Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_G - Genealogy Native Americans
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 68    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Genealogy Native Americans:     more books (100)
  1. Spirit Car: Journey to a Dakota Past by Diane Wilson, 2006-08-01
  2. Creek Indian History: A Historical Narrative of the Genealogy, Traditions and Downfall of the Ispocoga or Creek Indian Tribe of Indians by One of the Tribe, George Stiggins (1788-1845) by George Stiggins, 2003-01-22
  3. Cherokee by Blood: Volume 4, Records of Eastern Cherokee Ancestry in the U.S. Court of Claims 1906-1910 : Applications 7251 to 10170 by Jerry Wright Jordan, 2009-05-01
  4. The Eskimos of Bering Strait, 1650-1898 by Dorothy Jean Ray, 1992-03
  5. Honor the Grandmothers: Dakota and Lakota Women Tell Their Stories by Sarah Penman, 2000-10-15
  6. Strangers in Their Own Land: South Carolina's State Indian Tribes by S. Pony Hill, 2010-06-30
  7. Black, White, and Indian: Race and the Unmaking of an American Family by Claudio Saunt, 2006-07-27
  8. The 1890 Cherokee Nation Census, Indian Territory (Oklahoma) by Barbara L. Benge, 2002-01
  9. Cherokee Claims for Transportation and Subsistence: Special File 154, Vol. 1 by Dawn C. Stricklin, 2004-10
  10. Indians from New York: A Genealogy Reference, Volume 3 by Toni Jollay Prevost, 2009-05-01
  11. Indians From New York in Ontario and Quebec, Canada: A Genealogy Reference, Volume 2 by Toni Jollay Prevost, 2009-05-01
  12. A Country Between: The Upper Ohio Valley and Its Peoples, 1724-1774 by Michael N. McConnell, 1992-07-28
  13. To Be an Indian: An Oral History (Borealis) by Joseph H. Cash, 1995-03-15
  14. Bibliography of sources for native American family history in the Allen County Public Library Genealogy Department by Curt Bryan Witcher, 1988

41. Cherokee Indian Tribe Online Records
Cherokee Indian genealogy including rolls, birth records, and other resources.
http://www.accessgenealogy.com/native/tribes/cherokee

42. Creek Indian Online Records
Creek Indian genealogy, culture, and history information.
http://www.accessgenealogy.com/native/tribes/creek/

43. Google Directory - Regional > North America > United States > Society and Cultur
Lulu.com offers Native American Genealogy from selfpublished authors. Lulu allows anyone to publish and sell about Native American Genealogy.
http://www.google.cz/Top/Regional/North_America/United_States/Society_and_Cultur

44. Larry Jordan's Family Genealogy Information
Family genealogy of a part-Lumbee southern family, including links and resources on Lumbee genealogy.
http://www.lumbee.homestead.com/

45. Archer FAMILY GENEALOGY
FAMILY GENEALOGY. Archer Family Archer and Related Families Necrology Land Deeds Genealogy Native Americans My Favorite Links Midi links
http://www.angelfire.com/ar/labrover/index.html
FAMILY GENEALOGY
  • Archer Family
  • Archer and Related Families
  • Necrology
  • Land Deeds
  • Genealogy
  • Native Americans
  • My Favorite Links
  • Midi links
  • Irish Links
  • Non Related Family Genealogy
  • Civil War Page
  • Washington Co. Marriages
  • Sullivan Co. Marriages
  • Wills
Archer Family Links
ARCHER FAMILY MAIN PAGE
ARCHER INDEX

Jonathan M. Archer and Delilia Overfelt Web Page

Pictures of the grave site
ARCHER NECROLOGY

My Ireland Web Page

The Civil War Page

Visit this page for a lot of interesting links
Archer Table of Contents

Genealogy Links
Angelfire - Easiest Free Home Pages
Suzie's Home Page Morelock Family Web Pages Email: labrover@aol.com

46. Welcome To Mkharrison
Extensive information on Lumbee genealogy from a Lumbee-Jewish descendant.
http://www.mkharrison.com/Home.htm
Explore mkharrison.com Website Search this site mk's links Join mk's mailing list Tell a friend about this site ... Support this site!
Genealogy Research MK's Genealogy
Genealogy Search engines! Surnames Genealogical Services Surname Notes ... Genealogical Services
MK's Favorites Miscellaneous St-Barth 4-legged children mk's boutique! Mangalarga Marchador ... La Rabbiael 'Orgoglio
This web page was last updated 04 Feb 2007 05:59 AM
Report broken links
Send mk an email! Return Home

47. Where The Cherokee A Nomadic Tribe?
Native american clothing Native american genealogy Native americans information Native american art history Native american tribe information Native american tribe facts Native american
http://www.blurtit.com/q3654965.html

