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	<title>Baltimore American Indian Center &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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	<title>Baltimore American Indian Center &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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	<item>
		<title>This Land Was Their Land: Baltimore&#8217;s Lumbee Indians Claim Their History</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/baltimore-lumbee-indians-upper-fells-point-claim-their-history/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Aaron Hope]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Nov 2022 14:00:13 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[History & Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ashley Minner]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore American Indian Center]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Indigenous Peoples Day]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lumbee]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lumbee Tribe]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Upper Fells Point]]></category>
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<h3 class="mohr-black"> Thousands of Lumbee Indians migrated to Upper Fells Point after World War II. Decades later, members of the tribe are claiming their history.</h3>

<p style="font-size:2rem; padding-top:1rem; margin-bottom:0; color:#fffff;">By Ron Cassie</p>
<p style="font-size:1.5rem; padding-top:1rem; color:#fffff;">Photo Above: East Baltimore Church of God, on E. Baltimore St., c. 1960s. <i>Photography Courtesy of Rev. Robert E. Dodson Jr./Colorization by Katie Lively. </i></p>


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<h6 class="thin tealtext uppers text-center">News & Community</h6>

<h1 class="text-center">This Land Was Their Land</h1>

<h4 class="text-center"> Thousands of Lumbee Indians migrated to Upper Fells Point after World War II. Decades later, members of the tribe are claiming their history.</h4>

<hr/>

<h3 class="text-center">By Ron Cassie</h3> 
<h5 class="text-center">Photo Below: East Baltimore Church of God, on E. Baltimore St., c. 1960s. <i>Photography Courtesy of Rev. Robert E. Dodson Jr./Colorization by Katie Lively</i></h5>

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<a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/issue/october-2022/" target="blank">
<h6 class="thin uppers text-center" style="color:#23afbc; text-decoration: underline;">October 2022</h6>
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<p>
“People were basically running here to get away from farming,” says Jeanette Walker
Jones. The 80-year-old Lumbee tribe member is sitting on her porch, near her flower bed and
three flags—American, Maryland, and Lumbee—which are softly waving in the afternoon
breeze as she recalls her first impressions of Baltimore. “Any job was better than that. But I
didn’t want to move to Baltimore. I was 15 in 1957 and didn’t have a choice. The first time
I’d visited, I saw these tall buildings and people eating what I thought were ‘bugs,’ which is
what crabs looked like to me. I came from a house with three rooms and no indoor plumbing.
I begged my mother to leave me with my grandparents in North Carolina.”
</p>
<p>
Her sister, brother-in-law, and their four kids, members of the North Carolina-based
Lumbee tribe, had migrated to Baltimore several years earlier. Her sister’s husband found
employment as a commercial painter and eventually the family moved into a three-bedroom,
second-floor apartment in Upper Fells Point. Jones’ father had passed away years before
and soon enough her mother, along with Jeanette and her younger sister, moved north
as well. Rural, low-income Robeson County offered little work outside share cropping and
little in general beyond family, farming, and familiarity. The social structure was built upon
a tripartite system of bigotry that divided public life—schools, theaters, buses, restaurant
service, swimming pools, bathrooms—into “White,” “Indian,” and “Colored.”
</p>
<p>
The racism was so ingrained, Jones barely gave it thought growing up. The full realization
of the centuries-old apartheid didn’t register until she returned to Robeson County in
the mid-1960s with her own daughters. “We were visiting and went into town to a dime
store,” recalls Jones, who subsequently taught Indian Education in Baltimore public schools.
“In the back of the store, they had a restaurant and a soda fountain. Naturally, one of my
girls wanted a drink, but they said they wouldn’t serve her. I asked why, and they said, ‘Because
she’s Indian.’ Well, I knew the history there, but since I’d been in Baltimore for a few
years, I’d kind of forgotten about it. My girls were so young that they didn’t understand what
was happening, but I certainly did.”
</p>
<p>
So many Lumbee Indians would make their Great Migration-adjacent journey to the city
during its post-World War II industrial boom, they affectionately nicknamed the area where
they settled “the Reservation.” Fitting into a Black and white segregated city proved a whole
new challenge, however. While not as overt as in North Carolina, prejudice remained an
issue. Southeast Baltimore police began referring to the Lumbee newcomers as “Lombardees”—
after the busy street that cut through their neighborhood—and themselves as “Indian
fighters.” Established residents, many working-class Polish, Italian, Greek, and Jewish immigrants
and their descendants, did not know quite what to make of the latest arriving
group, who did not look or dress like the Indians in the popular Westerns of the period. The
segregated city’s Black residents were equally nonplussed.
</p>
<p>
To many in Baltimore, the close-knit Lumbees were a curiosity,
not just because of their assertion of Native American identity, but
because they did not match Native American stereotypes of physical
appearance, language and accent, religion, foodways, and dress
portrayed by Hollywood. In 1957, <i>Ebony</i> magazine sent a reporter and
photographer to document Southeast Baltimore’s newly urbanized
tribe in a four-page spread. The story and photo essay, which coincidentally
included a picture of the teenage Jones at a nearby McKim
Center dance, was titled: “Mystery People of Baltimore: Neither red,
nor black, nor white. Strange ‘Indian’ tribe lives in world of its own.”
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<h5 class="captionPic thin">
Ashley Minner at the Baltimore American Indian Center; Minner holding a photograph of a Lumbee woman shelling peas at the Baltimore American Indian Center.<i>From top: Photography by Jill Fannon; Photography by Xueying Chang of the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage</i>
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<p>
<span class="firstcharacter clan">T</span>
he Lumbees are the largest tribe east of the Mississippi
and the ninth largest in the country, with 55,000 members.
They take their name from the Lumbee River,
which is fed by the woodland swamps of tribal territory
in Robeson and the surrounding counties of southeastern
North Carolina. The tribe’s complex history and Native American
identity has long been a source of stigma—and skepticism—from
outsiders, including Baltimoreans, who tend to reduce Indigenous
authenticity to genetic features, like straight black hair and high
cheek bones, and “pidgin” English. At different times, the Lumbee
nation has also been known as or called Croatan, Cheraw, and Cherokee
Indians of Robeson County. One theory connects their origin story
to the Hatteras Indians of the Outer Banks. Another, since discarded,
to the Lost Colony of Roanoke. What is broadly understood is that
they descend from an amalgamation of Algonquian, Iroquoian, and
Siouan speaking people who settled in the region in the 1700s and
1800s, forming a tribal bond as they sought to escape European disease,
colonial wars, forced migration, and enslavement.
</p>

