Im Just Here To Make You Think Inc.

98% of African Americans Are In Fact Native Indians And Are Owed Millions 

Indigenous Aboriginal American Woman

The tens of millions of Black Americans, or rather Indians, who ‘disappeared’ after 1492 did not all die in the ‘holocaust’ inflicted within America. Hundreds of thousands were shipped to Europe and Africa as Indian slaves. The whole slave trade story was given to all of us in reverse. A mass colony of Africans were not shipped from Africa to America. The truth is that Black Indians were shipped from America to Europe! They were then shipped from Spain to Africa as commodity for African resources. These Black Indians, now mistaken as African Americans, were shipped back to America and classified as “African Slaves.” This part of our history is what the school systems fail to mention in history programs.

Every European nation that colonized North America utilized Indian slaves for construction, plantations and mining on the North American continent but more frequently in their outposts in the Caribbean and in the metropolis of Europe.

All historians note that nowhere is there more authentic documentation than in South Carolina, also known as the original English colony of Carolina, established in 1670. It is estimated that between 1650 and 1730 at least 50,000 Indians (and likely more due to transactions hidden to avoid paying government tariffs and taxes) were exported by the English alone to their Caribbean outposts.

Between 1670 and 1717 far more Indians were exported than Africans were imported. In southern coastal regions entire tribes were exterminated through slavery compared to disease or war. In a law passed in 1704, Indian slaves were conscripted to fight in wars for the colony long before the American Revolution.

Indigenous Aboriginal American Men

Brief Indian Slavery Complexity

Indians found themselves caught in between colonial strategies for power and economic control. The fur trade in the Northeast, the English plantation system in the south and the Spanish mission system in Florida collided with major disruptions to Indian communities.

Indians displaced from the fur trade in the north migrated south where plantation owners armed them to hunt for slaves living in the Spanish mission communities. The French, the English and Spanish often capitalized on the slave trade in other ways; for example they garnered diplomatic favor when they negotiated the freedom of slaves in exchange for peace, friendship and military alliance.

In another instance of Indian and colonial complicity in the slave trade, the British had established ties with the Chickasaw who were surrounded by enemies on all sides in Georgia. They conducted extensive slave raids in the lower Mississippi Valley where the French had a foothold, which they sold to the English as a way to reduce Indian populations and keep the French from arming them first. Ironically, the English also saw it as a more effective way to “civilize” them compared to the efforts of the French missionaries.

Indigenous Aboriginal American Woman


The Extent of the Indian Slave Trade 

The Indian slave trade covered an area from as far west and south as New Mexico (then Spanish territory) northward to the Great Lakes. Historians believe that all tribes in this vast swath of land were caught up in the slave trade in one way or another, either as captives or as traders. Slavery was part of the larger strategy to depopulate the land to make way for European settlers.

As early as 1636 after the Pequot war in which 300 Pequots were massacred, those who remained were sold into slavery and sent to Bermuda. Major slaving ports included Boston, Salem, Mobile and New Orleans. From those ports Indians were shipped to Barbados by the English, Martinique and Guadalupe by the French and the Antilles by the Dutch. Indian slaves were also sent to the Bahamas as the “breaking grounds” where they might have been transported back to New York or Antigua.

The historical record indicates a perception that Indians did not make good slaves. When they weren’t shipped far from their home territories they too easily escaped and were given refuge by other Indians if not in their own communities. They died in high numbers on the transatlantic journeys and succumbed easily to European diseases. By 1676 Barbados had banned Indian slavery citing “too bloody and dangerous an inclination to remain here.”

Indigenous Aboriginal American Woman


Obscured Identities of Native Indians 

As the Indian slave trade gave way to the African slave trade by the late 1700’s (by then over 300 years old) Native American women began to intermarry with imported Africans, producing mixed-race offspring whose native identities became obscured through time. In the colonial project to eliminate the landscape of Indians, these mixed-race people simply became known as “colored” people through bureaucratic erasure in public records.

In some cases such as in Virginia, even when people were designated as Indians on birth or death certificates or other public records, their records were changed to reflect “colored.” Census takers, determining a person’s race by their looks, often recorded mixed-race people as simply black, not Indian.

