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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #63583 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/63583)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Indians of Louisiana, by Anonymous
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Indians of Louisiana
-
-Author: Anonymous
-
-Release Date: October 30, 2020 [EBook #63583]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK INDIANS OF LOUISIANA ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- INDIANS OF LOUISIANA
-
-
- SPONSORED BY THE INTER-TRIBAL COUNCIL OF LOUISIANA
-
-
-
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
-
- PREHISTORIC LOUISIANA INDIANS
- 1. Lithic Period
- 2. Archaic Period
- 3. Poverty Point Period—Late Archaic
- 4. Tchefuncte Period
- 5. Marksville Period
- 6. Troyville—Cole Creek Period
- 7. Plaquemine Period
- 8. Mississippian Period
- 9. 1540-Present
- HISTORIC PERIOD
- I. ATAKAPA
- 1. Atakapa
- 2. Opelousa
- II. CHITIMACHA
- 1. Chitimacha
- 2. Chawasha
- 3. Taensa (Tensas)
- 4. Washa (Quacha)
- III. CHOCTAW
- 1. Choctaw
- 2. Jena Band
- IV. COUSHATTA
- V. HOUMA
- 1. Houma
- 2. Acotapissa
- 3. Bayogoula
- 4. Mugulasha
- 5. Okelousa
- 6. Quinipissa
- 7. Tangipahoa
- VI. KADOHADACHO (CADDO)
- 1. Caddo
- 2. Addi (Adai)
- 3. Doustian
- 4. Nasoni
- 5. Natasi
- 6. Natchitoches
- 7. Nanatsoho
- 8. Soacatino (Xacatin)
- 9. Washita (Ouachita)
- 10. Yatasi
- VII. TUNICA
- 1. Tunica
- 2. Avoyel
- 3. Biloxi
- 4. Grigra (Gris)
- VIII. INTER-TRIBAL COUNCIL OF LOUISIANA
-
-
-
-
- PREHISTORIC LOUISIANA INDIANS
-
-
- _Paleo-lithic Period_ (approximately 12,000-5,000 BC):
-
-According to anthropologists there have been people in Louisiana for at
-least 12,000 years. They probably migrated from the northern United
-States in search of game as more and more of the northern areas fell
-under sheets of advancing ice. Louisiana was much cooler and the
-plant-life very different from modern times.
-
-These early men hunted bison, mastodon, camels, and horses with simple
-spears made by attaching a sharpened rock flake to the end of a spear.
-They were the true pioneers of this state. They came here without
-benefit of guides to show them the best hunting farm lands.
-
-One of their villages has been discovered on Avery Island. Artifacts
-found among extinct animal bones indicate the area was inhabited when
-mastodons, bison, and camels, roamed Louisiana. *(Cabildo)
-
-
- _Archaic Period_ (5,000-1400 BC):
-
-The large animals gradually became extinct as the glaciers melted, the
-climate grew warmer, and the plant life changed. The native Louisianians
-were forced by necessity to hunt smaller animals and to supplement their
-diet with shellfish. The people of the Archaic Period moved from place
-to place leaving behind huge mounds of discarded shells which eventually
-increased the elevation of area and reduced flooding. During this period
-they developed such tools as spear—throwers, knives, scrapers, drills,
-and darts.
-
-
- _Poverty Point Period_ (1700-200 BC):
-
-In northeastern Louisiana, near Epps, is an ancient village site called
-Poverty Point. It contains a unique bird effigy mound and a large
-geometrical village. Houses of palmetto were built on ridges of earth
-arranged in an octagon east of the 600 foot long and 70 foot high bird
-mound.
-
-Since they did not have clay pottery, food was cooked by placing it in
-an earthen pit lined with hot baked clay balls. Tools, called
-micro-flints, were made from stone slivers to open shellfish, nuts, and
-seeds.
-
-There are also indications of developing trade with other areas.
-
-
- _Tchefuncte Period_ (200 BC-400 AD):
-
-In coastal Louisiana much of the old Archaic tradition of shellfish
-gathering, augmented by hunting, continued long after the Poverty Point
-culture was 1,000 years old. About 200 BC crude pottery was added to the
-basic Archaic Culture on the coast and around Lake Ponchartrain. They
-continued to eat shellfish, supplemented with small game and wild
-plants. They lived on shell middens in circular houses made from poles
-and thatch.
-
-
- _Marksville Period_ (100-550 AD):
-
-The development of agriculture during this period freed the early
-Louisianians from daily hunting and food gathering which allowed them
-time for more religious and recreational activities. They began making
-fine pottery and flint projectile points for ceremonial and burial
-purposes rather than for purely utilitarian uses.
-
-They continued building earthen mounds and added rather elaborate burial
-practices by placing the deceased in the mound with pottery and
-recreational items such as chunkey stones. Some of these burial
-artifacts were made from materials from as far away as Yellowstone Park
-and marine shells from the Gulf. Their artifacts included copper items.
-
-
- _Troyville-Coles Creek Period_ (500-1200)
-
-This was basically a continuation of the Marksville Period. Mound
-building became more advanced with a shift toward large flat topped
-pyramidal mounds as foundations for temples. These were probably used
-for sacred and ceremonial activities. The burial mounds continued to be
-built in conical shapes.
