Croatan

The Croatan are a small Native American group living in the coastal areas of what is now North Carolina. They might have been a branch of the larger Roanoke people or allied with them.[1] The Croatan people of North Carolina who exist today live in Cumberland, Sampson, and Harnett counties predominantly.[2]

Croatan
Total population
64 - 80
Regions with significant populations
North Carolina
Languages
Carolina Algonquian
Religion
Immortality of the Soul
Related ethnic groups
Roanoke

The Croatan lived in current Dare County, an area encompassing the Alligator River, Croatan Sound, Roanoke Island, Ocracoke Island, and parts of the Outer Banks, including Hatteras Island. Now extinct as a tribe, they were one of the Carolina Algonquian peoples, numerous at the time of English encounter in the 16th century. In 1580 Sir Walter Raleigh sent English explorers near what would be the Americas. That same time, the Croatan were living on the island of present-day Hatteras and Ocracoke islands. The Croatan people of North Carolina who are alive today live in Cumberland, Sampson, and Harnett counties. The Roanoke territory also extended to the mainland, where they had their chief town on the western shore of Croatan Sound. For the most part, the groups involved with the Croatan Indians were small. Even though the majority of these groups were small, they did have about 30 groups that consisted of 100 plus members in 1930. The Croatan Indians also had a group in Robeson County N.C that had nearly 15,000 members.[3]

Croatan Americans were a part of the Carolina Algonquians, a southeastern designation of the greater Algonquian source. Agriculture was the Native Americans' primary food source, and the fact that they could feed the colonists, as well as themselves, demonstrates very effectively the efficiency of their farming. The Native Americans regulated each person's position in society by public marks. The chiefs or leaders, called werowances, controlled between one and eighteen towns. The greatest were able to muster seven or eight hundred fighting men. The English marveled at the great awe in which these werowances were held, saying no people in the world carried more respect towards their leaders. Werowance means "he who is rich". Chiefs and their families were held in great status and with respect, but they had to convince followers that action or cause was wise, they did not command. The role of the chief was to spread the wealth to his tribe, otherwise, respect was lost.[1]

The legislature on June 30, 1914 declared a thorough investigation to decide what tribal right the "Cherokees" formerly known Croatan Indians of North Carolina had. The Croatan Indians were granted rights which enabled them to be designated and known as "Croatan Indians". They were also granted the right of "Indians and their descendants shall have separate school for their children, school committees of their own race, and shall also have the right to choose their own teachers based upon the General assembly of North Carolina.[3]

A scholar of Algonquian linguistics has suggested that the word "Croatan" means "council town" or "talk town," which likely indicates the residence of an important leader and a place where councils were held.[4]

They fished along the northern Outer Banks, but most of their fields and towns were in present day Buxton and Hatteras.

Descendants of the Croatan are known as the Lumbee tribe. In 1880 they tried to obtain Indian tribal recognition. The state acknowledged them as a tribe, but they could not be recognized by the federal government due to mingling and mixing from other tribes. (Powell)

Beliefs

The Native Americans living in the Carolinas believed in the immortality of the soul. Upon death, the soul either enters heaven to live with the gods or goes to a place near the setting sun called Popogusso, to burn for eternity in a huge pit of fire. The concept of heaven and hell was used on the common people to respect leaders and live a life that would be beneficial to them in the afterlife. Conjurors and priests were distinctive spiritual leaders. Priests were chosen for their knowledge and wisdom and were leaders of the organized religion. Conjurors, on the other hand, were chosen for their magical abilities. Conjurors were thought to have powers from a personal connection with a supernatural being (mostly spirits from the animal world).[5]

European colonization

It is known that the arrival of English Settlers upset some pre-existing tribal relationships. The Algonquian people advocated cooperation while others (the Yamasee, Cherokee and Chickasaw, for example) resisted. Later, this conflict between tribes and settlers would lead to the Yamasee War. Tribes that maintained mutually beneficial contact with the settlers gained power through their access to and control of European trade goods. While the English may have held great military superiority over the Carolina Algonquians, the Native Americans' control over food and natural resources was a much more decisive factor in the conflict with early settlers. Despite the varying relationships among tribes, the Roanoke and Croatan were believed to have been on very good terms with English Settlers of the Roanoke Colony. Wanchese, the last leader of the Roanoke, accompanied the English on a trip to England.[6]

The Lost Colony

Governor John White returned to Roanoke in 1590 to find the word "Croatoan" carved on a tree.