48. Abenaki Indian Genealogy
Links, mailing lists, and general information for tracing Abenaki heritage.
http://www.accessgenealogy.com/native/tribes/abenaki/index.htm

49. Village Yarn And Crafts, Fallbrook, Ca. 760-723-YARN "Jan" Metzger
I am Prodigy Internet's Communities Administrator for Crafts and Hobbies and Genealogy/Native Americans. Stop by and see us. We have a wonderful set of bulletin boards, and even
http://pages.prodigy.net/janmetzger/
Village Yarn and Crafts, Fallbrook, Ca. 760-723-YARN "Jan" Metzger Are you a knitter? A crafter? An animal lover? Are you owned by a Dachshund? Love nature? Hi...glad you stopped by to take a peek at this "work in progress"...my very first foray into the wonderful world of building a site. Oh my! Can this old heart take all this emotion? HG! I am a knitter and have been for sixty one years. I also am a purebred Dachshund breeder, own a feed store, an avocado ranch and am a professional dog obedience instructor and behaviorist. I do own my own yarn shoppe, and I hope through this medium...if I get good enough...I can share any and all of my experience with you...and answer any questions. So? If you will just bear with me, I will try and make this interesting as the days and weeks go by... I am Prodigy Internet's Communities Administrator for Crafts and Hobbies and Genealogy/Native Americans. Stop by and see us. We have a wonderful set of bulletin boards, and even more information on our community pages themselves. I will come back a little later and give you the urls for both areas. You will have a great time hanging out there.
I love life and try to live it to it's fullest so if you share that outlook, please come back often and I will see what I can do to make your time here most enjoyable!! "Jan"

50. Menu - Abenaki Genealogy Help
Genealogical and historical resources to help those researching their Abenaki ancestors. Also with FAQs and helpful articles.
http://www.avcnet.org/ne-do-ba/menu_gen.shtml
Please visit our new website at www.nedoba.org
Genealogy Main Menu
PayPal Donate
This page visited [an error occurred while processing this directive] times since Jan-2004.
Search for PayPal Donate
I have reached a DEAD END - Now What?

51. Alabama Native Americans
Alabama resources for genealogy research of Native American and Indian Cities Towns; Huntsville, AL; Alabama Genealogy; Native Americans
http://huntsville.about.com/od/nativeamericans/Alabama_Native_Americans_Genealog
zWASL=1 zGL='0';zGR='ca-about-radlink'; zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') zDO=0
  • Home Huntsville, AL
  • Huntsville, AL
    Search
    Filed In:
  • Alabama Genealogy
  • Alabama resources for genealogy research of Native American and Indian ancestors in Alabama.
    Cherokee Indian Genealogy
    Rare books on the history and genealogy of the Cherokee Indians.
    Heart of America Indian Center
    Information on getting an Indian Genealogy packet in the mail. zSB(3,3)
    Official Land Patent Records Site
    Database search for two million Federal land title records for the Eastern Public Land States, issued between 1820 and 1908.
    Vital Records Information for Alabama
    Free Huntsville, AL Newsletter! Sign Up if(zSbL<1)zSbL=3;zSB(2);zSbL=0
    Explore Huntsville, AL
    Must Reads Most Popular November 2010 Events Driving Times Silk Tie Quilt Restaurant Menus Free Huntsville, AL Newsletter! Sign Up By Category splitList(gEI('bcl'));
    About.com Special Features

    52. Slocum - RI To PA
    Genealogy of the Slocum family and their Miami Indian roots.
    http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~scwhite/slocum/index.html
    Search billions of records on Ancestry.com LOCUM From England among the first settlers to Portsmouth, Rhode Island, came the Slocum's; First Families of the Providence Plantations. Several generations later, a number of Slocum descendants, now Quakers, removed to the area of the Wyoming Valley of Pennsylvania, under King Charles II's Connecticut Charter, of 1662. Arrangements were later completed by the Susquehanna Company in Hartford, Connecticut, in 1768, for settling the Wyoming Valley lands. This Slocum line of descendants were among the very earliest participants to attempt to take advantage of this grant, the very earliest settlers of that area.
    SLOCOMBE - SLOCUM NAME From the New England Historical and Genealogical Register , Volume 34, October 1880, by Charles E. Slocum, page 391-2. "The surname Slocum, like so many other English surnames, is of local origin, and due to an abundant growth of the Sloe Tree in one of the numerous Combes (depressions, or valleys, in the hills) of southwestern England; hence the Sloe-Combe, and Slocombe." "Slocombe has been the uniform mode of spelling the name in England; but once have I found it otherwise, and that as Slocum, in the report of the Herald's Visitation of Devonshire in 1620, as published by the Harleian Society, London, 1872."