Indigenous Aboriginal American Family

The result is that today there is a population of people of Native American heritage and identity (particularly in the Northeast) who are not recognized by society at large, sharing similar circumstances with the Freedmen of the Cherokee and other Five Civilized Tribes as documented on the Dawes Roll cards by the United States Dawes Roll Administration.

Native American Indian Tribes have been awarded nearly a billion dollars in a historical settlement in early September 2015. 645 Native American Tribes won settlements against The U.S. Department of Justice, totaling in the amount of $940 million dollars.

The United States Government was very fearful that more Native Indians (also known as ‘Colored’, ‘Negro’, ‘Black’ or blank, meaning no race mentioned, on their birth certificates) will discover their true history and bloodline heritage, and that they will be forced to grant them all reparations and land.

So the US silently declared a deadline of December 31st 2014, for those people to make land claims and identity claims. Even though the deadline has passed, there are thousands of Native Indians still winning settlements through the US Supreme Court and most commonly through the United Nations courts. So DO NOT give up your fight, because where there’s a will, there is a way!

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FIND YOUR TRIBE & GET YOUR MONEY

Starting your journey of finding your family’s tribe but you need help? You don’t know where to look, what to have or what to do next?

Do not worry any further, I have done all of the sub-research myself from front to back with no help. So I will make things a bit easier for you to manage.

Click Here To Learn More

Dane Calloway is an educator, well-respected historian, and unorthodox researcher with 15+ years of related experience specializing in ethnographic, field, and historical research, American Indian history, World history, American history, case study, and unconventional journalism. Dane Calloway is the founder of Im Just Here To Make You Think Inc., in which he and his company specialize in educational writing and audiovisual works, sharing knowledge of surreptitious information by providing unembellished truths that is generally not mentioned and/or known to the public.

90 Comments

  • Ayaba

    Reblogged this on Ayaba's Labyrinth.

    • Anonymous

      How would i go about finding out if my blood really is ?? Torya Williams Fort Myers,Fl.

      • Ayaba

        Do not depend on DNA tests to tell you the truth. They are carried out by those who have oppressed us historically and still today. They will not tell you the truth and will link you to Africa in order to give life to their bs propaganda. The indigenous Americans (not so-called Native Americans) are black americans. When they test you for DNA, they'd check to see if you have Mongoloid blood and honestly, I'd suggest researching because DNA tests are scams anyway. The most they can do is tell you who your father and mother are.

      • Jane Moore

        Ancestry.com does a DNA test....$99, sometimes you can find a code for $79.

      • Horace

        23andme.com does DNA genealogy.

      • Jacqueline franks

        I need to know my DNA

      • myryh

        Yes, total Scams and why should we Trust aLIEn Murderous Vipers!

    • Anonymous

      #LOVEISLAWINTHEWASHITAW

    • Verlean Simpson

      After extensive research on Ancestry.com, I found my paternal grandmother, great-grandmother, etc all to be "Cherokee ", in the late 1800's and several times in the early 1900's they tried to register on the the Dawes for their American Indian heritage but was denied many times, what can I do now, their is definitely proof, pictures, etc, showing where they lived, what their slave master wrote down, etc....

      • Ayaba

        I honestly haven't gotten that far in my search but I know the area my ancestors are from was Cherokee territory. I suggest going through FIAAH ( www.fiaah.org ) to claim your indigenous identity.

      • A random White Guy

        You should show them the DNA results If they've said no before

    • Denise M Richardson

      Everything that is said in this article is correct, you can believe it or not, the choice is yours?

  • diaryofanegress

    Reblogged this on diaryofanegress and commented: Something many of you have stated in the past.

    • bernadette kinzer

      No on my fathers side his grand mother was indian trying to find out if due any money.

  • Shayla

    I never knew this, I'm interested in learning more, I always put American Indian on my paperwork I want to know about my family history

  • Twin

    Are there ways to find out if you are part native. I've heard that my great great grandma and graleat grandma were black foot.

    • Anonymous

      My family is Blackfoot Indian stemming for the Carolinas. The Blackfoot tribe is actually a group of tribes that joined together for protection from slave trading

  • Shannon Russell

    So, This explains why some of our native features are so prevalent. In fact, "WE ARE" Afrikan and Native American! I watched genealogy shows that told people that they're 98% Sub-Saharan and non native amer. because DNA was traced back to a certain tribe or area. That statement has crushed some even more because either the company doesn't know this history or just refuses to admit the 1 and only truth. Smdh. I, for one, am ecstatic to get more confirmation on what I've been told all along!! Thank You!!!!

