Still no evidence just heresay so far.
I was wondering how far back to you have to go to have full blood
Native member in your band?
Well, I'm an enrolled member of the MOWA Choctaw and my family does date all the way back...
We've lived in our lands since before the Indian Removal Act.
One of our cemeteries was established in 1800, the bodies were buried literally one, atop the other, until the cemetary was expanded an additional acreage was given to our people to help solve the problem.
We don't have to pretend to be who we are, we just are what we are.
Our community has been ostracized by both local towns on either end of us for most of my 44 years and long before that.
Segregation ended in 1965 for some but in 1985 we still had a race riot and the local paper said the Indians were scalping the white kids at school. Not to make light of that incident.
I've heard you say there was no proof of our heritage.
I'm going to post reference to some 30+ pages of proof that our people have access to for anyone's enjoyment. Our tribal center has more.
The biggest evidence we have how we live and our local customs - that have persisted in our community since before the Indian Removal Act.
Some of our folks are Choctaw (the current Mississippi Choctaw Princess seems to bear an uncanny to at least one MOWA squaw that lives on the Red Fox Road and a couple of others too).
In fact, I went to their website and quite a few of the people they are showing off as Indians could pass for locals MOWA's by appearance. Strange that no one thinks there might be some family between the two tribes.
It also seems strange to me that people forget that Mobile and Washington Counties were once a part of the Mississippi Territories.
People forget that the our people were the outcasts from other tribes - perhaps if you saw where my grandparents and great grandparents had to live you might better understand that they suffered some disadvantage due to their race and heritage.
Check this link out and take a look over 30 pages and 12 boxes of the MOWA historical documentation.
Remember our people were illiterate for most of this century to a large part.
Remember folks my dad's age had to walk some 5-6 miles to get to the Weaver Indian School on Patillo Road.
Remember not many of our folks ever made it to Citronelle High School to get past the 6th grade.
Remember our people had to claim white or black - most claim white and some to this day. Even when their skin is purely a light to a very dark tone of terracotta. Most now claim Indian since the MOWA was advertised.
Remember even today the MOWA still have some communication challenges getting tribal information to the entire tribe in the local communities.
People need written documentation...
We have that in the form of Dr. Monte L. Moorer - Look him up. He made some consideration for the heirs of the Native Americans that have lived here - he tried to help us and in fact, it seems some of our tribe may have neglected this fact.
I'm involved now my own immediate family has grown from a pair of grandparents who had 7 children to a much larger 200+ descendents in this past century. That's just 5 generations alone. There are more not counting the parents of my own grandparents - they can probably claim even more descendents - maybe double or triple this number.
The primary families of Byrds and Weavers and a few other surnames have inter-married over the last 100-200 years or so at least and as such mostly all of them have a considerably high blood quantum. I'd gather to say a few families are pretty close to pure blood.
Take a look at this evidence - it was not previously made public except as reference materials.
Darby Weaver