Artwork by Hatty Ruth Miller, Lumbee artist  
 
Category: 7.  Literature; creative writing by Lumbee people 

     SCHM001. Schmitz, Neil. “The other man. Buffalo Child Long Lance became famous as Blackfoot Chief, even though he wasn't one.” Buffalo News (New York) 8 October 1995: M12 (Sunday). 

Publication type: Newspaper article 

Electronic access: Knight-Ridder Newslibrary (www.newslibrary.com), $1.90 

Schmitz encountered Long Lance at age thirteen as an exciting 
summer read. He explored it again in a graduate seminar.  Upon 
checking further, he found that Long Lance was actually Sylvester 
Long, a Croatan (an earlier tribal name for the Lumbee) born in Winston-Salem who had assumed the identity of a Cherokee and then (in Canada) a Blackfoot. Besides writing Long Lance, Long was an active lecturer; starred in a silent film, The Silent Enemy; became a pilot; and endorsed a running shoe. He committed suicide in 1931. Schmitz discovered 
the research of Donald B. Smith, whose sympathetic biography of 
Long, Long Lance: the true story of an impostor (The Lumbee Indians:
an annotated bibliography, item 356) was published in 1982. 

A new edition of Long's 1928 book, 
Long Lance: the autobiography of a Blackfoot Chief
(see The Lumbee Indians: an annotated bibliography
item 290) was published by the University of Mississippi Press in 
1995 and edited by Donald B. Smith. Upon rereading it, Schmitz was able to 
recognize the clues of Long's assumed identity and noticed the distancing 
from his material.  He understood the meaning behind Long's 
statement that he was telling “the experiences of our old warriors 
who are still living, but who cannot tell their own stories 
because they do not speak the white man's tongue.”  

Additional subjects: Sylvester C. Long (Buffalo Child Long Lance) 

This annotation was edited on: June 6, 2002

Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net

 

 
 
 
Copyright © 2001, Glenn Ellen Starr Stilling. 
This document may be reproduced only if this copyright notice is reproduced with it.