<p>
By the mid-1950s, several thousand Lumbee had come together
in a roughly 64-block area in Baltimore, bordered by South Broadway,
Washington Hill, and Butchers Hill to the east and north,
and Patterson Park and Fells Point to the west and south. Later
estimates would put their booming population between 4,000 and
7,000 by the late 1970s and early 1980s. (The official U.S. Census
number, assumed to be an undercount, put 3,500 Native Americans in Baltimore and 8,000 statewide in 1980.) Other Lumbee
members, also migrating north for jobs and relief from Jim
Crow laws, moved to Detroit, Philadelphia, and other cities.
They brought with them a distinctive lilting Southern
accent and a strong work ethic, swapping their low-wage
farming jobs for employment in auto factories, steel plants,
the construction trades, and the restaurant and service industries.
Many Lumbee in East Baltimore became entrepreneurs,
opening small businesses like Hartman’s BBQ Shop,
Revels’ grocery, and Locklear’s grocery—all formerly in the
1700, 1800, and 1900 blocks of East Baltimore Street—plus
Pop’s on East Fairmount, which sold hog maws and chitlins,
and George’s Grocery & Grill, which was closer to Patterson
Park. The El Salvador Restaurant now on South Broadway
was previously a jewelry store called the Hokahey Indian
Trading Post. One of several Lumbee-owned auto shops in
the area, Hunt’s Service Station, was also situated on South
Broadway, right where a busy 7-Eleven store now sits. Today,
coincidentally, it’s a hub for Mexican and Central American
migrants seeking day labor employment.
</p>
<p>
A University of Maryland anthropologist who did fieldwork
in the community described it in 1982 as “perhaps the single
largest grouping of Indians from the same tribe in an American
urban area.”
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Members of an East Baltimore community group organized during urban renewal period, including Lumbee tribe member Rosie Hunt (center, fourth from left). <i>Photo by Fred G. Kraft for 'The News American,' February 27. 1972. Courtesy of Hearst Corporation. </i>
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“Working at General Motors”­—Lumbee tribe member Howard Redell Hunt Sr. <a href="http://www.ashleyminnerart.com/project/histories">Recorded by Ashley Minner</a>
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<p>
<span class="firstcharacter clan">J</span>
ust a few decades later, almost all physical evidence
of “the Reservation” has disappeared.
Partly, it’s due to urban renewal efforts—the entire
north side of the 1700 block of East Baltimore
Street where Jones first lived was leveled
and converted into a public park. Elsewhere, condominiums
have gone up. And, like many other upwardly mobile, rowhouse-
living Baltimoreans, Lumbees decamped for jobs,
schools, and suburban homes in Baltimore County. Others returned
to North Carolina as part of a wider reverse migration
trend that began in the 1980s.
</p>
<p>
The main vestiges include the <a href="baltimoreamericanindiancenter.org">Baltimore
American Indian Center</a> on South Broadway
and the South Broadway Baptist Church.
Both were founded in the halcyon days of
Indian activism in the late 1960s and remain
active, with cultural classes and religious
services.
</p>
<p>
But there are other holdovers.
</p>
<p>
“Slim’s Bench,” at the corner of East Baltimore and North Madeira
streets—named for since-deceased Lumbee elder D.C. “Slim”
Hunt, who resided nearby—endures as a near-daily gathering space
for older tribe members.
</p>
<p>
Slightly further afield, <a href="https://roses-bakery.square.site/">Rose’s Bakery</a> still makes downhome
Southern favorites, which is to say traditional Lumbee cuisine—sweet potato pie, cornbread, banana pudding, collards, and chicken
and pastry. Rose’s opened in the Northeast Market in 1978 and is
heavily patronized by the local Lumbee community, most of whom
now reside a few miles away in Dundalk, Middle River, Essex, and
Rosedale. (At the 81st National Folk Festival this past August on
the Eastern Shore, bakery owner Rosie Bowen demonstrated how to
make collard green sandwiches, which are associated with Lumbee
identity and memories of North Carolina and family. Collard sandwiches
are a unique blend of Robeson County demographics and
include Black, Indigenous, and white influences. Made with collards
brought from Africa, fried cornbread from the Americas, and the
fatback of hogs, which the Spanish carried to this continent in the
1500s—and often served with black-eyed peas—they’ve also been
described as the perfect food to understand colonialism.)
</p>