    • D

      Those features you are talking about are negroid- not African.. Negroes were all over the planet.

  • Anonymous

    true

  • Torya Williams

    How do I find out if my my blood is Indian??

    • Lueirether Jackson

      i think i came from the chawtaw tribe out of miss. my great-grand mother looks native american, i like to also know what steps do i need to take in order to find out., however, u stated that dna is not true all the time because of lack of knowledge, so i heard that if the tribe accept u then u can join them if u like

      • David Jefferson

        I have heard this also from mention by family members. I have a picture of my great grand mother who they say was a chawtaw

      • Cheryl Glover

        I am Native American I wish I could send you a picture My father called me Morning Star My grandmother was full blooded Native American

  • angelsdawning2

    Hello, I thank you for the information. My family have always believed that we are of Indian descent. Can you suggest a good source for DNA testing. Thank you sincerely, Betty Ann Franklin

  • Tarvis Simms

    I am American Indian and I can prove it !

  • Felicia Lloyd

    I would like to trace my heritage, I am from the Northeast and was told my grandparents were of black foot and Cherokee heritage. Not sure how to start investigating if we are recipients. Please help!

  • Judy Campbell

    I only know about my family. My great grandfather was a slave in Virginia. He was married to Caroline a full blooded Cherokee Indian. They ran away to Canada and freedom. They had 2 girls and 2 boys. One of the girls was my grandmother Bertha Cook. She married a man who was part Spanish as far as I know. They had 9 children and my mom was a twin. They were the last of this union.

  • Frank Simmons

    This information is both eye opening and phenomenal in revealing what many had always hinted at. Thank you for this.

    • Juliet Cantrell

      My grandmother is listed on the Creek Dawes Indian roll at the age of 4 years old I know my ancestry because my mother told me the story since I was a little girl I know all my family's names that is how my mother traced are Indian ancestry she was the historian of the family to find out Indian ancestry everyone needs to start with the census there is a Indian census and there is the United States census there you will find your grandparents and great-grandparents names List It as they were found I have written the Creek Nation and called until they sent me the transcripts from the meetings back in 1903 the information can be found on your ancestors from the federal government also the Church of Latter-day Saints History Center they kept records of everyone's history they own ancestry.com you must know the names of your grandparents and great-grandparents and their brothers and sisters to find your information I hope this was helpful

  • Thomas Flood

    Outstanding Research. However, just how can one determine his/her blood connection to these native tribes?

    • Juliet Cantrell

      You must start with knowing all your family's names grandmother grandfather great-grandparents great great grand parents and their brothers and sisters then go to ancestry.com and check the census both of the senses the Indian census and the United States census find their names it will trade you two there roll numbers as Indians

  • Kristian Reginald Craige

    Thank You. K.C.

  • Carl Frederick Erickson

    I'm in north miami looking to establish my status as a native. Family records are limited to native born, in NorthEast Coastline in region known as NewYor, married to a Danish businessman and brought to St. Croix by Carl Frederick Erickson. My great grandfather, grandfather and farther are all Carl Frederick Erickson. My birth record name is Carl Frederick Erickson. The RhodeIsland Black Historical Archives has my family New York birth records. Any suggestions you may have on further research methods or contacts to establish my status would be greatly appreciated.

  • Alice

    This could answer so many questions about the information my mother gave me, the verbal history, the way we look. The fact that I could never find any writings of the sadness of parent for losing their children to the slavers. My family is from SC, VA and thought to be Chickawa and colored

    • Alice Hicks

      I have been spending time investigating my family history. We have taken DNA from mind mother and found out we have quite of bit of Indian blood. I have found mind forth generation grandfather. His name was waka or English language walker. Catherine was the name as well as mind alice was used throughout generation and mind family always knew we were Abraham. As I research my family on mind own. I found we have own a airport and a cemetery located in Greenville South Carolina. Where mind mother mother side of the family was regenerated. We do have our state recognizing but not our federal just yet. Now I have remarried and mind new husband mother in law lived to be over 90 odds years old told me that she was Cherokee ascendant as well. Mind work isn't done by no means of the word. Mind church in which I attended also helps with mind ancestry. They only can verified four generation well as I have found over nine generation. I would need more insistence on mind finding I already sent information to north Carolina and they inform me that we wasn't on their charts that I have to go through Oklahoma because they have several more tribes than them...thank you for this information and I will search more for having more finding concerning mind family history in order of having it of being known of my family members knowingly there roots.