-
-Agriculture improvements included clearing fields by slashing the trees
-and burning them in the fields to provide fertilizer for crops. Bows and
-arrows were used for the first time which increased their hunting
-successes. With these improvements came larger populations as the people
-developed methods for feeding their growing numbers.
-
-It also meant time for improving the art of pottery making.
-Archaeologists are able to tell the tribe and with whom they traded by
-examining the styles of decoration and the lines incised on the pottery.
-
-
- _Plaquemine Period_ (1100-1450)
-
-Maize agriculture was important during this period. Villages were
-located on bluffs and terraces near large streams and rivers to utilize
-the rich alluvial bottom land for farming and water for the villagers.
-
-Rectangular shaped houses were built by digging trenches 12-18 inches
-wide and as deep. Poles 6 inches or smaller were set upright in the
-trench and earth was packed around them until the trench was filled.
-Sometimes rocks or horizontal logs were laid in the trench to brace the
-upright poles. The spaces between the rows of upright poles were
-intertwined and woven with vines and mud smeared over the entire
-structure. When the first Europeans came to Louisiana this type of house
-was very common among the Indians.
-
-The houses were usually arranged in small clusters around several large
-mounds which surrounded a central plaza. The plaza was used primarily
-for ceremonies. The famous Emerald Mound near Natchez, said to be the
-second largest prehistoric man-made object in the United States, is a
-nearby example of such a village arrangement.
-
-
- _Mississippian Period_ (1400-1700)
-
-Trade routes with other Indians in the Southwest and Mexico increased
-and cultural diffusion was extensive. Trade with the first Europeans
-began during the 16th century.
-
-After 1,000 years the elaborate burial practices from the Tchefuncte
-Period were revived and expanded into a “Cult of the Dead”. Great burial
-mounds were built to contain the dead and their burial artifacts. Many
-wooden forms of men and animals covered with hammered copper, pottery
-shaped as human or animal heads, and pottery depicting bones, skulls,
-rattlesnakes, and “feathered serpents” were placed with the corpse in
-the mound.
-
-Villages were enclosed by walls of poles plastered with mud. During this
-period Indian populations decreased significantly. As they decreased and
-the palisade walls rotted, smaller and smaller compounds were built
-around the remaining village.
-
-
- _1540-Present_
-
-It is not known how many Indians lived in Louisiana, however,
-archaeological evidence, as well as written accounts by early Spanish
-and French explorers indicate there were large numbers. From the
-northern farmlands of the Caddo and Tunica to the southern swamps and
-bayous of the Chitimacha; from the southwestern prairie of the Atakapa
-to the eastern hills and rivers of the Natchez and the Muskhogee (Houma)
-were many tribes who adapted their culture, their lives, and their
-economy to available products in their segment of Louisiana’s
-environment. Following is a brief history of the major tribes and those
-groups which merged with them.
-
-
-
-
- HISTORIC PERIOD
-
-
- ATAKAPA
-
-
- _Atakapa_—
-
-This large group of Indians occupied the prairies of southwestern
-Louisiana from Bayou Teche to the Sabine River and from Opelousas to the
-coastal marshes. They were a semi-settled, partially agricultural people
-occupying a number of favorable villages along waterways; the lower
-coast of the Calcasieu and around the shores of Calcasieu Lake, lower
-Mermentau, Grand Lake, along Bayou Plaquemine, along the Vermillion near
-the present site of Abbeville and a site near the present town of
-Opelousas.
-
-They were culturally less advanced than their neighbors, however they
-were more advanced than their reputation as wandering cannibals would
-lead us to imagine. They had several semi-permanent villages and are
-known to have participated in trade with other Indians along the Texas
-coast. They traded fish to the Opelousas for flints and other items they
-did not manufacture.
-
-Although individuals frequented various French posts with other Indian
-tribes, it was well into the 18th century that the Atakapa began to feel
-the influences of the Europeans on their culture. This was probably due
-in part to the relative isolation of their villages.
-
-In 1760 Skunnemoke (“Short Arrow”) sold the land on which his village
-stood along with a wide strip between Bayou Teche and Vermillion
-village, the group did not abandon their site until the early 19th
-century. Other lands of the Atakapa were steadily sold and the villages
-moved and combined to survive the advance of the Europeans.
-
-In 1787 the principle Atakapa village was at the “Island of Woods” later
-known as the “Island Lacasine”. It was abandoned about 1799 when they
-moved to a village on the Mermentau. This was the last village of the
-Eastern Atakapa and is said to have been occupied as late as 1836. Some
-of the Indians united with the Western Atakapa around Lake Charles, but
-others scattered as far as Oklahoma. The last village of the Western
-Atakapa was on “Indian Lake”, later called “Lake Prein”, which was
-occupied until after the middle of the 19th century.
-
-In 1885 a considerable vocabulary of Atakapa was gathered from two women
-living in Lake Charles who had belonged to this last Atakapa town. A
-later survey disclosed a few former residents of the old town were still
-living in 1907-1908 but, by 1942 all known villagers of the last Atakapa
-town were dead.