<p>
“The Lumbee community gradually spread out, so my own generation
never experienced ‘the Reservation’ as such,” says 39-year-old
artist and scholar Ashley Minner, a first-generation Baltimore
tribal member born to a North Carolina Lumbee mother. “Over the last 17 years, especially, there’s been a sharp decline of Lumbee
population in the city.” She estimates that perhaps a few hundred
Lumbee reside in Baltimore City and a couple thousand more in
Baltimore County. Minner, who grew up in Dundalk, has meticulously
researched, documented, and archived the Lumbee journey,
publishing a glossy walking tour map of the old Southeast Baltimore
neighborhood last year and creating the informational website <a href="https://www.baltimorereservation.com/"><i>baltimorereservation.
com.</a></i> An assistant curator for History and Culture
at the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian, her
American Studies Ph.D. dissertation at the University of Maryland,
Baltimore County explored the tribe’s history in Baltimore.
</p>
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<p>
She is currently working with UMBC to establish a permanent
Lumbee archive at the school, which will be named the Ashley Minner
Collection and assembled within the Maryland Folklife Archives
housed at UMBC’s Albin O. Kuhn Library. She is negotiating a book
contract based on her dissertation and the urban Lumbee story in
Baltimore, but with the sale of the Native American Senior Citizens
building in 2017, she also feels like she’s in a race against time. “The
remaining elders are in their 70s and 80s,” she says. “I do feel as if
I arrived at this work at a critical juncture. The history is with the
people. I wouldn’t know what to look for without the elders.”
</p>

