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An Ancestry of African-Native Americans

Using government documents, author Angela Walton-Raji traced her ancestors to the slaves owned by American Indians

  • By Katy June-Friesen
  • Smithsonian.com, February 17, 2010, Subscribe
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Comanche Family Researcher Angela Walton-Raji has been studying African-Native genealogy for over 20 years. The Comanche family pictured here is from the early 1900s.

Courtesy Sam DeVenney

 
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    Indivisible: African-Native American Lives in the Americas

    Angela Walton-Raji has been researching African-Native American genealogy for nearly 20 years and is the author of the book Black Indian Genealogy Research: African-American Ancestors Among the Five Civilized Tribes. She recently presented a series of genealogy workshops at the National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, D.C., in conjunction with the exhibit IndiVisible: African-Native American Lives in the Americas. Walton-Raji’s ancestors are Freedmen, African-Americans who were slaves of the Five Civilized Tribes – the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek and Seminole Nations – in Indian Territory, which became Oklahoma in 1907. The Cherokee freed their slaves in 1863, and after the Civil War, the other tribes did the same. All but the Chickasaw eventually granted Freedmen full citizenship in their tribe. In preparation for Oklahoma statehood, the U.S. Congress created the Dawes Commission, which was charged with dissolving collective tribal land ownership and allotting land to individual tribal members. Thousands of Freedmen came before the commission to prove their tribal membership and their right to a share of land. I spoke with Walton-Raji about her research.

    What spurred you to start researching African-Native American history and genealogy?

    I was inspired to begin the research because it’s part of my family history. I’m originally from western Arkansas and eastern Oklahoma, right there on the border. My great-grandmother Sallie Walton was born in Indian Territory, in the Choctaw Nation. She died in 1961 – I knew her very well. She was my babysitter until I went to kindergarten. [Her Choctaw heritage] was widely known in terms of family history. And growing up in a city such as Fort Smith, Arkansas … if you’re on the north side of the city, you can look at the Cherokee Nation, and if you’re on the south of the city, the bordering community is the Choctaw Nation.

    I did have in my possession some family papers – a small land allotment record from [Sallie] that she had obtained from the Dawes Commission. I had been doing genealogy for many years but was curious, “Gee, is there more information out there to be found?” I really didn’t know what there was to find. So when I moved to the Washington, D.C., area and had access to the National Archives … I went and started looking and found family records, and I was just amazed.

    What did you find?

    I found a [Choctaw Nation] enrollment card for Samuel and Sallie Walton, my great-grandparents. And then my grandfather, Sam, Jr., was recorded there, my Uncle Houston’s name was there, my Aunt Louisa’s name. I was like, “Wow, I didn’t realize there was a document that reflected this!” On the reverse side of that same card, which was the next exposure on microfilm, was information about [Sam and Sallie’s] parents. Here was additional information about his mother, his father and her mother and her father – there were four new ancestors! But beyond that, I also found an interview with my great-grandmother and great-grandfather about their life in the Choctaw Nation. I had known of Samuel Walton but did not realize he was originally born in Arkansas and had later been sold as a slave to someone in the Choctaw Nation. I also began to recognize surnames of people whom I had grown up around. I realized, here’s an entire record set reflecting people who had been slaves of Choctaw Indians, many of whom had Choctaw blood … an entire record set of African-American people that had never been talked about.

    You’ve said the Freedmen have been “deleted” from American history in the past. What do you mean?

    One hears, for example, about the forced migration of native people. One does not hear about the 1,200 slaves that were taken west with the Cherokee Nation. One does not read in history books that many people who were Choctaws – and the Choctaws were actually the first group that migrated, in the winter of 1830 and 1831 – sold personal property to be able to purchase slaves to take with them to Indian Territory. Pull up any history book or just Google “map reflecting slavery,” and you’ll always see the map of what is called “the South” and you see that empty spot that [would be] Oklahoma, and it looks as if there was no slavery taking place there. When the treaty of 1866 finally abolished slavery in Indian Territory, the fact is that a community thrived – a community of people who were not slaves of the United States, and they were Freedmen.