-
-
- _Opelousa_—
-
-Probably a divergent group of Atakapa. They lived in the vicinity of the
-present city of Opelousas and acted as middlemen in trade between other
-Indians in the South. They bought fish from the Chitimacha and Atakapa
-which they exchanged for flints from the Avoyels. Some of these flints
-were passed on to the Karankawas from the Texas coast for globular or
-conical oil jugs. They traded such items as Caddo pottery, Texas pots,
-stone beads, arrow points and salt along routes from the interior of
-Texas to the coast and inland through Caddo country in northern
-Louisiana and onward through Arkansas. (737)
-
-The last representatives of this tribe apparently joined the Atakapa to
-whom they were probably related.
-
-
- CHITIMACHA
-
-
- _Chitimacha_—
-
-The Chitimacha are the only Louisiana Indians known to currently live in
-the vicinity of their ancestral homelands. It is evident they were one
-of the largest tribes in Louisiana. Their large population was probably
-the result of a favorable environment which provided an abundant food
-supply of plants, animals and marine life without the necessity of
-extensive hunting or fishing expeditions, or the necessity to
-periodically abandon their village sites for lack of food. The men did
-the hunting and fishing.
-
-Although the women planted such crops as maize and sweet potatoes, many
-of their foods grew wild. Foods such as beans, wild potatoes, pond lily
-seeds, palmetto grains, rhizoma of common sagittaria and large leaf
-sagittaria, persimmons, strawberries, blackberries, mulberries, white
-berries, many kinds of tree fruits, pumpkins, and several others grew
-close to their villages.
-
-The Chitimacha inhabited two groups of villages. One group was located
-along the upper reaches of Bayou Lafourche near the Mississippi River
-while the other group was located on Grand Lake and the Bayou Teche
-area. These areas consist of many bayous and swamps which were easy to
-protect.
-
-They made their houses from poles covered with palmetto leaves on the
-roofs and walls. All the necessary building materials were readily
-available and easily replaced when damaged or destroyed by storms and
-hurricanes.
-
-Women exerted strong influence in the tribe’s affairs because important
-political positions were available to them. Usually the men controlled
-the governmental offices, however if a chief died his widow could assume
-his responsibilities if she were a capable leader. Women could also work
-as medicine men. Only the leadership of religious affairs was denied
-them.
-
-The political system was run by a group of powerful men. One head chief
-controlled the affairs of the entire confederation, with sub-chiefs
-governing the outlying villages. These leaders inherited their offices,
-lived in large homes, and carried heavily decorated peacepipes to all
-ceremonies and social affairs as reminders of their importance. They
-ruled by personal edicts, which were enforced by sub-administrators
-appointed especially for that purpose. They maintained groups of
-warriors to protect them, and to defend their villages against raids by
-neighboring tribes.
-
-The head chief, sub-chiefs, sub-administrators and war leaders were
-entrenched by the rules of a rigidly stratified society. The Chitimacha
-were the only southeastern tribe with a true caste system. The leaders
-and their respective families comprised the “noble class”; all others
-belonged to the “commoner” class. Noblemen addressed commoners in
-popular language, but commoners spoke to noblemen only in terms that
-were used solely for that purpose. With rare exceptions, noblemen
-married only noblemen because the husband joined the clan of the wife,
-therefore he would become a commoner. A nobleman was inclined to remain
-unwed if no woman of his class was free to marry.
-
-Religious affairs were controlled by Holy Men (and assistants who were
-to succeed them after their deaths). Holy Men were in charge of the
-sacred ceremonies of their respective clans. They had the responsibility
-of perpetuating the ancient parables and stories of miraculous events
-which embodied the moral codes of their villages, and which contained
-beliefs concerning man’s kinship to nature and to nature’s creatures.
-
-The Chitimacha men wore long hair, weighted with pieces of lead to hold
-their heads erect. They wore necklaces, bracelets and rings made of
-copper, gold and silver. Women wore their hair in braids, used makeup of
-red and white dyes, and wore bracelets, earrings and finger rings.
-
-Their aesthetic appreciation is revealed in their manufacture of objects
-from shells and stones and in their excellent baskets. Basket-makers
-gathered swamp cane, split it into strands then dyed it either black or
-yellow or red, and let it dry. When the strands were completely dry they
-wove them into baskets in two layers, in such a way as to produce
-symbolic designs on the exterior walls. Their first contact with
-Europeans in 1699. Between 1701 and 1705 war broke out after a party of
-French soldiers reinforced by Acolapissa and Natchitoches Indians took
-twenty Chitimacha women and children prisoner. In retaliation,
-Chitimacha warriors killed French missionary, St. Cosme, and his 3
-companions in a battle near the Mississippi River. When news of the
-incident reached New Orleans the governor of the new French colony
-declared war.
-
-When peace finally came thirteen years later many Chitimacha had been
-killed, displaced, or enslaved. This mighty Chitimacha nation was not
-only reduced in population; it had lost its power and political
-importance among the southern Louisiana tribes.
