If you were told your great-grandpa or great-grandma were
Native Americans raise your hand.
Now prove it!
Elizabeth Warren Cherokee Connection?
In this political fury everyone
is jumping in to prove or disprove the facts – commonly called Fact
Checking. But, where does family lore
come in? Most people have not put effort into fact-checking the
family stories. You just believe them; they are a part of who you are. That is
until the genealogists come along! I
recently penned this Preface for my own family book that uncovers the fact that
2nd Great Grandpa Tobe was not Native American after all:
For
as long as I can remember, I would boast, to any victim who would listen,…[about]
the Indian blood I possessed… To me,
these stories were a necessary reality of unproven truths that defined the “me” of me. I willingly accepted the twisted family
stories, spinned them and massaged them into epoch size fairy tales that defied
logic. Perhaps under microscopic review,
one could find 20% reality but the other 80% was clearly muddied by the
storyteller’s liberty.
I continued to explain that “In less than two months of
research, I came to some “mouth-dropped-open realities. Tobe wasn’t Tobe,[and] we had no Indian blood…”
So when Elizabeth Warren made the mistake of sharing what
she thought was her Native American bragging rights only to find that it was a
family myth, I have to admit, I was a bit sympathetic. I can’t say that the research is all in, but the preliminary
documents and arguments have nullified her Native American heritage. At best,
it appears that family line might (maybe) yield a 1/64 Native American blood
line.
So before any others suffer from the embarrassment of a genealogical
morass, know that there are a few key points to remember when searching your
Cherokee Connection:
- Just because your ancestor lived in the Indian Territory (now Oklahoma) does not make them an “Indian”
- Facial features and hair texture are not valid arguments for Native American heritage.
- Not all Cherokee ancestors were properly listed on the Dawes Rolls, but if they aren’t, they are not considered members of the Cherokee Nation, and you aren’t either
- As many Freedmen Indians already know: just because you aren’t officially a member of the Cherokee Nation, doesn’t speak of your bloodline. We’ve proven a few DNA connections to Native American bloodline, but more data is needed to claim tribal status.
- And finally, don’t confuse family lore with fact, especially while the whole country is watching!For
- Elizabeth Warren’s Genealogical Challenge
- Genealogical Society: No proof of Warren’s Cherokee Heritage Found
Accurate, accessible, answers
Dr. Bill (William L.) Smith has left a new comment on your post "Am I Really Native American?": Thanks for another great post. We all [need] these important reminders, now and then! Sorry about Tobe! ;-)
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