Some of the survivors of the Lost Colony of Roanoke may have joined the Croatan. Governor White finally reached Roanoke Island on August 18, 1590, three years after he had last seen them there, but he found his colony had been long deserted. The buildings had collapsed and "the houses [were] taken down". The few clues about the colonists' whereabouts included the letters "CROATOAN" carved into a tree. Croatoan was the name of a nearby island (likely modern-day Hatteras Island) in addition to the local tribe of Native Americans. Roanoke Island was not originally the planned location for the colony and the idea of moving elsewhere had been discussed. Before the Governor's departure, he and the colonists had agreed that a message would be carved into a tree if they had moved and would include an image of a Maltese Cross if the decision was made by force. White found no such cross and was hopeful that his family was still alive.[7]

The Croatan, like other Carolina Algonquians, suffered from epidemics of infectious disease, such as smallpox in 1598. These greatly reduced the tribe's numbers and left them subject to colonial pressure. They are believed to have become extinct as a tribe by the early seventeenth century.

Speculation of the fate of the "Lost Colony"

Based on legend, some people said that the Lumbee tribe, based in North Carolina, were descendants of the Croatan and survivors of the Lost Colony of Roanoke Island. For over a hundred years, historians and other scholars have been examining the question of Lumbee origin. Although there have been many explanations and conjectures, two theories persist. In 1885, Hamilton McMillan, a local historian, and state legislator proposed the "Lost Colony" theory. Based upon oral tradition among the Lumbees and what he deemed as strong circumstantial evidence, McMillan posited a connection between the Lumbees and the early English colonists who settled on Roanoke Island in 1587 and the Algonquian tribes (Croatan included) who inhabited coastal North Carolina at the same time. According to historical accounts, the colonists mysteriously disappeared soon after they settled, leaving little evidence of their destination or fate. McMillan's hypothesis, which was also supported by the historian Stephen Weeks, contends that the colonists migrated with the Indians toward the interior of North Carolina, and by 1650 had settled along the banks of the Lumber River. It is suggested the present-day Lumbees are the descendants of these two groups.[8]

Other scholars believe the Lumbees to be descended from an eastern Siouan group called the Cheraws. During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, several Siouan-speaking tribes occupied southeastern North Carolina. John R. Swanton, a pioneering ethnologist at the Smithsonian Institution, wrote in 1938 that the Lumbees were probably of Cheraw descent but were also genealogically influenced by other Siouan tribes in the area. Contemporary historians such as James Merrell and William Sturtevant confirm this theory by suggesting that the Cheraws, along with survivors of other tribes whose populations had been devastated by warfare and disease, found refuge from both aggressive settlers and hostile tribes in the Robeson County swamps in eastern North Carolina.[9]

In 1914, when Special Indian Agent, O.M. McPherson, was reporting on the rights of various Indian groups, he published a list of names of the Lost Colony. Numerous names on the list were typical Indian names in the North Carolina counties of Robeson and Sampson, at the time of his report. Many of the surnames included were that of surviving Croatan Indians.[10] Late twentieth-century research has demonstrated that among surnames established as Lumbee ancestors were numerous mixed-race African Americans free in Virginia before the American Revolution, and their descendants who migrated to Virginia and North Carolina frontiers in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. These "free people of color" were mostly descendants of European women and African men, who worked and lived together in colonial Virginia. These connections have been traced for numerous individuals and families through court records, land deeds and other existing historical documents.[11][12] In Robeson County, they may have intermarried with Native American survivors and acculturated as Native Americans.[2]

Modern era and legacy

The Lost Colony Center for Science and Research has excavated English artifacts within the territory of the former Croatan tribe. The artifacts may also be evidence of trade with the tribe, or of natives finding them at the former colony site. The Center is conducting a DNA study to try to determine if there are European lines among Croatan descendants.

In 1890 a group of about 100 Croatan Indians left Robeson County N.C, for South Georgia. By building a church and school for their people they established themselves in a time where racial barriers were very distinct between "black" and "white". The Croatan people instead considered themselves as "Indians". The South as a whole tried to force them into segregation, but the Croatan people of Bulloch County wanted no part of it. Instead of obeying the people of the south they headed back to Bulloch County where they could keep their people together as "Indians". The Croatan Indians established themselves in a place that was not home to them. It was unheard of for Indians to hold an identity in this way. They used the segregation of Jim Crow South to develop themselves as an entire community.[13] In 1910, the North Carolina state legislature renamed the Croatan Indians in North Carolina to "Cherokee" and designated them a branch of the Cherokee Nation.[14]

