Artwork by Hatty Ruth Miller, Lumbee 
artist  
 

Search the site>

Category: 3. Comprehensive studies and overviews

49. McPherson, O. M. Indians of North Carolina: Letter from the Secretary of the Interior, Transmitting, in response to a Senate resolution of June 30, 1914. Caption Title: Report on Condition and Tribal Rights of the Indians of Robeson and Adjoining Counties of North Carolina. US. 63rd Congress, 3rd Session. S. Doc. 677. Dated 5 Jan. 1915. Serial Set 6772. 252 p. Key source Key source

50.  Oxendine, Clifton. A social and economic history of the Indians of Robeson County, North Carolina. Thesis. George Peabody College for Teachers, 1934.

53. Barton, Lew. The most ironic story in American history: An authoritative, documented history of the Lumbee Indians of North Carolina. Charlotte, NC: Associated Printing Corp., 1967.

54.  Dial, Adolph L., and David K. Eliades. The only land I know: A history of the Lumbee Indians. San Francisco: Indian Historian P, 1975.  Rpt. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse UP, 1996. Key source Key source

55. Blu, Karen I. The Lumbee problem: the making of an American Indian people. 1980; Lincoln: Nebraska UP, 2001. Key source Key source

56. Barton, Bruce. An Indian manifesto: Bruce Barton’s The best of—As I see it: The sometimes irreverent but always honest columns as they appeared in the “Carolina Indian Voice” newspaper over the last ten years by Bruce Barton, editor; with some “Musings” by Ol’ Reasonable Locklear. A special ten year anniversary edition, 1973-1983. Pembroke, NC: The Carolina Indian Voice, 1983.

57.  Lumbee River Legal Services. The Lumbee Petition.  Prepared in cooperation with the Lumbee Tribal Enrollment Office.  Julian T. Pierce and Cynthia Hunt-Locklear, authors.  Jack Campisi and Wesley White, consultants.  Pembroke: Lumbee River Legal Services, 1987.  3 vols. Key source Key source

58. Dial, Adolph L. The Lumbee. Indians of North America. New York : Chelsea House, 1993. Key source Key source

59. Sider, Gerald M. Lumbee Indian histories: Race, ethnicity and Indian identity in the Southern United States. New York: Cambridge UP, 1993. Key source Key source

KNIC024. Knick, Stanley. “Along the Robeson Trail” (column). Carolina Indian Voice 13 August 1998: 2.

KNIC027. Knick, Stanley. The Lumbee in context: toward an understanding. Pembroke, NC: Native American Resource Center, University of North Carolina at Pembroke, 2000. 
Key source Key source

MAYN019. Maynor, Malinda, and Judy Kertesz. Sounds of Faith [Web site]. 1999-2002. Available: http://www.unc.edu/~mmaynor/. Accessed February 22, 2007. Key source Key source

SIDE002. Sider, Gerald M. Living Indian histories: Lumbee and Tuscarora people in North Carolina. Chapel Hill: U of North Carolina P, 2003. Key source Key source
This revised edition of Sider's 1993 work, Lumbee Indian histories, has 80 pages of new material, including a new preface. Annotation forthcoming.



    For thorough research, please consult The Lumbee Indians: An Annotated Bibliography (Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Co., 1994) which lists 11 annotated items dealing with this topic.

 

This page was updated on June 8, 2007 1:29 PM

Copyright © 2002-2007, Glenn Ellen Starr Stilling. All rights reserved.