-
-In 1762 another important milestone in Chitimacha history occurred. The
-Acadians from Nova Scotia began to arrive at New Orleans and move out
-along the bayous to escape persecution from British colonial
-authorities. These cajun French people married Chitimachas and within a
-century full bloods became scarce. The Chitimachas began to speak “cajun
-French” instead of their own language. Many converted to the Roman
-Catholic religion.
-
-By 1880 the remaining Chitimacha people were struggling for survival.
-Since they were too poor to own any of the large sugar plantations they
-worked on them during summer and harvest time for wages, some of them
-cut timber, manufactured baskets or raised small quantities of
-vegetables and sugar cane the rest of the year to supplement their
-wages. They were an impoverished remnant of the old culture.
-
-In 1905 the Chitimacha fought a court battle to retain the last 505
-acres of their once vast territory. An out of court settlement was made
-and they were given title to 280.36 acres of the disputed tract. This
-too was almost lost when the attorney in the litigation presented them a
-bill plus interest almost a decade later. However, Miss Sarah Avery
-McIlhenney, a wealthy philanthropist intervened and purchased the
-judgement on the land for $1450. She agreed to assign ownership to the
-United States government on behalf of the Chitimacha, therefore
-preventing the loss of the last of their land.
-
-In response to Miss McIlhenney’s efforts government officials took an
-interest in the Chitimacha affairs for the first time. On May 8, 1916,
-Congress placed the land in trust for the benefit of the tribe and
-established a roll of all known living members. Only 60 members were
-named. However, they did not receive any actual government assistance
-until a reservation school was established in 1934.
-
-Until the 1940’s they still relied upon traditional occupations because
-there were few job opportunities near the reservations. Many Chitimacha
-shuttled back and forth between the reservation and area lakes where
-fishing was good, while others lived out on the lakes. It took all day
-to get to the outlying lakes from the reservations in their “push-skiff”
-or pirogue.
-
-World War II marked a general turning point in tribal history as
-returning war veterans infused the tribe with new ideas, enthusiasm and
-a desire to insure tribal identity for the future. On November 28, 1946
-Chief Earnest Darden resigned as chief and urged the tribe to appoint
-someone to engineer the formation of a constitutional form of
-government, thus ending the traditional chief-type of rule that had
-existed since prehistoric times.
-
-Through the years there were many obstacles to obtaining the education
-necessary for the Chitimacha to secure well paying jobs. Until recently
-those desiring a high school education had to attend the Haskell High
-School in Kansas. Since few tribesmen could afford to send their
-children to Kansas for a high school degree a cycle of low education and
-low paying jobs continued.
-
-After World War II several Chitimachas began working in the oil industry
-on “in-shore” drilling crews and more were working “off-shore”
-operations by the early 1950’s. Their success soon attracted others to
-more middle income jobs and today there are Chitimacha working as
-mechanics, plant workers, carpenters, mental health directors, community
-health representatives and administrators and other such professions.
-
-On January 14, 1971 the Chitimachas became members of the first
-organized tribe in the state of Louisiana to be recognized by the United
-States government.
-
-They were also one of the founding members of the Inter-Tribal Council
-in May, 1975 and have continued to play an important role in the agency.
-
-
- _Chawasha_—
-
-A small tribe allied to the Chitimacha living in the alluvial country
-about the mouth of the Mississippi River. It is possibly this tribe
-which survivors of DeSoto’s expedition found using atlatls in 1543.
-
-Their village and that of the related Washa was on Bayou Lafourche in
-1699 when the colony of Louisiana was founded.
-
-In 1713 British slave traders formed a party of Natchez, Chickasaw and
-Yazoo to attack the Chawasha under the guise of a peace embassy. They
-killed the head chief and took 11 prisoners including the chief’s wife.
-
-There seems to have been 2 or possibly 3 successive villages by 1722 all
-on the Mississippi River. In 1730 in order to quiet panic fears of the
-French in New Orleans, Governor Perrier allowed a band of slaves to
-destroy the Chawasha town. Although he described it as a total massacre
-it is more likely the adult men were absent from the village on a
-hunting trip and possibly only 7 or 8 of the Indians were murdered.
-
-In 1758 Governor de Kerlerec states they had formed a little village 3-4
-leagues from New Orleans. Afterward the population steadily declined,
-and they seemed to disappear toward the close of the 18th or beginning
-of the 19th century.
-
-
- _Taensa (Tensas)_—
-
-The Taensa occupied 7 or 8 villages near Lake St. Joseph, on the west
-bank of the Mississippi River in Northeastern Louisiana.
-
-In March, 1700 the temple near Newellton on the west end of the lake was
-destroyed by lightning and was never rebuilt, fearing raiding parties
-from the Yazoo and Chickasaw the tribe abandoned their villages in 1706
-and moved down the Mississippi River to the Bayogoula village. The
-Bayogoula treated them well but soon after their arrival the Taensa
-turned on the Bayogoula killing many and driving the rest away. The
-Taensa had intended to return to their ancient villages after this
-massacre, but apparently they remained in the neighborhood of the old
-Bayogoula town, for they were at the Manchac in 1715. They also had a
-village during this period on the south side of the Mississippi, (about
-30 miles) above New Orleans.