  • NVGL

    Love the information!

  • Conniefaye Morris

    How do I find out if I'm of an Indian descent? My mom and dad were both from Louisiana and New Orleans.

  • Henry Barne's

    I believe there is truth to this . I'm from southeast Louisiana, we have always been told by our elders, that our bloodline on my mothers side was choctaw, st Tammany parish. Once part on the state of fl.

    • Tasha

      I'm from Slidell too. My grandparents were born in Lauderdale County Mississippi. I was told we can be linked to Choctaw.

  • Nuvo Sippa

    I love finding out what "they" have lied about our ancestry & seeing that the truth is coming out more and more. Thank you for sharing.

  • NanaEarth

    Great article! This is definitely a now topic. And the truth shall rise! My research has found that everywhere on this planet the invaders went they recorded that they found people of color. The names Indian, black, colored, Polynesian, melanesian, melanin, and all the other names were given by them, not us, confirming who they found during their travels. They identified those who they wanted to kill off so their people could take over the land and today they have re-named us African Americans so that we will have no claim to the land here, just Africa. In fact, in their quest to "take back their country", they may decide to call those who have accepted the tag of African Americans immigrants and try to send them back to Africa. Even those of us who have done DNA testing that claims to trace you back to Africa does not exclude you from being from this land originally due to movement of our people back and forth on the planet. DNA testing which is their so-called science, was invented to convince people of color that they were not from this land but from somewhere else. Testing has become a real farce, now they are telling people of color that they are European and many other mixtures confusing the whole issue, but taking away the land claim. Fact is the whole planet was populated by people of color and we have been wiped out in the billions so that the ones with no color could take over the planet as they are gradually doing. Claim the whole thing people of color, it is yours! Send them back to wherever they came from, they are the invaders!

    • Latonian Johnson

      Mine were Blackfoot Taylor's frm Brownsville Tenn

  • Wanda

    I would love to get more information on finding out about my family history i was told my grandmother Is Blackfoot my grandfather was from south America Chile Argentina

  • Shantwanette

    It's crazy because I can not find my identity anywhere. My grandparents were the absolute best anyone could ask for. My grandma was a very private person and never mentioned her childhood. And WATS even crazier is no one noes there maiden name. My grand dad on the other hand was a rambler he always would laugh a hearty laugh remembering his child hood wit siblings and his mom but the names were nicknames. Remembering my grandma would always say no matter where we go we will always b put on the back burner because we r Glovers. Sometimes I get scared because I dnt noe my own identity. My mom never gave up names either everybody was referred to as momma aunty grandma or sister. I've lost so much money on ancestry .com mylife archives and so many more. I am a lost soul and crying out for help geechi and Blackfoot is Wat I here from grandfather. My mom Indian and Creole.

    • Ebcroo

      My mother's maiden name is Glover...can trace it back generations mostly from Tx.

      • Troy

        The Texas Glover's are related to Danny Glover, and a lot of them have native features.

  • Michael sims

    IMO looking at DNA studies and people around the world, there are African Americans who have similar mutations as others like people of Mauritius and reunion island and Madagascar. They have similar origins as America in the way they started. It makes sense that we were being taken from Africa. Indians here were same as those over there, difference is that most west Indians were dark. But to your point, I think black type people were all over first and something significant happened that produce the current population of Europe and asia that wiped out black/asia and Europe in prehistory

  • Tiffany N Wiggins

    I would like to know what can be done. I know for a fact that I am Cherokee and western Indian. Daniel Boone is my an seater . We know that he was not a white man but in fact he is indian.

  • Gloria Stewart

    I was told by my Dad that his grandma's mother Maryanna Wolf was given that name when she was taken from her original family, that she always talked about but they couldn't understand grandma talk half the time and plus grandma always like to eat half baked dough, and that her 1st.husband was a strong man.so thats why I want to know. Also that my Dad came from rich blood that he didn't have to pick cotton. What does that mean?

