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  2. Black Seminoles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Seminoles

    The black Seminole culture that took shape after 1800 was a dynamic mixture of African, Native American, Spanish, and slave traditions. Adopting certain practices of the Native Americans, maroons wore Seminole clothing and ate the same foodstuffs prepared the same way: they gathered the roots of a native plant called coontie, grinding, soaking, and straining them to make a starchy flour ...

  3. Seminole Wars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seminole_Wars

    Seminole Yuchi Choctaw Black Seminoles: Commanders and leaders; Andrew Jackson (1816–19, 1835–37) Martin Van Buren (1837–41) William Henry Harrison (1841) John Tyler (1841–42) Wiley Thompson † (1835) Duncan Clinch Edmund Gaines Winfield Scott (1836) Thomas Jesup (1836-38) Alexander R. Thompson † (1837) Richard Gentry † (1837)

  4. Second Seminole War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Seminole_War

    The Second Seminole War, also known as the Florida War, was a conflict from 1835 to 1842 in Florida between the United States and groups of people collectively known as Seminoles, consisting of Creek and Black Seminoles as well as other allied tribes (see below).

  5. Wild Cat (Seminole) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wild_Cat_(Seminole)

    The U.S. began the Second Seminole War December 1835, with the expressed goal to find every Seminole village, destroy it, and send any living Seminole to Indian Territory. [6] The war's first battle was a successful Seminole raid on U.S. Army's Major Frances Dade's two companies of soldiers.

  6. Black Indians in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Indians_in_the...

    Because the judgment trust was based on tribal membership as of 1823, it excluded Seminole Freedmen, as well as Black Seminoles who held land next to Seminole communities. In 2000 the Seminole chief moved to formally exclude Black Seminoles unless they could prove descent from a Native American ancestor on the Dawes Rolls. 2,000 Black Seminoles ...

  7. Battle of the Caloosahatchee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_the_Caloosahatchee

    Two prisoners the Seminoles took from the Battle of the Caloosahatchee were two Black Seminole men named Sampson Forrester and Sandy Perryman, who were both taken into the Big Cypress Swamp. Forrester and Perryman were initially loyal to the Seminole tribe at the start of the war, but they later defected to the United States in exchange for ...

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  9. Seminole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seminole

    In 1835, the U.S. Army arrived to enforce the treaty. The Seminole leader Osceola led the vastly outnumbered resistance during the Second Seminole War. Drawing on a population of about 4,000 Seminoles and 800 allied Black Seminoles, he mustered at most 1,400 warriors (President Andrew Jackson estimated they had only 900).