    What have you found in your research about how blended families – those with native, African and Anglo roots – historically identified themselves? Obviously there were limitations on what box they could check on the census form, for example.

    And they weren’t allowed to check – it was somebody else checking the box.

    So how did people present themselves to the community?

    Self-identity is one thing and then a perceived identity is another. When you’re talking about perceived identity, that’s usually a census enumerator who was going around from house to house and was usually white and male. In Lake Charles, Louisiana, for example, an entire Indian village was captured in the census records … [but] the enumerator didn’t get the names of everyone. They would just write the name of a person such as “Baptiste” and say “his wife, his son, his daughter” without giving them a name. So more than likely that enumerator was not comfortable going into the Indian village … and just did a count without interacting with the people themselves. I always ask people to research an [ancestor] throughout their entire lifetime, and if this ancestor is continually identifying themselves differently than a descendent might claim – in other words, this descendent is claiming the ancestor was a Native American, but throughout that ancestor’s life they are identifying themselves as black – then one has to really look and say “Hmm, was this person really living in a Native American community?” Or is it a way to explain a light complexion that makes the family feel better than acknowledging that maybe this person’s mother or grandmother was involved in a relationship against her will? Some people may want to disassociate their family from having a blood tie to a slave master.


    Angela Walton-Raji has been researching African-Native American genealogy for nearly 20 years and is the author of the book Black Indian Genealogy Research: African-American Ancestors Among the Five Civilized Tribes. She recently presented a series of genealogy workshops at the National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, D.C., in conjunction with the exhibit IndiVisible: African-Native American Lives in the Americas. Walton-Raji’s ancestors are Freedmen, African-Americans who were slaves of the Five Civilized Tribes – the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek and Seminole Nations – in Indian Territory, which became Oklahoma in 1907. The Cherokee freed their slaves in 1863, and after the Civil War, the other tribes did the same. All but the Chickasaw eventually granted Freedmen full citizenship in their tribe. In preparation for Oklahoma statehood, the U.S. Congress created the Dawes Commission, which was charged with dissolving collective tribal land ownership and allotting land to individual tribal members. Thousands of Freedmen came before the commission to prove their tribal membership and their right to a share of land. I spoke with Walton-Raji about her research.

    What spurred you to start researching African-Native American history and genealogy?

    I was inspired to begin the research because it’s part of my family history. I’m originally from western Arkansas and eastern Oklahoma, right there on the border. My great-grandmother Sallie Walton was born in Indian Territory, in the Choctaw Nation. She died in 1961 – I knew her very well. She was my babysitter until I went to kindergarten. [Her Choctaw heritage] was widely known in terms of family history. And growing up in a city such as Fort Smith, Arkansas … if you’re on the north side of the city, you can look at the Cherokee Nation, and if you’re on the south of the city, the bordering community is the Choctaw Nation.

    I did have in my possession some family papers – a small land allotment record from [Sallie] that she had obtained from the Dawes Commission. I had been doing genealogy for many years but was curious, “Gee, is there more information out there to be found?” I really didn’t know what there was to find. So when I moved to the Washington, D.C., area and had access to the National Archives … I went and started looking and found family records, and I was just amazed.

    What did you find?

    I found a [Choctaw Nation] enrollment card for Samuel and Sallie Walton, my great-grandparents. And then my grandfather, Sam, Jr., was recorded there, my Uncle Houston’s name was there, my Aunt Louisa’s name. I was like, “Wow, I didn’t realize there was a document that reflected this!” On the reverse side of that same card, which was the next exposure on microfilm, was information about [Sam and Sallie’s] parents. Here was additional information about his mother, his father and her mother and her father – there were four new ancestors! But beyond that, I also found an interview with my great-grandmother and great-grandfather about their life in the Choctaw Nation. I had known of Samuel Walton but did not realize he was originally born in Arkansas and had later been sold as a slave to someone in the Choctaw Nation. I also began to recognize surnames of people whom I had grown up around. I realized, here’s an entire record set reflecting people who had been slaves of Choctaw Indians, many of whom had Choctaw blood … an entire record set of African-American people that had never been talked about.