    53. Grants Bibliography - State Library Of Florida - Florida Department Of State
    This bibliography lists materials about grants Judith Ring, Director R.A. Gray Building 500 South Bronough Street Tallahassee, FL 323990250
    http://dlis.dos.state.fl.us/library/Bibliographies/grants_bib.cfm
    Search this web site About the Library/Home Collections Library Catalog Bibliographies ... FL Memory Project
    Judith Ring, Director
    R.A. Gray Building
    500 South Bronough Street
    Tallahassee, FL 32399-0250
    State Library

    R.A. Gray Building
    500 South Bronough Street
    Tallahassee, FL 32399-0250
    Hours:
    Mon.- Fri. 9:00am - 4:30pm Sat. 9:30am - 3:30pm State Archives R.A. Gray Building 500 South Bronough Street Tallahassee, FL 32399-0250 Hours: Mon.- Fri. 9:00am - 4:30pm Sat. 9:30am - 3:30pm Florida Administrative Code Florida Administrative Weekly R.A. Gray Building 500 South Bronough Street Tallahassee, FL 32399-0250 Hours: Mon.- Fri. 8:00am - 5:00pm Capitol Branch Room 701 The Capitol Tallahassee, FL 32399-1400 Hours: Mon.- Fri. 9:00am - 4:30pm State Records Center 4319 Shelfer Road Tallahassee, FL 32305 Hours: By Appointment Only
    Grants Bibliography
    Funding Sources
    Annual register of grant support [Ref] 001.44 Ann

    54. Chippewa Indian Online Records
    Dozens of pages of census and roll information, an obituary archive, maps, and a query forum. For descendants of US Chippewa/Ojibway tribes only.
    http://www.accessgenealogy.com/native/tribes/chippewa/

    55. MCHA Gift Shop • Genealogy
    Histories Diaries; Booklets Small Publications; Institutional Histories; Genealogy; Native Americans; Links; About MCHA; Membership; Contact Us
    http://www.monroehistorical.org/shop/onlineshop/genealogy.html
    Monroe County Historical Association

    About Online Orders
    Payment will be made through the secure PayPal™ system, with your choice of MasterCard, Visa, American Express or Discover credit or debit card, or a PayPal™ account.
    You must have a PayPal account to use the system, even if you intend to use a credit or debit card. You will be taken through the free registration process at checkout.
    Sales tax:
    All orders sold in state are subject to 6% Pennsylvania state sales tax, which will be added at checkout.
    A $4 shipping and handling charge will be added for the first item ordered. An additional $1 will be added for each subsequent item. Shipping and handling charges will be added at checkout.
    Total due:
    Your total due will be shown before you submit payment for your order.
    Questions about items or orders:
    Call 570 .421.7703 during our hours: Or contact us.

    56. People Of The Three Fires Native Genealogy
    Census data, tribal histories, and queries for the Ojibwa, Potawatomi and Ottawa tribes.
    http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~minatam/
    Search billions of records on Ancestry.com
    "People of the Three Fires": There are three major tribal groups in Michigan today: the Chippewa (Ojibwe), the Ottawa, and the Potawatomi. They comprise what is called the Three Fires Council. Although these three tribes have similar cultures and share the same territory, there are still some differences. Ottawa are found in the northern reaches of the Great Lakes; in michigan they occupy the western half of the Lower Peninsula. The Ottawa people were seasonal wanderers of the land and sailors of the Great Lakes gathering wild rice, netting fish, trapping both large and small game, and hunting large game such as moose, deer, and caribou. Ottawa people continue to be great traders and craftsmen. One hallmark of Ottawa life is the birch bark canoe. When the French came, the Ottawa people adapted well to the fur-trading economy and managed to avoid major military entanglements with the European colonial powers competing with each other for North American land and resource dominance. They did, however, fight with the Iroquois throughout the early 1600's.

    57. Genealogy.com: Stands Tall
    About Our Family Research Family Genealogy Native Americans of South Carolina VERY IMPORTANT FIND 1719 South Carolina Assembly in determining who should be indian for tax
    http://www.genealogy.com/users/t/a/l/Stands-Tall/
    DisplayAd('top', 728, 90);
    Community
    • Message Boards Family Home Pages
      Family Finder
      First Name: Middle: Last: Stands Tall
      Updated January 14, 2006
      About Our Family Research
      Family Genealogy
      Native Americans of South Carolina
      By the 1750's when these Christian, English-speaking, literate, industrious, mixed-blood families began to spread to southern NC and northern SC, those white colonists didn't know what to do with these people. Usually when they 'toed-the-line' socially, financially, and legally, these is little documentation to distinguish them from their white neighbors... its only when someone crosses the line that their is some legal case, tax dispute, violent confrontation, etc., etc., which of course documents these peoples' ancestry in the darkest possible light.
      The single most important point here is this.......it wasn't the "mixed-blood" factor that held these people together as separate communities (there are many families of mixed black/white ancestry or white/Indian ancestry that melted into the larger white or black population) ... it wasn't the Portuguese ancestry that held these people together as separate communities (many of the families did not claim Portuguese ancestry, and the majority did not claim it as their first choice of racial identity)...it was the Indian ancestry that was the identity and motivating factor which caused them to live separately from their white and black neighbors.