-
-Before 1744 they had moved to the Tensaw River, to which they gave their
-name and where they remained until the country was ceded to England in
-1763. They then removed to the Red River and were later granted
-permission to settle on the Mississippi at the entrance of Bayou
-Lafourche.
-
-They were living beside the Apalachee, the settlements of the two tribes
-extending from Bayou d’Appo to Bayou Jean de Jean and their own village
-standing at the head of the turn. Subsequently both tribes sold their
-land and moved to Bayou Boeuf.
-
-Later the Taensa parted with this land also and drifted farther south to
-a small bayou at the head of Grand Lake, still known on local maps as
-Taensa Bayou.
-
-They intermarried with the Chitimacha and the Alabama becoming gradually
-lost as a distinct people.
-
-
- _Washa_—
-
-Small tribe living on Bayou Lafourche west of present city of New
-Orleans in 1699. By 1805 only 5 individuals living with French settlers
-in 1805.
-
-
- CHOCTAW
-
-
- _Choctaw_—
-
-The Choctaw were the second largest tribe in the Southeastern United
-States. They were excellent farmers who lived in permanent towns in the
-territory which is now Southern Mississippi and Southeastern Alabama.
-Although they were non-nomadic they developed and maintained extensive
-trade routes with other tribes as far away as Canada. Some of our modern
-road and highway routes follow those established by this tribe.
-
-The women did most of the farm work, fetched the water and cut firewood.
-They spun cloth for long skirts from buffalo wool and strong herb
-fibers, silk grass or mulberry bark. It was a thick canvas-like material
-which could be worn with either side out.
-
-The men did the hunting, built the houses, made wood and stone tools,
-and helped the women in the fields. They were fond of games, wrestling
-and jumping contests as well as ball and chunkey games.
-
-Their houses were circular with clay mixed with straw sides and thatched
-roofs. Cane seats about 2 feet off the ground lined the walls inside.
-During the day they were used for seating and for beds at night. The
-space under these seats was used to store vegetables. In the center of
-the house was an open fireplace.
-
-Their society was divided into different classes or castes. There were
-the chiefs, one to preside over war ceremonies and another over peace
-ceremonies, the upper class (“their own people” or “friends”), and 5
-classes of slaves.
-
-The Choctaw women had their babies alone and it was not until later
-times they accepted the practice of mid-wives. When the mother was about
-to give birth the father retreated to another house and would not eat
-until after sunset. He also abstained from pork and salt until the baby
-was born.
-
-When the baby was born the mother washed him and placed him in a cradle
-with a bag of sand tied over his forehead to flatten it. This is why the
-Choctaw were called “flat heads” by neighboring tribes.
-
-Mothers were not allowed to discipline their sons. This was the duty of
-the maternal uncle who acted as the boy’s teacher. All the boys were
-schooled morning and afternoon in tribal legends, hunting with bows and
-arrows, and other manly tasks.
-
-In 1540 the Spanish explorer, DeSoto, began trading with them. The
-Choctaw were intrigued by Spanish goods, especially metal. They also
-established trade with the French and by the 1700’s had adopted many
-French ideas, life styles, cultural attitudes and incorporated French
-words into their language. Unlike their Indian neighbors, the men
-continued to wear their hair in full length styles.
-
-The Choctaws served as guides for the European expeditions across
-Louisiana which resulted in many Choctaw words being used as name
-locations throughout our state.
-
-As colonization increased pressures to choose alliances with either the
-French to keep the English and their powerful allies, the Chickasaw and
-Creek Nations, from closing trade routes to the north and Canada.
-
-From 1754-1763 the Choctaws were in almost constant warfare. In 1763 the
-French and Indian wars ended with France ceding all her lands east of
-the Mississippi River to the English. This resulted in half the Choctaw
-towns being allied to the French and the other half with the English.
-War pressures eroded inter-tribal tranquility in the Choctaw Nation,
-leading to civil war.
-
-When the French retreated to New Orleans they in effect deserted their
-Choctaw allies. On January 3, 1786, the Treaty of Hopewell was
-negotiated with the United States Government recognizing the Choctaw
-Nation as a nation and defining the eastern boundary of the Choctaw
-Lands.
-
-Hostilities with their former Indian allies during the wars, coupled
-with increasing pressures from settlers desiring their lands, led the
-tribe to migrate west of the Mississippi River in search of farm land
-and tranquility.
-
-Between 1801 and 1830 they were methodically negotiated off their tribal
-homelands in Alabama and Mississippi. In 1830, they signed the treaty of
-Dancing Creek, agreeing to leave their homelands and not return. The
-following year the greater part of the nation moved to lands along the
-Red River in Oklahoma granted by the treaty. There they established a
-small republic modeled after that of the United States government.
-However, this republic came to an end when the State of Oklahoma was
-organized.
-
-A considerable number of Choctaw remained in Mississippi while smaller
-bands migrated to northern and central Louisiana.
-
-Prior to 1778 Choctaw communities moved from north Central Louisiana to
-LaSalle, Rapides, Jackson, and Grant Parishes in the vicinity of two saw
-mill towns, Jena and Eden. Other Choctaw communities were scattered
-throughout the Florida parishes north of Lake Pontchartrain.
