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The Florida Historical Quarterly. 71 (2): 188–208. ISSN 0015-4113. JSTOR 30150360. Hann, John H. (1996). "Late Seventeenth-Century Forebears of the Lower Creeks and Seminoles". Southeastern Archaeology. 15 (1): 66–80. ISSN 0734-578X. JSTOR 40713051. Hann, John H. (2006). The Native American World Beyond Apalachee. University Press of Florida.
Cherokee Nation West of Missouri and Arkansas (formerly Cherokee Nation West or Southern Band of the Eastern Cherokee Indians of Arkansas and Missouri). [23] Letter of Intent to Petition 5/11/1998. [25] Also in Missouri. Cherokee-Choctaw Nation of St. Francis and Black Rivers, [23] Paragould, AR. Letter of Intent to Petition 08/01/2006. [25]
Choctaw Nation Tribal Services Center in Hugo, Oklahoma. The Choctaw Nation is the first indigenous tribe in the United States to build its own hospital with its own funding. [41] The Choctaw Nation Health Care Center, located in Talihina, is a 145,000-square-foot (13,500 m 2) health facility with 37 hospital beds for inpatient care and 52 exam ...
Operating ICFs/IID certified companies and organizations must recognize the developmental, cognitive, social, physical, and behavioral needs of individuals with intellectual disabilities who live in their setting or environment by requiring that each individual receives active treatment in regards to appropriate habilitation of their functions to be eligible for Medicaid funding. [6]
Each of the refusing states has Republicans in command of their legislatures – but Florida, with 2.5 million uninsured, also has one of the nation’s highest shares of residents without health ...
Unless repealed by the federal government, the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma would effectively be terminated as a sovereign nation as of August 25, 1970. [3] After a long struggle for recognition, the Mississippi Choctaw received recognition in 1918. The Mississippi Choctaw soon received lands, educational benefits, and a long overdue health care ...
Jackson McCurtain was born in Mississippi on March 4, 1830, to Cornelius McCurtain and Mahayia Nelson. He fought in the American Civil War serving as a captain in the Confederate First Regiment of Choctaw and Chickasaw Mounted Rifles and later as a lieutenant colonel in the First Choctaw Battalion. [1]
The Oklahoma Indian Welfare Act of 1936 (also known as the Thomas-Rogers Act) is a United States federal law that extended the 1934 Wheeler-Howard or Indian Reorganization Act to include those tribes within the boundaries of the state of Oklahoma.