  • Anonymous

    One of my Grand Mother's lastnames was Drinkwater...She lives to 101...She said her Mother was Cheerokee, Black foot and Choctaw..She remembered picking cotton in the fields with her in Greneda, Bayford Mississippi...and she became a Harris from My Grand Dad who has Cheerokee blood because his Father ran away from Oklahoma...My Mother's side was Mister, Williams and Washington from Bayford ME..they were from all parts of the South..New Orleans,Arkansas, Memphis, Alabama, Mississippi, Missouri...There's family on the West Coast and 31st coast as well...Cuban and Creole are also in Harris and Williams blood...

    • Krystle

      I am a Harris from Virginia and have traced back a slave and she was listed as mulatto. We do have Indian blood. Not sure the tribe though. However, I suppose she had children with a white man because my family has native American /white features.

      • Wilbert Harrus

        I am a double Harris, I descend from the Harris families on my paternal and maternal side.Most likely than not , we're distant cousins. The countenances you have described are consistent with my paternal Tuscarouran descent of Virginia. My maternal descent ,historically from North Carolina has a Cherokee admixture. Clearly the admixture of native American bloodline in black families is often understated or simply not acknowledged.

  • Nyiaa Jones

    This is all so interesting I have been told by many in my family we have roots back to the Seminole Indians and East Indians however no one has been able to produce the documentation. Can you please point me in the direction of where I may be able to begin the History of where my roots truly are my great Grandmother was born on a Seminole Indian reservation in Florida back in the 1800's.

  • Paul Annor

    I really want to know the history of blacks in general. ..because whn I look at some of the tribes in Ghana. .I can tell there is something similar if not the same to the culture of the Indians in America. ...their dance...how their warriors dresses and way of life is almost the same.. .I will be very glad if I am schooled on this topic which has been bothering my mind for a long time...thank you for this eye opening research. ..

  • Lisa Wms

    FYI-There are several forms of DNA test. The $99 test that ancestry uses only test the "maternal" (mothers) bloodline. So if your native lineage comes from your fathers side, you will not get that information from ancestry results. There are other sites that test the fathers lineage but for some reason it cost $250. Just want people to be informed and not mislead.

  • Emily Paige Ealey

    Hello. I would like the information for accurate DNA testing. Like everyone is stating my family elders state that we have Indian blood as well but do not have the evidence other than in pictures. I would like my family that still remain to be tested. Thank you for your assistance

  • Anonymous

    http://genetics.ncai.org/tribal-enrollment-and-genetic-testing.cfm

  • Irvin Morris

    Wishful thinking, unfortunately. DNA tests are not accepted by most tribal governments when considering enrollment. The tests may show native ancestry yes, but cannot identify a specific tribe. You have to be enrolled in a tribe recognized by the federal government to get any benefits at all. Requirements for enrollment vary. Most require verifiable proof of lineal descent. DNA tests just don't cut it. Don't waste your money! I am Diné (Navajo). My people are going through a period of increased intermarriage and as a result there are more and more Diné who are of mixed ancestry. We are matrilineal, which means descent is traced through the female line. If your mother is Diné so are you. The BIA requires 1/4 lineal descent for enrollment as a Navajo. Generally speaking, at least one of your grandparents must be Diné. A DNA test might be accepted if you're trying to prove parentage (descent from a specific person), but if you're attempting to prove native ancestry in general, well, good luck. DNA testing is notoriously unreliable. Aside from the biology, there is the political implications of what you're proposing. Namely, claiming a share of already scarce resources. Natives have never received adequate compensation or treaty-obligated funds to meet health and education needs. What makes you think that tribes will be willing to share that pittance? While there are probably millions of African-Americans with native blood, it is unlikely that they will ever legally qualify for membership in any tribe. It's not that I don't sympathize; my family comprises several different "racial" groups including African-American. Traditionally, membership was more fluid. People without a drop of Diné blood could be adopted and given a clan identity. At one time we had over 50 clans that included those adopted from other tribal groups. We even have a Mexican clan. African-Americans are known as Naahiłi or Naakai łizhiní. The latter comes from the early days of colonial contact when African-Americans accompanied Spanish expeditions into the Southwest. The name means "Black Spaniards." My people must negotiate the twisted road between two vastly different ways of reckoning Diné identity: the traditional clan system, or the federally-mandated method driven by Blood Quantum. Only the latter provides "benefits", i.e. money. All of this may not have any bearing on what seems to be your motive: gaining compensation as people who are owed because of historical wrongs committed against a marginalized mixed-race demographic. I don't know if the federal government will look favorably on that. Which you probably know by now. If we lived in the old days, this wouldn't be an issue at all. But unfortunately, the federal government doesn't want to open the flood gates to claims by other marginalized groups if you get your way.

