I have a letter from my late grandmother
spooky3
Sep 2012
#4
Mine's quite well documented but you know how people are. They believe what they want or need to.
nolabear
Sep 2012
#13
Including my son, who is 1/16 Comanchee, but I'll never be able to prove it. His grandmother
1monster
Sep 2012
#20
Common, but not universal, in NA & Asian populations. Rare, but not non-existent, in others.
HiPointDem
Oct 2012
#38
Probably because the Swedes have some Sami (Mongolian) heritage. Same for some Norwegians
diane in sf
Oct 2012
#43
Hmm I have shovel-teeth. I'm pretty much as white as you can get, but according to my father
Erose999
Oct 2012
#49
I've got two full NA in my ancestry and show it. She doesn't. But fuck the detractors.
HopeHoops
Sep 2012
#9
no idea how you even go about proving stuff like this, all i know for sure is i have no NA blood
loli phabay
Sep 2012
#18
Brown is inferring strongly that American Indians have an advantage over white men like him
lunatica
Sep 2012
#21
Another reason so many people have "Cherokee princesses" in their background is it was a little more
Brickbat
Sep 2012
#30
Do you think Brown thinks Warren should look like the Indian women in the movies?
Thinkingabout
Sep 2012
#35
without knowing anything about this, but di NA keep records of stuff you can look at or is a lot of
loli phabay
Oct 2012
#40
Sometimes you can find people in US census records when they bothered to count NAs, but the names
kestrel91316
Oct 2012
#44
re:a response from a Wampanoag about the Brown/Warren Indian ancestry controversy
allan01
Oct 2012
#51
Almost everyone I know is part Native. How does Brown think this will help him?
McCamy Taylor
Oct 2012
#55