A historical marker placed by the state of Georgia states "In 1870 a group of Croatan natives migrated from their homes in Robeson County, North Carolina, following the turpentine industry to southeast Georgia. Eventually, many of the Croatans became tenant farmers for the Adabelle Trading Company, growing cotton and tobacco. The Croatan community established the Mt. Zion Baptist Church in Adabelle, as well as a school and a nearby cemetery. After the collapse of the Adabelle Trading Company, the Croatans faced both economic hardship and social injustice. As a result, most members of the community returned to North Carolina by 1920."[15]

Researchers from the University of Bristol, UK have also been excavating on Hatteras Island in conjunction with the Croatoan Archaeological Society.[16] Hatteras Island is the main locus for the settlement of the Croatoan tribe, and to date, they have discovered a large contact/pre-contact period settlement, midden deposits and European trade items.

Notable people

  • Manteo disappeared after 1587, ambassador and mediator.

See also

Notes

  1. "Indian Towns and Buildings of Eastern North Carolina". Fort Raleigh National Historic Site. National Park Service. 2015-04-14. Retrieved 2020-11-23.
  2. Butler, George (1916). The Croatan Indians of Sampson County, North Carolina. Their Origin and Racial Status. A Plea for Separate Schools. Durham, NC: The Seeman Printery.
  3. Johnson, Guy B. (1939). "Personality in a White-Indian-Negro Community". American Sociological Review. 4 (4): 516–523. doi:10.2307/2084322. ISSN 0003-1224. JSTOR 2084322.
  4. Evans, Phillip W. (2006). "Croatoan Indians". www.ncpedia.org. Retrieved 2020-12-10.
  5. Blu (2004). Handbook of North American Indians. Sturtevant and Fogelson. pp. 323–326.
  6. Kupperman (1984). Roanoke: The Abandoned Colony. Rowman and Allanheld. pp. 45–65.
  7. Milton, Giles (2000). Big Chief Elizabeth - How England's Adventurers Gambled and Won the New World. London: Hodder & Stoughton. pp. 265–266. ISBN 978-0-340-74881-7.
  8. Blu (2004). Handbook of North American Indians. Sturtevant and Fogelson. p. 155.
  9. Encyclopedia of North American Indians, Houghton Mifflin
  10. Butler, George E. (1941). The Croatan Indians of Sampson County, North Carolina: their origin and racial status: a plea for separate schools. pp. 23–25.
  11. Heinegg, Paul. "Free African Americans of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Maryland and Delaware". Paul Heinegg. Retrieved 15 February 2009.
  12. Stilling, Glenn Ellen Starr. "Lumbee origins: The Weyanoke-Kearsey connection". The Lumbee Indians: An Annotated Bibliography. Glenn Ellen Starr Stilling. Archived from the original on 20 July 2008. Retrieved 30 July 2008.
  13. Maynor, Malinda (2005). "People and Place: Croatan Indians in Jim Crow Georgia, 1890–1920". American Indian Culture and Research Journal. 29 (1): 37–63. doi:10.17953/aicr.29.1.w18126107jh11566. ISSN 0161-6463.
  14. "O. M. (Orlando M.) McPherson. Indians of North Carolina: Letter from the Secretary of the Interior, Transmitting, in Response to a Senate Resolution of June 30, 1914, a Report on the Condition and Tribal Rights of the Indians of Robeson and Adjoining Counties of North Carolina". unc.edu. 1914-06-30. Retrieved 2020-11-23.
  15. "Croatan Indian Community historical marker". usg.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-23.
  16. "Croatoan Archaeological Project". www.cashatteras.com. Retrieved 2020-12-10.

References

  • K.I. Blu: "Lumbee", Handbook of North American Indians, vol. 14: 278-295, Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, 2004
  • T. Hariot, J. White, J. Lawson: A vocabulary of Roanoke, vol. 13, Merchantville: Evolution Publishing, 1999
  • Th. Ross: American Indians in North Carolina, South Pines, NC: Karo Hollow Press, 1999
  • G.M. Sider: Lumbee Indian histories, vol. 2, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993
  • S.B. Weeks: The lost colony of Roanoke, its fate and survival, New York: Knickerbocker Press, 1891
  • J.R. Swanton: "Probable Identity of the Croatan Indians." U.S. Dept. of the Interior, Office of Indian Affairs, 1933
  • J. Henderson: "The Croatan Indians of Robeson County, North Carolina", U.S. Dept. of the Interior, Office of Indian Affairs, 1923
  • K.O. Kupperman: "Roanoke, the Abandoned Colony", Rowman and Littlefield, 1984
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