Monday, December 13, 2021

Cherokee Nation chief optimistic about seating delegate in Congress

The principal chief of the Cherokee Nation expressed optimism in an interview that aired Sunday that it will be able to see its delegate seated in Congress.

© Istock Cherokee Nation chief optimistic about seating delegate in Congress

During an appearance on "Axios on HBO," Cherokee chief Chuck Hoskin Jr. said the U.S. should make good on its treaty agreement with the tribe by seating Kim Teehee in the House of Representatives. The tribe tapped Teehee as their representative delegate in 2019, according to Axios.

"The president of the United States agreed to this 180 years ago," Hoskin Jr. said. "The United States Senate did its job 180 years ago; there's one part of the government left to take action. That's the United States House of Representatives."

The Treaty of New Echota, signed by then-President Andrew Jackson and ratified by the Senate in 1835, promised the Cherokee Nation a nonvoting House delegate.

Thousands of Cherokee tribe members died making the journey from their homelands in the U.S. states of Georgia, Alabama and Tennessee to Oklahoma in what is known as the "Trail of Tears."

Hoskin Jr. and Tehee expressed optimism about that their efforts were moving in the right direction and were gaining support.

Hoskin Jr. said that any lawmaker who campaigned for "pro-tribal sovereignty and goes back on such a basic promise, they're gonna be on the opposite side of me and they're gonna be on the opposite side of history. And there'll be a consequence for that."

"I think as long as we are willing to proactively continue to keep the ball moving, we'll get there," Teehee told Axios.

133 years of struggle: Lumbee have faced a long and winding path to federal recognition

Josh Shaffer

Sun, December 12, 2021

The tea-brown waters of the Lumber River have supported Native Americans for thousands of years, and the Lumbee tribe formed from ancestors who predate white settlers and others who sought security in the thick, swampy woods.

Even there, the native people lost land to whites and, once the Civil War began, faced the threat of conscription into the Confederate Army, which forced them to build up Fort Fisher and defend the port at Wilmington.

This led to the Lowrie War, in which Lumbee fought the Confederate Home Guard.

After the war, rising racial tension caused many natives to conceal their tribal identity, or bond together with other tribes to form a common identity and self-determination. Known then just as “Indians,” the natives around the Lumbee got their first official name in 1885 when they were recognized by the North Carolina legislature.

They were then the Croatan, and under that name, they started their long road to federal recognition. That road continues with the Lumbee Recognition Act now before the U.S. Senate.

U.S. Sen. Richard Burr counted 29 bills for recognition in the last 133 years. Here is some of that history:

1888

The tribe first asks Congress for federal recognition, having recently built its own Normal School with just $500 a year in state assistance. The tribe sought more educational money to “compensate for the state’s unequal funding.”

The federal government declined to recognize them or provide any school funds.


Dancers perform at the annual Lumbee spring pow-wow in Lumberon.

1935


The tribe is encouraged to seek recognition under the federal Indian Reorganization Act, but they were required to be at least half-native.

Several years later, only 22 of 209 people in Robeson County qualified under the tests that Lumbee now describe as pseudoscience.
1956

Congress recognized the Lumbee as an American Indian tribe, but it held back the services and benefits that normally came along with recognition.

This “Lumbee Bill” remains an infamous moment for the tribe.


Raven Stanley, right, of Greensboro and the Lumbee tribe gets help preparing for the Carolina Indian Circle Powwow from Tabitha Jacobs, left, at UNC-Chapel Hill Saturday March 23, 2013, in Chapel Hill.

1992

A bill for Lumbee recognition died on the U.S. Senate floor. Sen. Jesse Helms had opposed the tribe’s bid for recognition, saying it should move through the Bureau of Indian Affairs rather than Congress. The 1956 bill, however, prohibited them from doing so.

1994


Another bill failed to reach the Senate floor despite support from North Carolina Sen. Lauch Faircloth, who had earlier opposed recognition.


Nicholas Wayne Locklear, 9, sits in the cab of a truck as he waits for a thunderstorm to end at the Lumbee tribe powwow at the farmer’s market grounds in Robeson County . Locklear, who is Lumbee and is from the town of Shannon, was introduced to American Indian dance by his uncle. They were both competing at the powwow.



2003

An archaeologist and UNC-Chapel Hill professor with Cherokee ties said the Western North Carolina tribe was actively working against Lumbee recognition, fearing a rival casino would eat into its own gambling funds.

“It would cut that money in half,” said Brett Riggs, a former tribal archaeologist and deputy tribal historic preservationist officer for the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians. “They are lobbying against it like you would not believe.”

2020

President Joe Biden, then a candidate, pledged full support for Lumbee recognition. President Donald Trump, running against Biden, pledged the same shortly afterward.

Despite this, the Lumbee were left out of a Congressional spending package.

2021

The Lumbee Recognition Act passes the U.S. House and is sent to a Senate committee, where it received favorable words from both Sens. Richard Burr and Thom Tills.

“To say the tribe has been here before would be an understatement,” Burr said in a November Senate hearing. “No other tribe in the country has been subjected to as much Congressional scrutiny.”

Sources: Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina, NC Museum of History, News & Observer archives.

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