    • Denise

      I am the historian of the family. I am not researching my native history for anything but to document our history. I don't want land, money, or membership. A piece of paper doesn't confirm for me what I already know. I want to thank you guys for being so informative about the history of Black Natives. My family is of mixed ancestry which has been buried in historical denial and fear. I am trying to open the door.

  • Miriama Haines

    Soooo how would I start to claim my money and land? Any websites or resources you can point me too?

  • Shunta

    My mother is native American from the menominee tribe which is located in Wisconsin and as far as our history according to my tribe and anything I've read. We have always been in America and more importantly we have alway been in Wisconsin. We still have our orginal land (well most of it) and we are of lighter skin. Not all indigenous Americans are dark skin. It all depended on where in the country you lived (more sun or less) also our history goes back further then the 1400's before Columbus. So if what you say is true and Africans are the true Indians then what are we.

    • Jen Sochi

      I don't think he's saying "Africans are the true Indians". He said many of the indigenous peoples that lived near the coast and in the south were shipped to different countries as slaves. Meaning the slave trade wasn't just one sided. As you stated, it's important to note that indigenous peoples had all different skin tones depending on location. Unfairly, many darker skinned indigenous peoples were labeled "African-American" creating generations of people who don't know their true ancestry and were denied claims that lighter skinned indigenous peoples were able to obtain.

  • Anonymous

    As though this maybe true, white people will never acknowledge this or pay what is owed.

  • A'Doris Andrews

    For me, I just would like to know if what I've heard my entire life is true. My motivations are more about knowing myself. I've always been told that my maternal great-great grandmother was Chawtaw (not sure if I'm spelling it correctly) from either Louisiana or Arkansas; as she lived in both places and died in Junction City. My own features suggest that my people were not purely African. I embrace both, but I'd like to know more. If DNA test are not a good source, then what is?

  • Nicole

    You have to show proof of who are you descended from. Nowadays some tribes are starting to close that circle to protect their investments or in many cases way to many registered tribal members. My Tribe is starting to do that because they use to accept 3/4 and now they only accept 1/2 and 4/4 MS Choctaw. Its more like the tribal members that are registered are wanting to close it because of too many mixes that are claiming and using descendants that they are not actually related too. 1/2 half's are still able to get full benefits, but anything below that you will only get so much but not all benefits from the tribe.

  • Clouden

    I have a very mixed heritage, my maternal grandmother was descended from native people/Indian but was born in the Caribbean; she said that they were called Taino / Carib/ Arawak/ Lokoan indian/native people. But her stories said she said we were not originally from their and her grandfather fought for their freedom with tribes their. Some were decimated by Europeans, diseases and murdered it is hard to tell. She was born in Grenada and our family historically island hopped Grenada, Trinidad, St. Vincent, Barbados, Venezuela and other islands. But many traditions are a mixture some similar to American Native People and African traditions. Some, of the stories from my childhood were unbelieveable, but aren't so easily dismissed with the more I learn. We are not taught the Truth, the victors write the narrative.

  • Nandi charles

    I'm caribbean born but raised in the United States. My Dna test on both ancestry and 23 and me said I was 2.5% native American indian. My parents are both guyanese but my mom ancestry is from Barbados. Originally my mom family handed down stories that some colored man from the south east of the United States and his brother got separated and he left to go to the caribbean. I didn't believe the story until I got my results back and found that my DBa matched with black Americans as 2nd and 3rd cousins on the database from south carolina, georgia, mississippi, alabama and Florida. It was fascinating...that sort of confirmed my mom's family story that her great grandfather was southern American n relocated to the islands. Also I'm not sure what type or tribe of native American is in my bloodline but it came up on the tests. There was also white but that's another story.

  • James Blacksher Jr.

    My grandmother was a tall light skin women , Her sisters were also . One day as a kid, I asked mama, We all called her Mama, What are you mixed with ? She told me african, Choctaw, and Irish . what degree of Choctaw Native are her grandkids ? before she married my grandfather, she was Thelma Cobbs, but became Thelma Wagoner .

