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The Journey, 2019

  • Broadcast in Books
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New Titles From Scott Hodalee Sewell

  • Eyes on the Prize in the Native South: The Struggle for Federal Recognition in the 21st Century As of 2018 the United States federal authorities have a special government to government relationship with the 567 federally acknowledged Indian tribes.
  • The Freedmen’s Quandary: Crossroads of Tribal Identity in Indian Country The 1890 census counted 18,636 people "of Negro descent in the Five Tribes" present in the Indian Territory, communities who were made fully members of the Five Tribes by treaties negotiated in 1866 with their emancipation from slavery to the individual Cherokee, Creek, Choctaw, Chickasaw, and Seminole Nation citizens who held them in bondage. Today their descendants are still known as the Freedmen, and many have seen their long historical ties to the Five Tribes being challenged, minimized, or severed.
  • Last of the Dominickers, For nearly 200 years’ outsiders in Florida’s panhandle viewed suspiciously a group of people who didn’t fit the usual racial categories of the day, these insular, independent, and rugged families were called “Dominickers”, and said to be a mixture of black, white, and Indian. Scholarship in the last few decades have documented the groups ancestral ties tao native Americans in the Virginia and Carolinas and to historic Free People of Color populations that are as well progenitors of many other groups including the Melungeons, Lumbees, Redbones, and other historic “American Isolate” groups.

Hodalee has several titles and all can be purchased through Amazon from Backintyme.biz. https://amzn.to/2Dur2Lx 

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