This article examines how the Delawares responded to the challenges that living among the Cherokees posed to their identity. It also focuses on the question of how this forced co-residence developed and what the United States role in the matter was. The multifaceted threats to Delaware identity are at the center of the article, as are the responses and strategies applied by various factions of the Delaware tribe in reaction to those challenges. The different strategies and their motivations are analyzed, along with the effects they had on the tribe, its unity, and its communal identity. By focusing specifically on matters of land tenure, legal identity, internal strife between modernists and traditionalists, the article explains why Delawar...
Within a few years of 1838, when most members of the Cherokee Nation were forced to emigrate to Indi...
This article addresses the Cherokee tribe and their historic conflict with the descendants of their ...
Too often, what passes as Native American history does not provide the indigenous perspective, but r...
This article examines how the Delawares responded to the challenges that living among the Cherokees ...
The unequal relationship explored here can also provide a perspective for the anthropological study ...
The federal acknowledgment process is a highly contested procedure under the best of circumstances. ...
This study explores the conflict between two Indian nations, the Delaware Tribe of Indians (headquar...
On 8 April 1867 the Native American tribes of the Cherokees and Delawares, under United States super...
This Article examines the Cherokee Freedmen controversy to assess whether law and biology can functi...
Many past and current generations of historians, anthropologists, and literary writers have acknowle...
This dissertation examines federal Indian law of the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries as cons...
The history of the Cherokee people with the advent of white settlers in North America is a sad one. ...
The Cherokee Removal of 1838 was intended to remove all members of the Cherokee Nation to west of th...
Article explores the political context of removal of the Cherokee tribe from their native lands by e...
This research explores the meaning, construction, representation, and function of Delaware ethnic id...
Within a few years of 1838, when most members of the Cherokee Nation were forced to emigrate to Indi...
This article addresses the Cherokee tribe and their historic conflict with the descendants of their ...
Too often, what passes as Native American history does not provide the indigenous perspective, but r...
This article examines how the Delawares responded to the challenges that living among the Cherokees ...
The unequal relationship explored here can also provide a perspective for the anthropological study ...
The federal acknowledgment process is a highly contested procedure under the best of circumstances. ...
This study explores the conflict between two Indian nations, the Delaware Tribe of Indians (headquar...
On 8 April 1867 the Native American tribes of the Cherokees and Delawares, under United States super...
This Article examines the Cherokee Freedmen controversy to assess whether law and biology can functi...
Many past and current generations of historians, anthropologists, and literary writers have acknowle...
This dissertation examines federal Indian law of the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries as cons...
The history of the Cherokee people with the advent of white settlers in North America is a sad one. ...
The Cherokee Removal of 1838 was intended to remove all members of the Cherokee Nation to west of th...
Article explores the political context of removal of the Cherokee tribe from their native lands by e...
This research explores the meaning, construction, representation, and function of Delaware ethnic id...
Within a few years of 1838, when most members of the Cherokee Nation were forced to emigrate to Indi...
This article addresses the Cherokee tribe and their historic conflict with the descendants of their ...
Too often, what passes as Native American history does not provide the indigenous perspective, but r...