Based in Gadsden, not to be confused with the Echota and Chickamauga and four other groups also claiming to be Cherokee tribes in Alabama.
Their website basically admits they haven't been around long. Under history there's nothing but the Indian Ten Commandments. Their "council" has two (!) people in it.
Photos
http://cherokeesofalabama.net/powwow.htmlhttp://www.gadsdentimes.com/article/20090620/NEWS/906209991?Title=Cherokees-making-plans-for-golf-coursehttp://nachofoto.com/gallery/Cherokee_of_Alabama_Pow_Pow_in_Gadsden_August_30_2009-1http://www.gadsdentimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/gallery?Avis=GT&Dato=20090830&Kategori=NEWS&Lopenr=830009998&Ref=PH&template=galleryThis is their tribal spokesperson Teresa Bolduc on a genealogy board back in 1999.
http://boards.ancestry.com/surnames.bush/42.43/mb.ashx------------------------
http://www.gadsdenmessenger.com/articles/2009/06/24/news/news01.prtCherokees of Alabama lay out plans, bingo included
By Jacob Probus, News Editor (Updated: Tuesday, June 23, 2009 6:03 PM CDT)
....“We’re not interested in state (recognition),” Huddleston said, and so they have not applied for it, and don’t plan to do so....
In an opening statement by Teresa Bolduc, a tribal council member, she said the group has been formed for “about” nine years. She said they’re not seeking any kind of federal assistance for their members, they just want federal recognition....
They also laid out the process for joining the ‘tribe’ at the press conference. Anyone with certifiable one-eighth Cherokee blood can fill out an application to join. There is a voting process, a background check, and a vetting of heritage for prospective members.
“Anyone that can prove there heritage to Cherokee can join this tribe,” Sterling said, “but you have to prove that you’re Cherokee.”
Right now the group has “just a little under 300” members according to Huddleston. Natanda Three Winds, the membership chair on the council, said she handed out around 50 applications at the event.
“I want to ask for your support on this because this is going to bring jobs and money to Gadsden,” Jerry Lang, a member of the Warrior’s Society, said.
According to Lang the group is very family oriented.
“There’s no drinking, no alcohol, nothing like that involved in any of our activities because we’re family oriented,” Lang said. “We don’t allow drinking or drugs or anything like that.”
The Cherokees of Alabama will officially take over the 103.2-acre property on July 1, according to Huddleston.
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This is a discussion of their buying that golf course. Be warned if you go to that link, the thread has a lot of racist garbage.
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http://community.gadsdentimes.com/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/3291074365/m/9301057219/p/2rstephens Posted 09-03-2009 09:39 AM Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by k3s793:
Let's see...the people who owned the golf course knew that a reckoning was coming and they weren't going to make it with what funds they were taking in. They unloaded the property to the CoA. The CoA hoped to start raking in the bucks with electronic bingo. Hasn't happened and now they are facing the same issues. What I wonder is, if the CoA defaults are the prior course stockholders still on the hook to Regions Bank for the debt?
Local real estate folks tell me they paid cash, that someone wrote a check for $13.1 million.
Sure would be interesting to know how they got that kind of money. And who signed the check.
Could be a story for Andy Powell to look into.
bull
Posted 09-05-2009 11:38 PM Hide Post
why do you say that we (course stockholders) unloaded the property to the COA. the property is the most wanted property in etowah county. there were two companies that had decided to buy it but when the economy turned bad they both backed out which left it open for a new bid. the COA then took the initiative and purchased the best piece of land in the whole county. since the property was up for sale we sold it. dah?
and no, we weren't going to lose the property. we could have borrowed against it for the bank payment.
it is amazing how these rumors get started and then get bigger and bigger. and no, you are wrong about who is paying the money. but it is not for me to tell who it is but it is above board. sorry there isn't some scandal but sometimes what you see is just that.
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http://cullmantimes.com/local/x1116143570/Cherokee-group-asks-county-school-board-about-leasing-landJune 10, 2009
Cherokee group asks county school board about leasing land
By Trent Moore
A Cherokee education center could be on the way to Cullman county.
The Cullman County Board of Education has been approached by members of the Cherokee of Alabama to lease them land to create an American Indian education center in the Joppa area....
In a previous interview, Cherokee of Alabama member Teresa Bolduc said they hope to create “an educational hotspot” on the 357 acres near County Road 1807.
“We want to build a museum ... and walking trails ... and have a summer camp and
teach survival techniques,” Bolduc said.
Allen said the school board has yet to see a detailed outline for exactly what the Cherokee would like to do with the land....
The Cherokee of Alabama had previously asked the Cullman county commission to lease them the land for $1 a year for 99 years, though the land was actually owned by the school board.
Bolduc previously said her organization has been trying to get the Joppa land for nearly nine years and have had trouble finding out who exactly has control of the property. She said her organization approached the board of education several years ago, but were told to contact the Alabama Department of Education. The state department later told them to contact the county commission, Bolduc said.