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Category: 17.5. Efforts to obtain federal recognition.
HUNT008. Hunt, Cynthia L. Looking
back while walking forward (column). Carolina Indian Voice
25 May 2000: 2.
Publication type: Newspaper article
This installment describes three commissioned
federal reports on the Lumbee. The first was written by Fred A. Baker
in July, 1935 in relation to the tribe's request for benefits under the
Indian Reorganization Act (see The Lumbee Indians: an annotated bibliography,
item 1138). Baker was in Robeson County June 16-27, 1935, meeting with
various groups of Indians to discuss establishing a land project that
would remove them from the vicious sharecropping and credit financial
traps (described in Gerald Sider's Lumbee Indian histories (1993),
pages 65-68).
Baker estimates that he met with a total of 8,000 Indians.
He summarizes in his report, It may be said without exaggeration
that the plan of the government meets with practically the unanimous
support of all the Indians. . . . They seem to regard the advent of
the United States government into their affairs as the dawn of a new
day, a new hope and vision. . . . We must confess to the fact that our
own feelings were deeply touched as the old people expressed so deep
a longing to have a piece of land on which they could live in peace
without fear of ejectment by a landlord. Baker's report was a
step in the process leading to the establishment of the Red Banks Mutual
Association cooperative farming project (see The Lumbee Indians:
an annotated bibliography, pages 143-146).
The article then describes John Pearmain's reports (October
1935 and November 11, 1935; see The Lumbee Indians: an annotated
bibliography, items 1139 and 1140). They also related to the Red
Banks cooperative project.
Finally, the article describes the study by Dr. Carl
Seltzer to determine which Indians were 1/2 or more Indian blood. Hunt
explains, The study included a long intense process which included
pseudo-scientific anthropometric analysis of head shape and measurements,
skin pigmentation, hair, ears, nose, lips, teeth, and blood type measurements.
This was a mockery to tribe and affront to the pride of the Indians
of Robeson County. The study was not a success. Out of approximately
12,400 Indians, only 209 applied to be a part of the study. Only
22 of the 209 were found to be 1/2 or more Indian blood; they came to
be known as the Original 22. [For background, see Knick's
The Lumbee in context (item KNIC027),
pages 42-43, The Blood Game, and pages 62-63, about the
extent of physical variation among Native Americans and other races
as well.]
Note: Author is Lumbee.
Additional Subjects: Red Banks Mutual Association | Carl
C. Seltzer | Fred A. Baker | John Pearmain
This annotation was written on: July 12, 2001; last edited
on July 3, 2002.
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