<p>
Her efforts come at an interesting time in the broad arc
of the story of Indigenous people and nations. Though this
is their land, Native Americans are only now seeing their
stories celebrated as part of the “American story” in mainstream
culture.
</p>
<p>
Just last year, Baltimore celebrated its first Indigenous
Peoples’ Day, becoming one of more than 50 cities and/or
states to do so. President Biden issued the first-ever presidential
proclamation of Indigenous Peoples’ Day last year,
a significant shift away from the federal holiday honoring
Christopher Columbus toward a celebration of Native peoples
instead. (Also in 2021, Biden named former New Mexico Congresswoman
Deb Haaland the U.S. Secretary of the Interior,
making her the first Native American to serve as a cabinet
secretary. He also appointed Charles Sams the director of the
National Park Service, making him the first tribal citizen to
serve in that role.)
</p>
<p>
More telling: A plethora of recent Native American-led and
-cast television shows have been receiving rave reviews. The
first season of <i>Reservation Dogs</i> on Hulu has been described
as “a stereotype-smashing, Tarantino-esque triumph.” Peacock’s
popular <i>Rutherford Falls</i>, co-created by a Native American,
is for all intents and purposes, television’s first Native
sitcom. The big budget <i>Dark Winds</i>, on AMC+, a long-awaited
series with a Native American filmmaker directing most of
the episodes, has also earned praise from viewers and critics.
There are others, too: <i>Mohawk Girls</i>, <i>Prey</i>, <i>Wild Indian</i>, <i>Montford:
The Chicasaw Rancher,</i> and <i>Love and Fury</i>—all on major
streaming platforms, with more to come.
</p>
<p>
“I don’t call it a moment, because hopefully it lasts longer
than that and it’s not something that comes and goes,” says
Jody Cummings, an enrolled Lumbee member and lawyer,
who has represented Native American tribes on natural resource
issues. “But there is an increased profile, some because
of people like basketball player Kyrie Irving embracing
his mother’s Standing Rock Sioux heritage and some from the
environmental issues [pipeline protests] in tribal communities,
that hasn’t been there before. It’s a good thing.”
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COVER AND SPREAD FROM A 1957 'EBONY' STORY ON BALTIMORE'S LUMBEE COMMUNITY. (THREE WOMAN ON THE COVER ARE CREOLE WOMEN FROM NEW ORLEANS.)—<i>Sean Sohbot/Courtesy of Ashley Minner</i>
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<p>
<span class="firstcharacter clan">M</span>
inner’s chronicling of the Baltimore Lumbee community
and migration story started with her own
family’s saga while she was still in high school.
She began by recording her grandfather’s memories
of North Carolina and Baltimore—long before
she considered it an academic pursuit. He had decided to put
his family farm in the rearview mirror after getting out of the
U.S. Army and eventually brought his wife and three children—Minner's mother and her two brothers—to Baltimore.
(One of Minner’s uncles had red hair as a child and got teased
and harassed about it regularly when they moved here: There
ain’t no red-haired Indians!)
“I guess it was that
fear of loss and realizing
even at that age that people
aren’t around forever,”
Minner says of the early
impetus for her research.
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Former eatery in Upper Fells Point owned by the Baltimore American Indian Center. <i>Courtesy of the Baltimore American Indian Center. </i>
</h5>
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<p>
That was during a
period in high school in
which she struggled with
her own often-mistaken identity, which is not unusual among first-generation
tribal members in Baltimore. Displaced from their tribal
roots in North Carolina, subsequent generations of Lumbee children
often had a challenging time in city and county public schools, not
easily fitting into Black or white cliques, or, more recently, Hispanic
immigrant circles. Many faced harassment and bullying. It happens
even today to Native American students in city and county schools.
“I’ve been called Asian, Puerto Rican, Hawaiian—everything but
what I am,” Minner says. “Then you tell people that you’re Indian,
and they say, ‘No, you’re not.’ It does something to you psychologically
to have people not accept you for who you are day in and day
out.” Minner is Lumbee on her mother’s side and Anglo-American
on her father’s side. Her husband, Thomas, is Lumbee and African
American. The couple recently had their first child.
</p>
<p>
“Our young people can be particularly unmoored,” continues
Minner, pausing and reflecting again on why she started collecting the stories of her elders
and why they matter. “There are all kinds of
ways society makes you feel like you don’t
belong. I think when you realize that your
history is much deeper than what you knew,
it gives you a different sense of belonging. I
think the archive could help with that. We are
part of a long, rich history. We helped build
this city. We helped develop the character it
has now. It’s ours, too.”
</p>
<p>
Dean Cox, an ironworker by vocation and
artist by avocation, is part of Minner’s generation.
He remembers paper balls being thrown
at him and running home to avoid getting
jumped by classmates. “I didn’t want to keep
telling my mom,” he says. “You fight back
because you think that’ll work, but it doesn’t.”
</p>
<p>
Cox’s grandmother, Elizabeth Locklear,
was one of the founders of the Baltimore
American Indian Center. His mother, Linda
Cox, 72, who was raised by her grandparents
in North Carolina, still lives in the neighborhood,
and currently serves as chair of the center.
She also sings in the choir at South Broadway
Baptist. “My mother wanted more out of
life, but my grandparents would not let her
bring me with her,” she says. “So I visited in
the summer and then came to [permanently]
stay in Baltimore when I was 18.”
</p>
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<p>
The center, which has long offered traditional
music, dance, and singing classes, and
organized annual powwows—the 46th-annual
<a href="https://calendar.powwows.com/events/annual-baic-pow-wow/">BAIC Pow Wow</a> is scheduled for November 19
at the Maryland State Fairgrounds—also supported
youth sports, including a lacrosse team
her son played on. (As Marylanders know, lacrosse
was invented by Native Americans.) It
became a refuge for the younger Cox and other
Lumbee children. “You don’t think about these
things consciously, but you go there to be with
other Native American kids,” Cox says. “A couple
of them lived nearby and you would hook
up with them, and then the parents would
know each other, too, and you’d go stay with
them maybe on a weekend.”
</p>