    You’ve said the Freedmen have been “deleted” from American history in the past. What do you mean?

    One hears, for example, about the forced migration of native people. One does not hear about the 1,200 slaves that were taken west with the Cherokee Nation. One does not read in history books that many people who were Choctaws – and the Choctaws were actually the first group that migrated, in the winter of 1830 and 1831 – sold personal property to be able to purchase slaves to take with them to Indian Territory. Pull up any history book or just Google “map reflecting slavery,” and you’ll always see the map of what is called “the South” and you see that empty spot that [would be] Oklahoma, and it looks as if there was no slavery taking place there. When the treaty of 1866 finally abolished slavery in Indian Territory, the fact is that a community thrived – a community of people who were not slaves of the United States, and they were Freedmen.

    What have you found in your research about how blended families – those with native, African and Anglo roots – historically identified themselves? Obviously there were limitations on what box they could check on the census form, for example.

    And they weren’t allowed to check – it was somebody else checking the box.

    So how did people present themselves to the community?

    Self-identity is one thing and then a perceived identity is another. When you’re talking about perceived identity, that’s usually a census enumerator who was going around from house to house and was usually white and male. In Lake Charles, Louisiana, for example, an entire Indian village was captured in the census records … [but] the enumerator didn’t get the names of everyone. They would just write the name of a person such as “Baptiste” and say “his wife, his son, his daughter” without giving them a name. So more than likely that enumerator was not comfortable going into the Indian village … and just did a count without interacting with the people themselves. I always ask people to research an [ancestor] throughout their entire lifetime, and if this ancestor is continually identifying themselves differently than a descendent might claim – in other words, this descendent is claiming the ancestor was a Native American, but throughout that ancestor’s life they are identifying themselves as black – then one has to really look and say “Hmm, was this person really living in a Native American community?” Or is it a way to explain a light complexion that makes the family feel better than acknowledging that maybe this person’s mother or grandmother was involved in a relationship against her will? Some people may want to disassociate their family from having a blood tie to a slave master.

    And on the other hand you’ll find some white families who don’t want to acknowledge having a black ancestor in the family and will claim, “This complexion came from an Indian relative.” I always say if you are a serious researcher, you follow the records.

    What documents and records are there for the Freedman of the Five Civilized Tribes?

    For Freedmen of Oklahoma, the source is amazing. There is a microfilm publication at the National Archives that consists of Freedman enrollment cards [for] individuals who had been enslaved (or their parents had been enslaved) by citizens of the Five Civilized Tribes. Those individuals were eligible to receive land allotment. Data was collected on each person who was applying [for land], usually the head of the household, about where they lived and who their slave owner was.

    These interviews took place in the 1890s and slavery officially ended in 1866 in the Territory. The reverse side of the enrollment card is the name of the person’s parents – the father’s tribal enrollment, the name of the father’s slave owner if the father had been enslaved. In many cases, particularly in the Choctaw Nation and Chickasaw Nation, you’ll find that the father was actually an Indian. Then, the name of the person’s mother and her tribal enrollment … and the name of the mother’s slave owner. If on one side of the card you have a husband, his wife and their children, and on the reverse side you get the names of their parents, that means you have three generations on one card. Then, there’s an interview packet that contains hundreds of reels of microfilm of the actual interviews: “Sam Walton, sworn in under oath, testifies as follows…What is your name? Were you a slave? Where did you live? Who was your owner?”

    What was the purpose of these interviews?

    These gave the Dawes Commission information to decide whether or not a family should get a land allotment. Land was held in common by the tribes, and Freedmen were members of the tribe after 1866, because they didn’t have anywhere else to go [and] that was their home since the 1830s. So they remained where they were, they spoke the language. But Oklahoma statehood was approaching, and before the rest of the land could be released for white settlers to come in, the [U.S. government] decided to take the land that was held in common by the tribes and redistribute it to the individual members – the Western tradition of personal property.

    What has been the reaction of your family to your research? What have you found that has surprised them?

    I think the biggest surprise for my brother and I, who remember Sallie … was that both of us knew someone who had been born a slave. She was born in the middle of the Civil War in 1863 and she died in 1961.

