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Juzan List of Mixed Bloods
[84]One of the earliest and most colorful of the mixed-blood lines is the Juzan
family (see Charts 14 and 15). The noted Choctaw historian Muriel Wright
discussed the history and genealogy of the family in a little-known, private
letter to a Juzan descendent in 1931, writing:
"A young Frenchman by the name of De
Juzan, acting as military aide to
Chevalier De Noyan, fell in a battle
[Ackia] between the French and the
Chickasaws, in May 1736....Whether De
Juzan was
connected in any way with the Juzan
family among the Choctaws is uncertain
at this time, although it has been my
understanding that the ancestor of the
Juzans was a Frenchman who settled among
the Choctaws in the latter half of the
18th century.
"I am of the strong opinion that the
fifth signer of the Treaty of Doaks
Stand, in 1820, 'James Hunizon' was a
James Juzan Hunizon being a corruption
of the correct spelling 'Juzan.' In
1823, the missionaries of the American
Board of Commissioners of Foreign
Missions (Boston) established a school
at Mr....Juzan's who lived about 85
miles southeast of the Mayhew Mission
(present Lowndes County, Miss.) and on
the old Choctaw trading path to Mobile.
In 1828, Pierre Juzan was among the
older Choctaw boys who attended the
Choctaw Academy at Blue Springs,
Kentucky. He and George Harkins, another
student, were reported to have been "an
ornament to the nation." ...Major Juzan
(probably the father, James) was said to
have inspected the Academy
Key to Chart
Probable = P, Countryman = C,
Yes = Y, Trader = T,
Married = md, Mixed Blood = mb
Chart 14[84a]
Juzan List of Mixed
Bloods
|
Name |
Location |
MB |
Remarks |
Juzan, Charles
Juzan, Charles
Juzan, Charles
Juzan, Daniel
Juzan, Delilah
Juzan, Eliza Ann
Juzan, Isabell
Juzan, Jack
Juzan, Jackson
Juzan, James
Juzan, Lucy
Juzan, Mary
Juzan, Peter
Juzan, Pierre
Juzan, Pierre, Sr.
Juzan, Pierre, II
Juzan, Pierre, III
Juzan, Pierre IV
Juzan, Pierre, V
Juzan, Rebecca
Juzan, W. Peter
Juzan, William
Juzan, William
Juzan, William |
Choctaw Nat
Trading House
Tombigbee R.
Choctaw Nat
Choctaw Nat
Choctaw Nat
Choctaw Nat
Choctaw Nat
Choctaw Nat
Choctaw Nat
Choctaw Nat
Choctaw Nat
Chunky Town
Choc Academy
Ackia
Choctaw Nat
Choctaw Nat
Choctaw Nat
Choctaw Nat
Choctaw Nat
Mobile
Choc Academy
Marengo Co |
Y
C
P
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
P
C
P
P
Y
Y
Y
T
P
P |
md Peggy
Traherne
T500 debt
26 in family
bro of Charles
md Jesse Brashears
md Hugh Flack
son of Charles
md Chick
md A. Geary
md Ben Lenore
md niece of Push
Bienville aid
md dtr of Push
son of Charles
md John Bond
id as Commissary
Land reservation
md a Brashears |
Chart 15[84b]
Juzan Genealogy
Chart

[85]and given his
approval of the institution In 1829
William Juzan was enrolled as a student.51
Wright correctly identifies Pierre Juzan
and George Harkins as students at the
Choctaw Academy and continues her letter by
discussing the Juzan kinship to Pushamataha
and other full-blood leaders:
"Both Pierre and Charles, probably
brothers, were beneficiaries under the
terms of the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit
Creek in 1830, to the amount of 1240
acres of land. They both lived on the
west bank of the Tombigbee River in the
vicinity of its confluence known as
Shuknachi River (Succornoochee) in
Western Alabama. There were twenty-six
members in Charles' family, which
included his twenty slaves (slaves were
listed in giving the total number of
each family under the census). Pierre
was single and given the title of
Captain.
"Since both Captain Pierre and Charles
Juzan lived in the northern part of
Chief Nittakechi's district and not far
from the chief's home, it would seem
that they were of the Kusha Okla.