<p>
Typically migrating from homes without indoor plumbing and sometimes electricity,
the Lumbee community struggled with disproportionately
high rates of poverty, alcoholism,
drug addiction, and other health issues that
often coincide with urban poverty. The center
tried to address many of those needs over the
years, hosting at various times job placement,
housing, healthcare assistance, mentoring
programs, entrepreneurial training, and alcoholism
education on top of its cultural programming.
“The center helped a lot of people,”
Dean Cox says. “I was born into it. I’ve been a
part of the center my whole life.” In 2015, Cox
oversaw a restoration of the Indian-themed
mural in the center’s courtyard, originally
painted by center teenagers in 1980.
</p>
<p>
Despite the Baltimore American Indian
Center’s half-century history, however, the
mistaken identity continues.
</p>
<p>
“It’s guaranteed somebody’s going to walk
up to me and speak Spanish every day," Cox
says. “We can get used to anything as human
beings, but if I’m talking about it, and if I’m
being honest, it probably still bothers me.”
</p>
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REFURBISHED MURAL AT THE BALTIMORE AMERICAN INDIAN CENTER ON BROADWAY IN UPPER FELLS POINT. <i>PHOTOGRAPHY BY MIKE MORGAN</i>
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“Anyway”—Lumbee tribe member Rebecca Holmes Oxendine. <a href="http://www.ashleyminnerart.com/project/histories"><i>Recorded by Ashley Minner</a></i>
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<p>
<span class="firstcharacter clan">V</span>
ery much a segregated, if quickly
industrializing, Southern city in
the 1950s, Baltimore may seem
like an unlikely destination for a
person of color wishing to escape
bigotry and systemic racism. Discrimination
comes in varying degrees, however.
</p>
<p>
“They say Abraham Lincoln ended slave
labor, but where I’m from, a small town
called Red Springs in Robeson County, North
Carolina, sharecropping just became another
name for slavery,” says James Earl Locklear,
standing outside the South Broadway Baptist
Church in Upper Fells on a recent morning
after services. The church, led by Rev. Bobby
Joe Hunt, a Lumbee tribe member, has a Sunday
school and roughly 100 members, including
numerous Lumbee congregants, most of
whom now commute from the county. “You
rented the land and if you had an animal to
pull the plow, you’d get to keep half the sales
from the crops; if the owner supplied your
animal, you’d get to keep a third,” Locklear
continues. “And you bought sugar and coffee,
cornmeal and things you needed like that,
from the landowner’s store. Not a lot, because
you also grew your own food. But no matter
what, good year or bad, at the end of the year,
you’d end up in the hole and if you tried to
leave, they’d come after you.
</p>
<p>
“I was 17 when I left in 1959,” adds Locklear,
who still cuts a striking figure at 80
years old in a suit jacket and bolo tie with an Indian pendant. “By then I was working on
other people’s farms, picking tobacco, cotton,
and corn, making $2.50 a day. I had an uncle
already in Baltimore and he got me a job with
a commercial painting company here making
$3.25 hour. I thought I was rich,” he adds
with a wry grin. “Then I discovered the bars in
the neighborhood where you could spend that
money.” (“The reservation” was also known
for its sometimes rowdy local bars in the day.)
</p>

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<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/OCT_Lumbee_flag.jpg"/>
<h5 class="captionPic thin">
North Carolina
Lumbee members
wrapped in a captured
KKK flag. <i> 'Life' Magazine, Courtesy of the Charlotte Observer Photograph Collection, Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County.</i>
</h5>
</div>