    Did she tell you she’d been born into slavery?

    No, she didn’t. She had no memory of it. And also, children don’t know to ask their elders, “Tell me about your life when you were a child.” … My dad knew of his very strong ties to the Choctaw Nation, which was spoken about in everyday conversation, so that wasn’t new, but … I didn’t know this part of Sallie’s early history. Of course, where I grew up, everybody knows they have some ties to [Indian] Territory. In Fort Smith, everybody has cowboys, Indians, marshals and outlaws in their family.

    What is your advice to people who want to start researching their African-Native American heritage?

    Your heritage is your heritage, whether it’s white, whether it’s black, whether it’s blended, whether it’s a family of immigrants or a family native to the Americas. Your family history is done using the same methodology, regardless of ethnicity. You’re going to start with your oral history – you’re going to sit down and talk with your elders, and you’re going to talk with them more than one time. Transcribe those interviews. Even before you leave the house, you’re going to look and see what you have in the house – for example, I had some documents that were folded up in little pieces in Samuel Walton’s old Bible. There was Sallie’s land allotment information with “Choctaw Nation” stamped at the top. At some point you will be ready to start obtaining those vital records, and the most important thing is that you don’t skip back 100 years – you start with things that are more recent.


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    Related topics: African Americans Native Americans Westward Expansion Oklahoma


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    Comments (33)

    + View All Comments

    I have searched for my families history fory years, even before they were recoginized. actually, I wasn't trying to prove that my grandmother was a member because I always thought she was, her dad was full blood and her mom was mixed black, white and i'm told Choctaw.
    The tribe finally became recognized. Now everyone needed to prove their connection. I produced: an affidavid from a Judge in that town, a letter fom a member saying that my grandmother was closely related and more. Long story short, tribes can do what they want. This tribe Tunica-Biloxi stated in their incorporation papers that they did not want the black families as members. So just because you have solid proof does not mean you'll be accepted into a racist tribe. All tribes are not racist but this one is.

    Posted by Cheryl Johnson on January 24,2012 | 11:06 PM

    Hi IM 23yrs old i Dont really know to much about my mother or father side of family my mother died when i was the age of 16 i know my mother father was India and black also her mother and my father mother was white and India and his father was a Nigeria i know my father side come from greenvile mississippi i think i heard my mother side come from the south too IM not for sure but i have four kids now but my kids can go for multiple races and i hate that i never got to meet my grand parents can some one help me out

    Posted by dominique Dixon on January 17,2012 | 09:22 AM

    I am in the process of researching my family history and have been amazed at much information I have been able to find on line! My mother's family are descendents of Choctaw and Chickasaw freedom. I have been able to find my relatives from my great, great, great grandparents who were removed from Mississippi in the 1803's with their owners the Colberts, Kemps and the Bynums,through my great grand parents who were born in Indian Territory by getting my family's Dawes jackets. What I am having a problem with is finding out where the Indian blood came from. They are all listed as Freedmen and the ones old enough before 1866, have slave owners listed. I know the Dawes Comission required anyone with black blood to register as Freedmen no matter how much indian blood they have, so I can't tell where the Indian Ancestors came from. If you ever saw them, they are clearly of Indian Ancestry. But no one knows how. I have actually found out far more than anyone else ion my family. But here, I am stumped. Any Suggestions?

    Posted by Nanette on December 22,2011 | 11:03 PM

    Hello, I am also trying to trace my African-Native American roots. I was born in Central Alabama (Tuscaloosa) And my great grandfather from my mother's side, was full-blooded Choctaw Indian. I carry his last name (Belton). but when I trace this name back, alot of my family members are located in South Carolina!! so I'm so confused!!! And growning up, my mother always said that me had, Idian in our blood, but she could never tell me, from which side, because she didn't know herself. I'm just really trying to find out any information, of how I can find out my family history. Can you please help me.