-
-
- _Jena Band_—
-
-Although they function autonomously, the Jena Band of Choctaw continue
-to maintain a close relationship with their parent tribe, the
-Mississippi Band in Philadelphia, Mississippi and continue to speak
-their native language.
-
-In 1974 they incorporated as a non-profit organization and are currently
-preparing for federal recognition as a separate tribe from the
-Mississippi Band.
-
-They are basically rural people, but maintain a community at Jena,
-Louisiana on Highway 167, approximately 46 miles northeast of
-Alexandria.
-
-The Jena Band of Choctaws are a founding member of the Inter-Tribal
-Council.
-
-
- COUSHATTA
-
-The Coushatta occupied many villages in their Alabama homeland. They
-lived in towns and farmed the surrounding lands. The tribe was divided
-into clans. Each clan was allotted specific fields and a portion of
-their crops were collected for the public granary to protect against
-poor harvests, war emergencies and to feed the needy and hungry
-travelers.
-
-The clans elected their best orator as chief who in turn appointed a
-town chief and war chief for each town. In the center of the town was a
-square where the tribal leaders met to discuss the religious, political
-and economic affairs.
-
-The Coushatta were primarily farmers who supplemented their crops of
-maize, peas, beans, squashes, pumpkins, melons, potatoes, and rice by
-hunting, fishing and trading with other tribes. They were accomplished
-archers and were reluctant to accept the use of guns. They also used
-their bows and arrows for fishing or they used blow guns, hook and
-lines, spears, traps and handnets.
-
-In 1540 a Spanish exploration party led by DeSoto robbed an outlying
-Coushatta village, kidnapping the chief and other leaders. They
-threatened to burn their hostages alive unless the tribe agreed to give
-future explorers whatever they wanted.
-
-Co-existence with the Spanish and French assumed relatively peaceful
-proportions and was mutually beneficial until the end of the
-Revolutionary War when land seeking settlers pushed farther and farther
-into Coushatta territory.
-
-The years were marked by a continuing struggle over land, warfare,
-broken treaties, migration away from white settlements and a dwindling
-Coushatta population. The final blow came when 3,000 warriors were
-killed and 22 million acres of Indian land lost in the Creek War of
-1813-1814.
-
-The Coushatta migrated through Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana
-and Texas in their search for unclaimed land where they could
-re-establish their peaceful agricultural way of life.
-
-By the beginning of the Civil War in 1861, some 250 Coushattas had
-settled along the Calcasieu River near Kinder. Here the tribe continued
-its traditions and enjoyed amicable relations with their neighbors,
-until their peaceful and prosperous existence was again lost when
-American settlers became interested in Coushatta lands. In 1884 most of
-the Coushattas remaining in Louisiana moved to a site 15 miles east of
-the Calcasieu River and 3 miles north of Elton in Allen Parish. Life was
-hard for the Coushattas, but by 1920 individual tribespeople had carved
-out an Indian community that encompassed more than 1,000 acres of
-farmland, forest and lush, green swamps.
-
-In 1898 the United States government placed 160 acres in trust for the
-tribe and assumed partial responsibility for educating the children.
-Later a federally sponsored elementary school for grades 1-5 was
-established and medical services were added for the tribal members.
-During the repudiated “termination” policy in 1958 the United States
-government ended its trusteeship of tribal lands and discontinued its
-meager services. Legally this meant the Coushatta tribe no longer
-existed.
-
-In 1973 a newly formed corporation, the Coushatta Alliance, Inc. finally
-succeeded in getting the United States government to legally
-re-establish recognition of the Coushatta tribe.
-
-With the development of a strong tribal government came the revival of a
-culture almost lost; a heritage almost forgotten.
-
-
- HOUMA
-
-
- _Houma_—
-
-The Houmas were accomplished farmers who lived in towns or villages and
-farmed the surrounding lands. Certain unique cultural traits indicate
-they may have migrated to Louisiana centuries ago from a homeland
-somewhere in South America. It is evident they had some contacts,
-directly or indirectly, with other Indian cultures in Mexico and South
-America. Several varieties of squash and pumpkin native to the Indian
-south of the equator were part of the Houma agriculture. Also, grew
-peas, beans, and other vegetables. They relied heavily on their maize
-crop but also grew several varieties of peas and beans in addition to
-squash and pumpkins.
-
-Another indication of ties with South America is their composite type
-grooved blow-gun. It was made in two pieces and tightly bound with sinew
-or fiber cord. Although this type of blow-gun was very common among
-South American tribes it is quite different from the cane blow-guns used
-by other Southeastern tribes of the United States.
-
-When anyone in their village fell ill two wise men were summoned to the
-cabin to chase evil spirits away by singing. Their cabins were perfectly
-square structures made with pole frames covered with a plaster of mud
-and Spanish moss. There were no openings in the house except for a very
-small door 2 X 4 feet or less. There were no smoke holes for their
-fireplaces either. After the house was plastered woven cane mats were
-attached to the walls inside and out. These mats were then covered with
-bunches of tall grass canes. Such a structure would last 20 years
-without repairing.
-
-A red crawfish was recognized as their war symbol. War parties were led
-by women as well as men. One woman was so fierce and respected, she
-occupied first place on the council of Houma villages. Women could also
-serve as chief.