<p>
More than six decades later, the racism he
encountered even as a child in North Carolina
is never far from the surface.
</p>
<p>
“When I was growing up, if you were Black
or Native American, like me, and wanted to
buy an ice cream, they’d only serve it to you
in a cup. The cones were for white kids. That’s
how they taught hatred to little kids.”
</p>
<p>
In fact, a year before Locklear left North
Carolina, a Ku Klux Klan rally intended “to
put the Indians in their place, to end race mixing,”
in the words of its ringleader—shone a
spotlight, literally, on Indian racism in Robeson
County. The Klan had swelled in ranks following
the 1954 <i>Brown v. Board of Education</i>
desegregation decision. Although the Klan
had typically targeted African Americans,
in 1958 they began harassing the Lumbees.
On the night of January 13, 1958, the KKK
burned crosses on the front lawns of two Lumbee
families. One of the crosses was burned in
the yard of a Lumbee family that had recently
moved into a predominantly white neighborhood.
The other was intended to intimidate
a Lumbee woman who was rumored to have
been dating a white man. Five days later, the
Klan rallied in a field in Robeson County.
</p>
<p>
It did not go as planned, but proved a
demonstration of the tribe’s cohesiveness
and tenacity. Reports differ regarding the
exact number of Klan members, but it’s estimated
around a hundred KKK supporters
turned out. When their meeting began, however,
the arc of their dim light didn’t spread
far enough for the Klansmen to see that as
many as a thousand Lumbees had surrounded
them. Several young tribe members, some
armed, closed on the rally, with a shotgun
blast shattering the light from their generator.
In the darkness, the Lumbees descended,
yelling and firing guns into the air, scattering
the overwhelmed Klansmen. Some left under
police protection while others, including their
new Grand Dragon, simply ran away. Considered
one of the nation’s most dangerous organizations
at the time, the Klan hadn’t kept the
time and place of their rally a secret, and news
photographers already on the scene captured images of exuberant Lumbees holding up
the abandoned KKK banner, which were published
around the world. Simeon Oxendine, a
popular World War II veteran, appeared in <i>Life</i>
magazine smiling and wrapped in the banner
with another tribe member. Their rout became
known as the Battle of Hayes Pond.
</p>
<p>
Nonetheless, Southern history remains an
overwhelmingly Black and white narrative.
Most Americans believe the genocide of Native
Americans took place long, long ago. But it’s
important to understand it was not completely
successful, says Emory professor Malinda
Maynor Lowery, a Lumbee tribe member and
a former director of the Center for the Study of
the American South at the University of North
Carolina. “There are over six and a half million
American Indians, and many of them live
in the South,” she wrote in a <i>New York Times</i>
opinion piece in 2018 following efforts to remove
Confederate statues in several Southern
states, including on the campus of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill. Lowery describes Indians
as “the original Southerners” and stresses
they continue to shape Southern history. She
also links the genocide of Native Americans
and the enslavement of Black Americans.
</p>
<p>
“American Indians often confronted both
the North and South as enemies,” she noted.
“The Confederacy’s commitment to slavery
and the Union’s commitment to expansion
were different versions of the same story of
imperialism. Usually the last mention of us
in K-12 classrooms is the Trail of Tears, when
five Southern tribes were forced West in the
1830s.” Few people, even progressives, seem
to recognize Native American presence in the
South. The coalition organized to oppose the
white supremacist Unite the Right rally in
Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017 did not invite
any representatives of Virginia’s seven
American Indian tribes to participate.
</p>
<p>
It’s worth mentioning it was not until 2012
that Maryland formally recognized the Piscataway
Conoy Tribe and the Piscataway Indian
Nation in southern Maryland, and 2018 for
the Accohannock tribe of the Eastern Shore.
</p>
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Photo for the occasion of the Baltimore American Indian Center winning the 2018 Maryland Heritage Award in the category of “Place.” (l-r Louis Campbell (Lumbee), Celest Swann (Powhatan),  E. Keith Colston (Lumbee/Tuscarora).<i> Courtesy of Edwin Remsberg</i>
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<p>
<span class="firstcharacter clan">M</span>
eanwhile, the Lumbees actually
remain in the middle of a nearly
140-year-old struggle for full recognition
from the U.S. government.
The tribe received state
recognition from North Carolina in 1885, and
a compromised recognition of sorts from the
federal government in 1956—recognition without
the full benefits accorded other tribes.
</p>

<p>
The bipartisan Lumbee Recognition Act, which President Biden has indicated he’d support,
hasn’t gotten to his desk yet and remains
pending in Congress. Other North Carolina
tribes, notably the Cherokee, have opposed
their campaign for full recognition—the assumption
being they don’t wish to share the
benefits that come with full tribal standing.
</p>
<p>
“The proposed legislation finishes the job
Congress started in the 1956 Lumbee Act—full recognition, which frankly, our folks have
been pushing for from the U.S. government
since the late 1800s,” says Cummings.
</p>
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<h5 class="captionPic thin">
The Baltimore American
Indian Center in
Upper Fells Point.<i>Courtesy of University of Maryland Special Collections and University Archives, College Park, Maryland. Permission: Hearst Corporation.</i>
</h5>
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<p>
To Milton Hunt, a diversity, equity, and inclusion
consultant, leveling that field means
everything. A Baltimore Lumbee with roots in
North Carolina, Hunt highlights the fact that
Native Americans represent the smallest minority
in the U.S., making up roughly two percent of the population. “This is the first time
in history that a Native American has been
the secretary for the Department of Interior,
which is responsible for the Bureau of Indian
Affairs,” Hunt says. “We don’t have a sitting
senator or Supreme Court judge. We haven’t
had a president. We haven’t had the numbers
to move the political needle by ourselves. The
same has been true almost everywhere outside
Oklahoma. Consider Baltimore, where we
had 7,500 Native Americans at one time. Well,
Baltimore had close to a million people then.
We didn’t have anyone on the City Council.
Representation has always been a struggle,
and it’s kept us marginalized.”
</p>
<p>
Hunt, who is 61, credits the Indian Education
outreach in city schools managed by
Jeannette Walker Jones as life-saving for him.
“I didn’t experience those things like ‘Colored,’
‘Indian,’ and ‘White’ water fountains
in North Carolina that I was told about, but
I was called everything from ‘half-breed’ to
the ‘N-word’ here,” he says. “I wouldn’t have
graduated and was going to end up incarcerated
and things like that. Today, I know that
a true sense of identity, knowing who you
are, that will get you through times when you are lost, especially when you’re young. What
I learned from Jeanette, and she used older
Indian students to mentor younger Indian kids
with homework and everything else, was that
it’s not who or what you say I am,” Hunt continues.
“It’s who I know I am that matters.”
</p>
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<i>MAP OF THE HISTORIC LUMBEE COMMUNITY NEIGHBORHOOD IN SOUTHEAST BALTIMORE BY ROBERT CRONAN OF LUCIDITY INFORMATION DESIGN, LLC </i>
</h5>