Nittakechi himself was Kusha and a
nephew of Pushamataha. I have never
found a record proving that Pushamataha
was Okla hannali Okla (Six Towns
people), on the contrary, I believe him
to have been of the Kusha. Direct family
relationship was based upon whether one
belonged to the Hattak iholata or the
Kashapa okla, the two great iksas, the
laws of which governed marriage among
the ancient Choctaws. Perhaps you have
proof that that the Juzans were directly
related to Pushamataha. It seems quite
possible to me; at any rate, both were
members of the Kusha okla from which the
chiefs of the Southeastern District in
the old nation in Mississippi were
selected. Because of his intemperate
habits, Oklahoma was chief for only a[86]
short time after Pushmataha's death,
Nittakechi, another of his nephews,
being selected to fill Oklahoma's
position. After the migration of the
Choctaws to the Indian Territory,
Nittakechi retained his position until
1838, when Captain Pierre Juzan was
elected as chief of Pushamataha
District. Captain Juzan died in 1841."52
Descendants of the Juzan family have also
gathered data from extant records, as well
as from family lore, which corroborate
Wright's conclusions. A modern relative of
the Juzans writes:
"My Juzan information goes back to
1736 thus far....De Juzon [sic] had
married a Marie Frances
Trudeau and they had a son Pierre born a
month before his father's death....In
Dec. 1781, I find where Pierre Juzan
asked for and was given 1280 acres of
land on the Tombigbee River. It was the
first Spanish land grant, a river tract
between Bayou Canyon and La Prado's
bluff (21 mile bluff) which had been
British property. He said that he wanted
to raise cattle."53
In another letter the above writer
claims:
"I have started only the Choctaw
[sic] side of the family tree. As you
can see, there is Choctaw [sic] blood on
both the Brashears and Juzan side. One
court record called Jesse Brashears a
full blood but that is not true. I
believe he was as much French as
Choctaw."54
[87]Peter J. Hamilton, a noted Mobile
historian, states that a Juzan was involved
in Indian trade and was an early resident of
the city:
"The first grant near the city
[Mobile] was December 18, 1781, to
Pierre Juzan, His Majesty's
c2pcommissaryr the Indians in the Town
of Mobile...."55
In a more detailed statement, Halbert and
Ball explain further about Juzan's
involvement with the Indians and his style
of living:
"Pierre Juzan, a noted French Indian
countryman, at this time [1811] was living
at Chunky Town. He had settled among the
Choctaws in early life, and had married a
Choctaw woman, a niece of Pushamataha, and
raised an Indian family. He spoke English,
French, and Choctaw with equal fluency.
Juzan had several trading houses among the
Choctaws, one being at Coosha Town, situated
three or four miles southeast of old
Daleville, on the right bank of Issuba in
Kannia bok (Lost Horse Creek); and another
at Chunky. His dwelling house at Chunky was
on the west side of the creek and about two
hundred yards from it. He had here an apple
orchard, -- a rare thing in an Indian
country -- the trees or scions for which he
had brought from France. He also had another
residence at Coosha. Juzan died about 1840,
at Tuscahoma, on the Tombigbee. Some time
after his death, his family, with the
exception of a daughter, emigrated west.56
Halbert and Ball also discussed an
interesting example of[88] mixed blood influence
on their full-blood relatives when Pierre
Juzan rebuffed the noted Shawnee leader,
Tecumseh, when he visited Choctaw country
not long before the War of 1812:
"On the day of their arrival at
Chunky, Tecumseh and Seekaboo called
upon Juzan and had a long interview with
him in the coarse of which they
endeavored to persuade him to use his
influence with the Choctaws to induce
them to join with the Indian
Confederacy. Juzan became greatly
indignant and spurned the Shawnees'
proposition. He turned away and would
hold no further conversation with them.
It so happened that same day that
Oklahoma, a noted mingo from Coosha, a
nephew of Pushamataha and brother of
Juzan's wife, was in Chunky with a
number of warriors. He was soon informed
by Juzan of the object of Tecumseh's
visit, whereupon he became greatly
enraged and forthwith ordered his
warriors to mould bullets and prepare to
make battle against the Shawnees."57
Juzan's allegiance to the Americans
during Tecumseh's famous visit to the
southern Indians was paralleled by the
actions of other countrymen and mixed bloods
and was instrumental in the continued
Choctaw fealty to the United States during
the ensuing Creek War.58
Another acquaintance of Juzan, Gideon
Lincecum, mentions him in his autobiography:
"I had, however, never seen the Eliccha
chito [Indian doctor) of the Six Towns, and
I wrote a letter to P. Jurzong, a
half-breed, instructing him to see the[89]
doctor, and enquire of him if he would be
willing to meet me....I received from friend
Jurzong a very satisfactory letter."59
Juzan, it appears, was an intermediary
between the individual Choctaw and whites on
more than one occasion.
Members of the Juzan family intermarried
with the mixed-blood Brashears, Trahernes,
LeFlores, Walkers, and Walls, as well as the
Indian marriages they made, demonstrating
once again the high degree of Intermarriage
tatting place between the various
mixed-blood families. The family also
engaged in agricultural pursuits beyond
normal Indian plantings, as evidenced by
Pierre's apple orchard. The early family
involvement in cattle raising and trading
also demonstrated successful farming
practices to their Indian relatives.
Choctaw Mixed Bloods
45 Debt list of William Loyson, 1795, Archivo
General de Indias, Papeles de Cuba (hereafter cited as AGI), Legajo #200.
46 Woodward, Reminisinces, III.
47 Jack D. L. Holmes, "Fort Stoddard in 1799: Seven
Letters of Captain Bartholomew Schaumburgh,"
Alabama Historical Quarterly (Fall 1964), 26:242.
48 Hamilton, Colonial Mobile, 427.
49 Halbert and Ball, Creek War, 245.
50 Arrel M. Gibson, The Chickasaws, (Norman:
University of Oklahoma Press, 1976) 274; Debo, Rise and Fall, p. 60;
Baird, Peter Pitchlynn, 74.
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.
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