-
-French explorer, LaSalle, first encountered the Houma in 1682 in the
-area now known as Wilkinson County, Mississippi and West Feliciana
-Parish, Louisiana near Angola. This was the first known contact with
-Europeans. When the French returned to the area in 1700 half of the
-Houma tribe had died of abdominal flu.
-
-In 1706 the Houma and Tunica formed an alliance to strengthen themselves
-against the Chickasaw and their British allies. Three years later the
-Tunicans turned on their allies and many Houma were massacred in the
-ensuing battle. Those who survived, fled southward and settled briefly
-on the Mississippi River near Donaldsonville.
-
-During much of the 1700’s they migrated from place to place searching
-for a suitable location, free from pressures of other groups, where they
-could resume their agricultural economy. As their tribe decreased they
-united with other tribes and pursued hunting, fishing, and trapping to
-feed and clothe their shrinking group. With other tribes joining and
-merging with the Houma their cultures and customs were interchanged and
-blended until the tribes were indistinguishable from one another. Only
-the various chiefs attempted to maintain their tribal identities.
-
-From 1820-1840 the Houma migrated farther and farther south until they
-reached the Gulf of Mexico and settled along the bayous and swamps in
-Terrebonne and Lafourche Parishes. They shared this territory with the
-French Acadians and gradually adopted the French language and Catholic
-religion.
-
-Although they formerly had the skills to weave finely decorated cane
-baskets similar to Chitimachan baskets, this skill was lost and replaced
-with palmetto, cypress and cane weaving and moss mat making. Many of the
-men are skilled wood carvers.
-
-By 1940 they supported themselves almost exclusively by trapping
-muskrats and raccoons in the coastal marshes, by fishing with nets for
-shrimp and other fish in season, gathering oysters, and in a small part
-hiring out to cane and rice growers in the lower parishes. Thus their
-traditional agricultural economy evolved into a hunting and fishing one
-on the coastal fringes.
-
-Today tribal members are concentrated primarily in Terrebonne, Lafourche
-and Jefferson Parishes with the majority located in Terrebonne Parish.
-
-They have historically held the concept of each community retaining a
-large measure of autonomy, existing separately and possessing different
-outlooks and goals. With such tradition it is not surprising that two
-distinctly separate tribal governments currently exist. The Houma Tribe
-Inc., domiciled in Golden Meadow in Lafourche Parish serves Lafourche,
-St. Bernard, St. Tammy, Orleans, Plaquemine, Jefferson and Terrebonne
-Parishes while the Houma Alliance Inc., is domiciled in Dulac, in
-Terrebonne Parish.
-
-The Houma Alliance, Inc. was a founding member of the Inter-Tribal
-Council.
-
-
- _Acotapissa_—
-
-In 1699 this tribe was living on the Pearl River about 11 miles from its
-mouth. It is said to occupy 6 villages and the Tangipahoa occupied one
-which had formerly constituted a 7th.
-
-In 1702 or 1705 they moved to Bayou Castine on the North shore of Lake
-Pontchartrain, six months later the Natchitoches, whose crops had been
-ruined, were settled beside them by the commanders of the Mississippi
-fort.
-
-In 1718 they moved to the Mississippi River and settled 35 miles above
-New Orleans on the east bank. In that year a Frenchman described their
-village and said the chief’s house was 36 feet in diameter. Six feet
-more than that of the Natchez Great Sun.
-
-A little higher up the river they had a small village, then abandoned.
-In their old town was a temple which they rebuilt after they moved to
-the Mississippi River.
-
-This tribe, the Bayogoula and Houma who had settled nearby were
-gradually becoming amalgamated. The Bayogoula and the Acotapissa seem to
-have combined first and then united with the Houma.
-
-
- _Bayogoula_—
-
-When the colony of Louisiana was founded in 1699, this tribe was living
-on the west bank of the Mississippi River about 5 miles below Plaquemine
-at a place which still bears their name. The Mugulasha tribe was then
-living with them.
-
-The Bayogoula were at war with the Houma. When the Mugulasha became too
-friendly with the Houmas, the Bayogoula attacked their fellow villagers,
-destroyed a considerable number and drove the rest away. They then
-invited the Acotapissa and Tiou to take their places. In 1706 the
-Taensa, who had abandoned their towns on Lake St. Joseph, settled in the
-Bayogoula as they had attacked the Mugulasha. The survivors were given a
-place to settle near the French fort on the Mississippi River. By 1725
-they had moved above New Orleans. In 1739 they were living between the
-Acotapissa and the Houma and had partially become fused with them. Their
-subsequent history is given with the Houma.
-
-
- _Mugulasha_—
-
-This tribe was living at a site a few miles above the present site of
-New Orleans on the opposite side of the river when LaSalle first
-encountered them in 1682. In 1699 they shared a village with the
-Bayogoula north of their former settlement. Between 1682 and 1699 the
-Mugulasha and the Quinipissa joined together. The chief of the
-Quinipissa in 1682, when the French first entered the territory, also
-served as the chief of the Mugulasha in 1699. In May, 1700 they were
-attacked by their fellow villagers, the Bayogoula, and were almost
-completely destroyed. Survivors probably united with the Bayogoula or
-Houma.