    Posted by Veronica Belton on October 5,2011 | 09:37 AM

    I am so glad I found your web site. A friend and I are working to have a commission on African-American Indian and Black Indians to revisit the Dawes Commission to correct or at least revisit the categorizing of the commission. My friend is Phil Wilkes Fixico, refixico@aol.com. I am of Chickasaw descendants and I am in search of my real history. I've had the opportunity to have my Genealogy chart done and that's when I found out about the Dawes Commission. Thank you for your dedication.Yours Sincerely Edward W. Townsend Sr.

    Posted by Edward W. Townsend Sr on August 17,2011 | 01:09 AM

    I'm really glad that I came across your site. I have been tracing my family lines for years. My great-great father was an African-Indian of the Chocktaw nation in Mississippi. His name was Prince Love. He was also apart of the family group that did not leave Mississippi. When I went to the National Archives in Washington a few years ago, I wasn't able to get much information. However, my elder relatives in their (90s) at reunions spoke of their parents talking about an elderly relative named Ihoptep (sp). I was able to trace her back and what I found interesting was that over the generations there are "family names" that keep re-occurring in each generation. I haven't give up and I continuing until I can hopefully prove and expand on this geneology for myself and my children.

    Posted by Karman Beamon on July 2,2011 | 11:12 PM

    Hi Angela, I am an of mixed heritage. I have black,native american and white blood lines. My Indian ancestors are the Claytons, jacobes and the Lavales. I went as far back as to my great grandfather and allI could find is that his name was Winey. I am of choctaw, Avogel and probably Tunica Biloxi.

    Posted by delores keller on February 16,2011 | 02:34 AM

    For the past six years after discovering that there is African blood mixed with my Native Indian being I have been attempting to ascertain how the English surname (Pendleton) came into being in my family tree? I do know that in the 1790 census my ggg-grandfather Nathan Pendleton is listed as a slave in Norwich, New York. He was married to a Narragansett Indian lady named Sarah potteague. On the Indian side we are of the Stockbridge tribe originally from Berkshire county, Massachusetts. I'm hoping there is somebody out there with more information to help put my heritage in a semblance of order. Thanking you in advance, Cy - symcokid@yahoo.com

    Posted by Richard Simons on January 14,2011 | 11:53 AM

    Since I'm African-American ,I was born on February 14th 1982,in Chicago,Illinois. Now I'm African-Native American,I absolutely like talk about what's a called: An Ancestry of African-Native Americans!

    Posted by Vuwea on December 27,2010 | 03:43 AM

    I liked African-Native American Flags!

    Posted by Vuwea Scott on December 5,2010 | 03:12 AM

    I absolutely love African-Native American creative those earrings & hair braids and twists?

    Posted by Vuwea Scott on November 11,2010 | 03:58 AM

    Dear Angela,
    I have come across your site with much excitment. I live in Australia and my family is trying to research our family history. We have always been in a bit of confusion with our Great Great Grandmother Louisa Hampton who was apparently in California where she married an english man Joseph Goodsell, they had a son Walter Goodsell in approximately 1859. In 1869 Joseph and Walter (10years old at the time) emigrated to Australia, we cannot seem to find any mention of Louisa. The older members of the family remember my Great Grandfather Walter as being very dark with long grey hair but looking more like an American Indian rather than African American. So the confusion starts when some say Louisa was African American and others say she was American Indian, my grandmother has passed on but my mothers cousin remembers my Grandmother saying Louisa was Cherokee Indian. I am now thinking is it possible that she was African-Native American.
    I apologise for any Total confusion I may have caused you but would be extremely interested to find any information on Louisa Hampton if I can it.
    Kindest Regards
    Maree Butlin

    Posted by Maree Butlin on October 7,2010 | 10:04 AM

    I am of native american and african descent also, originally from st lucia west indies, mixed of carib indian and african descent, we are here but history does not speak about us. Most blacks in teh caibbean are of mixed with native americans. i would like for you to send me information about your family history and where can i get a hold of your book. thank you veery much

    Posted by Ruddy Francois on August 3,2010 | 02:29 PM

    Hi i am looking for my grand father.My daddy name was charles stanford, he was born 1928 in lane oklahoma, mather kittie ,father name unnown.stanford may be native american.please help me .charlene nutt

    Posted by charlene nutt on July 15,2010 | 07:45 PM

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