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<p>
Jessica Locklear, a Lumbee member and
public historian from Philadelphia, says Lumbee
migration from rural North Carolina to the
crowded urban setting of industrial Baltimore
has echoes of the Black migration story as
well as the European immigration story. But
she adds it’s important to keep in mind there
are differences, and that the Lumbee migration
story, like the story of other migrant/immigrant
groups, shouldn’t be simplified to a single narrative.
“Lumbee history is American history,
and it’s rich and diverse and always connected
to all the broader things happening in the U.S.
The movement to Baltimore is a major part,
but Lumbee also migrated in-state to cities like
Greensboro. They settled in places like Georgia
in the 1800s, forming communities that lasted
100 years, before returning to North Carolina.
The Lumbees have evolved and survived by
adapting to what was going on around them,
and then often returning to North Carolina.”
</p>
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<p>
To Locklear’s point, Lumbee tribe members’
profound connection to North Carolina,
specifically the four southeastern counties of
Robeson, Hoke, Cumberland, and Scotland, is
unique and can’t be overstated. Baltimore may
have become home for many, but North Carolina
will forever be the homeland.
</p>
<p>
Rosie Bowen, the owner of Rose’s Bakery,
still drives back and forth to North Carolina
for her collard greens and the local cornmeal.
</p>
<p>
“It’s not the same from anywhere else,” she
says with a smile, holding up a photograph
of a patch of enormous collards from North
Carolina from behind her bakery counter just
hours before another trip to the place where
her father was raised. “It’s funny, though,
there are so many people from down there who
came to Baltimore and returned home, that
every time I tell people that I’m driving down,
they start asking me bring them things—and
the reverse.
</p>
<p>
“North Carolina and Lumbee family and
friends in Baltimore want me to bring back
collards and cornmeal,” she says, shaking
her head and smiling again. “The family and
friends who returned to North Carolina from
Baltimore? They ask me to bring lump crab
meat, Old Bay, and UTZ potato chips.”
</p>
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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/baltimore-lumbee-indians-upper-fells-point-claim-their-history/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Found Art</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/you-are-here-found-art-normals-books-records-baltimore-american-indian-center/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 24 Nov 2017 08:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[History & Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore American Indian Center]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[home movies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Native Americans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Normal's Books & Records]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[You Are Here]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://server2.local/BIT-SPRING/baltimoremagazine.com/html/?post_type=article&#038;p=2371</guid>

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			<h4>Found Art</h4>
<p><em>East 31st Street<br />October 14, 2017</em></p>
<blockquote><p>
<em>“There’s no such thing as a bad home movie.”</em>—John Waters.
</p></blockquote>
<p><strong>The home movies </strong>screened at Normal’s Books &amp; Records tonight include the expected clips of a 1950s-era Ocean City vacation and an Irish-Catholic wedding reception of the same vintage. There’s footage of a crammed 1983 East Baltimore rowhouse Christmas, a swinging sermon from a local black church, and shots of a sister and brother playing in their Rogders Forge backyard, which begins in rather pedestrian fashion until the boy dons a Fidel Castro-inspired beard and Cuban military-style cap, picks up a toy rifle and chases after his sister. </p>
<p>Some of the footage screened is from professionally archived sources, others are found on eBay and the like, and some are courtesy of audience members who have brought along their own home movies.</p>
<p>“Hey, it was 1959,” the grown-up would-be revolutionary explains from the back of the crowd amid raucous laughter. “Castro was a hero in the U.S.”</p>
<p>Hosted locally by the Mid-Atlantic Regional Moving Image Archive (MARMIA), Home Movie Day is an annual event that’s been held around the world since 2002. Among other efforts, the preservation nonprofit recently began digitizing historic footage from WJZ-TV.</p>

