|
Anderson List of Mixed Bloods
[59]The first Choctaw family examined, the Anderson family, has
little or no documentation in Choctaw country prior to the removal era (see
Chart 3) other than family tradition and
representation on the Armstrong roll. There is, however, a Robert C. Anderson
listed as a Mississippi Territory volunteer during the Creek War. On August 12,
1813 he had a commission Second Lieutenant.8
But beyond this and a few Andersons on the 1808 and 1810 Washington County
Mississippi territorial census there is little documentation on this family. One
might surmise from the relatively small number (seven heads of households) of
Andersons on the
Armstrong Roll that they came late into the area. Since no
source positively identifies any Anderson as a mixed blood the family may have
entered Choctaw country as countrymen.
One Anderson (no first name given) was located at the head of BoK Ho Ma which
probably is the Bogue Homa, or Red Creek of the Melish map which flows southwest
into the Chickasawhay River north of Sinte Bogue. Its headwaters would be in
present Washington County, Alabama[60] approximately half way
between the Tombigbee and Chickasawhay
Rivers (See
Figure 2). Four other Andersons are
located by Armstrong as living on the
Chickasawhay at Emok La Sha, in the same
area, while another is found along the
eastern side of Long Creek (not found in
Melish, but probably in present Yalobusha
County) and a last one living on north
ChakKe Creek (also not found in Melish).9
The Andersons listed on the Armstrong roll
had thirty-eight members inclusive for an
average family size of over five. They were
located near the white settlements along the
Tombigbee and Chickasawhay Rivers.
Key to Chart
Probable = P, Countryman = C,
Yes = Y, Trader = T,
Married = md, Mixed Blood = mb
Chart 3[59a]
Anderson List of
Mixed Blonds
|
Name |
Location |
MB |
Remarks |
|
Anderson, (nin)
Anderson, Adam
Anderson, Andel
Anderson, Daniel
Anderson, Danl Jr.
Anderson, Ed.
Anderson, Gains
Anderson, Jincey
Anderson, John
Anderson, John E
Anderson, Joseph
Anderson, Lam C.
Anderson, Reason
Anderson, Reuben |
BokHoMa head
Chickasawhay
Chickasawhay
Chickasawhay
Long Creek
Chickasawhay
N ChakKe Creek
|
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P |
4 in family
6 in family
6 in family
3 in family
4 in family
5 in family
10 in family
|
As late as 1839 a John Anderson attended the
Choctaw Academy in Kentucky. He, along with
twenty-nine other Choctaw students, signed a
protest letter against what they considered
to be poor administration of the school. It
is not known whether his family was still in
Alabama or Mississippi, or had removed to
Indian Territory.10
There is no known available genealogical
chart for the Choctaw Andersons, making the
family relationships uncertain.
Choctaw Mixed Bloods
8. See John F. H. Claiborne, Mississippi as a
Province, Territory, and State with Biographical Notices of Eminent Citizens,
(1889, reprint, Spartanburg: The Reprint Company, Publishers, 1978) 320n.
9. National Archives, Old Map Files, Melish maps of
Alabama and Mississippi.
10. United States serial set, 26th Cong., 2d sess.,
House doc. 109, "Choctaw Treaty Dancing Rabbit Creek," 136.
Notes About the Dissertation:
Source: Choctaw Mixed Bloods and the Advent of Removal, Dr. Samuel James
Wells, 1987, University of Southern Mississippi. Copyright Dr. Samuel James
Wells, 1987-2009. Used here with permission.
Online Publication: The manuscript was scanned and
then ocr'd. Minimal editing has been done, and readers can and should expect
some errors in the textual output.
This site includes some historical materials that may imply negative
stereotypes reflecting the culture or language of a particular period or place.
These items are presented as part of the historical record and should not be
interpreted to mean that the WebMasters in any way endorse the stereotypes
implied.
Free
Genealogy |
Indian
Genealogy |
Choctaw Mixed Bloods
|
|