  • Janice Flowers

    I believe my grandfather was from the Actacoochees an Indian tribe from Eufaula Alabama.His name is J.B Flowers how can I find Information.

  • Gail

    Hi peace and love, My great great grandmother and her children name Littlejohn's are on the Dawes roll as Mississippi band Choctaw/ Cherokee it states rejected mcr with numbers. How do I move forward.

  • Margaret

    My grandmother was part Indian. I want to know more about my DNA! My mother has no information.

  • Kueleza S. Vega

    Cherokee Taino Ohlone Kumiyah Madjai Dey KNoble Ku Ali Shahid Bey I AM From TheMiddleEast Oakland

  • Linda

    DNA testing companies will not tell the truth. I was told I have a un known percentage of DNA. What! (unidenifiable DNA) I'm in the process of finding a reliable DNA company, that is if thier is any out here who will tell the truth. These $5.00 Indians needs to be stopped and the true heritage and funds returned and go to the rightful people with Afro-Indian American ancestery. A person's true hertiage is every man/woman's right under God and the law of the land. So I say to these DNA testing companies STOP BREAKING THE LAW and do what's right.

  • Marguerite

    My dad told me that we were comprised of Black Indians, Kenyans & Nigerians, but I'd only found this little book call 'Black Indians' years ago that was borrowed and never returned and nothing else until recently. Thanks for your work!!

  • Rascal von Manor

    If you take a look at Europe the Black (Mohrhen) nobles look like Africans but I'm pretty sure they are native Americans. They were the first to build hotels that remind me of long houses in the 13th century. Not seen in Africa only in America and Central Asia. There's more but I won't dig into. Also the dates of African has to wrong, off by 500 years...

  • Stan

    I spent over a year researching my own ancestry. I used an audit approach reviewing as much testimonial, documentary and physical evidence as was available. What I found was shocking!! All four of my grandparents were of Native ancestry. I could not find even one African in my research. To be honest I only researched my father's fa completely. His father was 25 percent Cherokee and his mother decended from a different tribe. My family is from North and South Carolina where most of the slaves married Indians. Even the US government in 1897 acknowledged that southern blacks have "consideredable" Native ancestry. I also discovered the Racial Integrity Act of 1924 and it's "One Drop Rule" which classified a person with as little as one drop of African blood as black. This meant that black people in the southeast of United States were robbed of their Native ancestry while the same law allowed Europeans with one drop of Native blood to be classified as Native Americans. This is why the reservations are full of mixed European Native Americans and $5 Indians. I invite all to read the article i wrote on why DNA test results aren't realistic in quora.com. These test results are saying that black Americans are 70-80 percent West African is a lie plan and simple. Personally I believe the average black American is indegenious, native, African and European....and the percentages should be in that order. This highest being indegenious and native and the lowest African and European. The US government combined the indegenious and African peoples and called the all colored, then negoes, then black and now African American. The correct classification is indegenious or Aboriginal peoples. I concur fully with this write-up and invite all to read my write-up posted on quota.com ... answered the question: Are DNA test results reliable? I have supplied much reference material including some by the author of this article. Shalom!!

  • Brenda A Nero

    IT IS WHAT IT IS because itzallconnected. Sexism, racism, and colorism are pre-programmed, mental, illnesses founded, and grounded, in extremely low self-esteem. The belief in "white supremacy" has reduced the majority of pale-skinned [white and imitation white] people to living lies who have chosen to die in The Lie. Protecting the credo of a pale-skinned [white], male supremacy has always--in all ways--been more important than human decency, truth and justice. Discovery is a proud American tradition. The yet unknown tragedy is how "White People" continU to "diss-cover" their true, democratic, purpose. Soon enough, more of US will give thanks for the knowledge that becomes "won" with, and as, US. Prepare for The Rude Awakening of [white and imitation white] America. It will be called A 2020 Vision. "If we all are not free [to be], none of us is free [to be]." - Ida B. Wells-Barnett

  • R. Hairston

    That's why my great grandparents look like they look.

  • Louis Wright

    Thanks for the validation I have a picture of my great great grand father and his daughter as they say one picture is worth a 1000 words

  • Parahkiyah

    Dave Calloway you’ve done a great body of work, and I’d to be commended. I have something you may be interested in. Please contact me at you convenience. Onilengozi@yahoo.com. Peace and love

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