    58. Carolyne's Native American Genealogy Helper
    Native American genealogical resource including how-to articles that address the nuances and pitfalls commonly found in this complicated branch of genealogical research. Histories, maps and keys to census records are here, too.
    http://www.angelfire.com/tx/carolynegenealogy/
    Are you trapped in a Frame? LIBERATE YOURSELF! You'll have access to the entire site!
    Carolyne's Native American Genealogy Helper
    Thanks for stopping by!

    A major portion of this site focuses on Native American history and genealogy resources that may prove helpful in your ancestry search. If you are here searching your Native American ancestry, and your bloodline is mixed with the blood of immigrants to North America, you may be Metis - a French word meaning "mixed." South of the U.S. border, the term is "Mestizo." You will find links to Metis/Metsizo resources on my "helper" as well.
    Need help with Native American genealogy? You'll find Native American History and genealogy information links in my "Site Map" which is listed at the bottom of all the web pages. Tribal-specific census information, rolls and links to free online Indian census records will be found on the link called Native American Genealogy . This page also connects to my personal collection of tribal census data. The Native Links also has some genealogy resources listed. Updates are normally listed first on my blog

    59. Wichita & Caddo Nations I.T.
    Official USGenWeb and OKGenWeb site for the Wichita and Caddo Nations of Oklahoma Territory. Particular emphasis on the years 1867-1902, during the reservation period under the Wichita Agency.
    http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~itwichit/
    Search billions of records on Ancestry.com
    Welcome to the website for the Wichita and Caddo Nation of the OK/ITGenWeb, a part of the USGenWeb Project. Related research is also on the Caddo County site. I hope you find the site informative and useful in your genealogical research. I appreciate anything of interest that I could add to the site. If you have any comments, or know of resources that are available, please e-mail me at Cindy Neal.
    History
    George Washington (Sho-we-tat, Little Boy)
    A leader of the Whitebead Caddo
    Photo taken about 1872 History Before Formation of the Wichita Agency The Wichita Indians, of Caddoan stock, had separated from the Caddos proper about 1500 B.C., but the two peoples maintained close ties. In 1846, the various Indian tribes of Texas signed a far-reaching treaty with the United states. Both tribes were forced further westward, until in 1854 the Wichita were settled together with the Caddos, Wacos and Tawakonis on the Brazos Reserve (now Young County, Texas). This location proved to be doomed, because of hostile Northern Comanches who competed for hunting land and white settlers who competed for farm land. At that time large numbers of the three Caddo confederacies (Kadohadacho, Natchitoches and Hasanai) joined the Whitebead village near Fort Arbuckle in the Indian Territory. Here they were successfully raising crops, and began making attempts to adopt to the white ways, shown by the leader Showetat, when he took the name George Washington.

    60. Searching For Saponi Town -- Eastern Siouan, Eastern Blackfoot Descendants
    Tracing Eastern Siouan ancestors, also called Eastern Blackfoot, who originated in the NC/VA area, including Occoneechi, Monacan, Eno, Tutelo, and Saponi. Historical information and forum for sharing research.
    http://www.saponitown.com
    Home Forum Historical Articles Links
    Searching for Saponitown
    This site is for those seeking to research Native American ancestry deriving from the Piedmont of Virginia and North Carolina. These are Siouan people, commonly referred to generically as the Saponi, Tutelo. Occoneechee, Eno, Cheraw. Many families connected to these bloodlines have carried the identification of " Blackfoot ." Virginia and North Carolina, especially Southside Va, has thousands of the descendents of these people. Some of these people are in state recognized tribes but the vast majority of these people are not formally organized in tribes. Also we have found migration trails into all of Appalachia West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee; on into Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa. Some are even known to have settled in Alberta, Canada. There are historical records and family genealogies involving New York, while the historical records notes the main body, referred to at that point as Tutelo, being adopted into the Six Nations in Ontario. It is believed that many descendants survive Tutelo adoptees into some of those Six Nations. There are also migration patterns into South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Texas.

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 3     41-60 of 68    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | Next 20

    free hit counter