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			<p>Also on hand is Jasmyn Castro (no relation to Fidel, needless to say), media conservation and digitalization specialist with the National Museum of African American History &amp; Culture, who is screening home movies shot by black families in Washington, D.C. and Baltimore. Those films, mostly from the 1960s and  1970s, capture everyday African-American family life—at home, at their local schools, at wedding receptions-—that simply was not represented on television or by Hollywood at the time.</p>
<p>“Home movies hold all kinds of finds and provide context that documents life in the region the way it was lived by everyday people,” says MARMIA president Siobhan Hagan, before a lively crab feast/day camping adventure on the Chesapeake Bay from the early 1960s appears on screen.</p>
<p>“You can practically smell the Natty Boh, cigarettes, and hairspray,” someone quips.</p>
<p>Not all home movies are fun. There is also amatuer footage shot during the 1968 Baltimore riot.</p>
<p>One of the truly gorgeous films is 16mm color footage from The Johns Hopkins University Medical Archive of a physician’s fishing expedition on the Chesapeake in the early 1940s. The wooden boats and crisp white sails—not to mention the well-attired men sporting fedoras as they cast their lines—appear to be from another epoch altogether, as does the sterling blue Bay, with its then-plentiful rockfish seemingly jumping into the boat. “Otherwise,” deadpans JHU visual projects archivist Tim Wisniewski of the school’s medical film archive, “our footage is mostly surgeries.”</p>
<p>One of the first home movies of the evening includes upper-deck footage from the last Opening Day at Memorial Stadium in 1991, a potentially auspicious afternoon that proved anything but. One-term vice president Dan Quayle threw out the first pitch that afternoon before the O’s lost 9-1—the first of 95 defeats that season.</p>
<p>“My mom had two rules when we went to Memorial Stadium,” Hagan says, narrating the clip as her 6-year-old self eyes a trayful of pink cotton candy passing on screen. “You can’t go to the bathroom while the Orioles are at bat and no cotton candy. Ever.”</p>
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			<h4>Homeland</h4>
<p><em>Broadway<br />
October 9, 2017</em></p>
<p><strong>Inside the Baltimore </strong>American Indian Center, a sign touts the cultural classes held every Tuesday night, while noting the remarkable resiliency of the native people of the Americas.</p>
<blockquote><p>
<em>We are still here</p>
<p></em><em>We are not going away</p>
<p></em><em>We have pow wows</p>
<p></em><em>We have parts of our culture</p>
<p></em><em>It is still here</p>
<p></em><em>We still make our jewelry</p>
<p></em><em>We still make our leather</em>
</p></blockquote>
<p>Tonight, however, the center, which has served the metro area’s indigenous population—more than 8,300, according to the last census—since the late 1960s, is filled for a rally and petition-signing drive in support of renaming Christopher Columbus Day to Indigenous Peoples’ Day. </p>
<p>Last year, notes organizer Rebecca Nagle (whose family includes Cherokee ancestors), City Councilman Brandon Scott introduced legislation that would’ve placed Baltimore among other cities, including Los Angeles, Denver, Seattle, and Albuquerque, which have renamed the holiday. But the “Indigenous Peoples’/Italian Americans Day” bill did not pass.</p>
<p>Jennifer Hunt, a Baltimore County mother of two, starts the evening with an emotional reading of Columbus and his men’s well-documented cruelty against native peoples, including execution, rape, dismemberment, forced work, and sale into European slavery.</p>
<p>“I wasn’t sure that I’d be able to get through it,” says Hunt, who is Choctaw, referring to her text, which includes entries from Columbus’ own journal and testimony from a contemporary Spanish witness to the atrocities. “I knew children would be here. But my husband, who is African American, said people need to know the truth. All I learned in school was same thing as everyone else: ‘In 1492, Columbus sailed the ocean blue.’”</p>
<p>Later, she notes that it was her Choctaw grandfather who came to Baltimore after joining the Coast Guard. She says that despite brutal federal policies that removed Native Americans from their land and pushed them onto reservations, “joining the military is often how you try to get out of poverty.” In fact, Hunt adds, a higher proportion of Native Americans serve in the U.S. military than any other ethnic group.</p>
<p>She also adds that she certainly doesn’t hold any animosity toward Italian Americans, particularly those in nearby Little Italy—she just takes issue with the veneration of Columbus.</p>
<p>“I love Sabitino’s and their Bookmaker Salad,” Hunt says with a smile. “We go there all the time.”</p>

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