-
-
- _Okelousa_—
-
-In 1541 the Spaniards described them as a tribe “of more than ninety
-villagers not subject to anyone, with a very warlike people and much
-dreaded”, occupying a fertile land.
-
-In 1682 they appear as allies of the Houma in the destruction of a
-Tangipahoa village on the east bank of the Mississippi River. They were
-a wandering people living west of the river on two little lakes to the
-west of and above Point Coupee.
-
-By the 18th century they were a small tribe living west of the lower
-course of the Mississippi River. They evidently joined the Houma tribe
-and ceased to exist as a distinct group.
-
-
- _Quinipissa_—
-
-This tribe was found by LaSalle in 1682 a _few miles above the present
-site of New Orleans_, but on the _opposite side_ of the river. The
-people received him with flights of arrows, and on his return used
-peacemaking overtures as a mask for a treacherous but futile attack upon
-his force. Four years later, Tonti made peace with this tribe. In 1699
-Iberville hunted for them in vain, but later learned that they were
-identical with the Mugulasha, then living with the Bayogoula about 20
-leagues above their former settlement. According to Sauvolle, however,
-the Quinipissa were not identical with the Mugulasha, but had united
-with them. In any case, there can be no doubt that the _chief of the
-Quinipissa in 1682 and 1686 was the same man as the chief of the
-Mugulasha in 1699_.
-
-In May, 1700, shortly after Iberville had visited them for the second
-time, the Mugulasha were attacked and almost completely destroyed by
-their fellow townsmen, the Bayogoula. The destruction was not as
-complete probably as the French writers would have us believe, but we do
-not hear of either Mugulasha or Quinipissa afterward, and the remnant
-must have united with the Bayogoula or Houma, the latter having been
-their allies.
-
-
- _Tangipahoa_—
-
-A tribe _probably related to the Acotapissa_ and perhaps originally a
-part of them, whose home at the end of the 17th century was on an
-_affluent of Lake Pontchartrain_ which still bears their name. Some may
-at one time have moved to the Mississippi, Sioucie. LaSalle in 1682,
-found, on the east side of the river, 2 leagues below the Quinipissa
-settlement, a town recently destroyed and partly burned by enemies,
-which some said was named “Tangibao”, though others called it
-“Maheonala” or “Mahehoualaima”. The remnants of this tribe probably
-united or reunited with the Acotapissa and eventually merged with the
-Houmas.
-
-
- KADOHADACHO (CADDO)
-
-
- _Caddo_—
-
-The name Caddo is applied collectively to an important group of
-approximately 25 tribes forming 3 or more confederated groups of
-Kadohadacho covering the present states of Arkansas, Louisiana, and
-Oklahoma.
-
-Their culture was considerably different from those of other Louisiana
-tribes. They allied themselves with the plains cultures and unlike the
-other tribes of the state, who were afraid of horses, the Caddo readily
-accepted and utilized them for hunting buffalo and other game.
-
-The Caddo was very large and powerful before the arrival of the
-Europeans. They had highly developed social and ceremonial organizations
-with surrounding tribes. They were excellent farmers and noted for their
-outstanding pottery. Their importance in history however quickly
-diminished with the arrival of the white man.
-
-Their name comes from their own word Kadohadacho which was later
-shortened to Caddo by the white man. They seem to have always lived on
-the Red River where they planted corn, pumpkins, and various vegetables.
-They did not tolerate idleness and those who did not work were punished.
-They worked their fields in good weather and attended their handiwork,
-made bows and arrows, clothing, and tools during cold rainy weather. The
-women kept busy making mats out of reed and leaves and by making pots
-and bowls from clay.
-
-When it was time to till the fields all the men assembled and worked
-first one field and then another until every field of all the households
-were ready for planting. The planting was never done by the men; only
-the women. To supplement their crops the men hunted and fished.
-
-Each tribe had a chief called a Caddi, who ruled within the section of
-country occupied by his tribe. The larger tribes also had sub-chiefs,
-the number depending on the size of the tribe.
-
-They lived in a communal arrangement. Eight to ten families lived in a
-single conical shaped grass house or one made of thatch supported by a
-pole frame. Mat couches lined the walls and served for seating during
-the day and for beds at night. A fire burned in the center of house
-night and day. (883)
-
-Their houses were arranged around an open town square which was used for
-social and ceremonial functions. The members of each house were
-responsible for farming the fields adjacent to their house.
-
-For their role as ambassadors of peace under the rule of the French,
-Spanish and American governments, the Caddo were promised they would
-never be disturbed from their land. However, the purchase of the
-Louisiana Territory resulted in increased immigration into Caddo
-country. Even with military assistance it soon became impossible for the
-United States government to restrain the white settlers from inhabiting
-the Caddo lands. Finally the Indian agent was authorized to purchase the
-Caddo land and the Indians moved westward to Texas.
-
-As a result of an extermination policy by the Texans who did not want
-the Caddo either, those who weren’t killed were driven from Texas east
-of the Red River where in retaliation, the Caddo sent small bands into
-Texas to plunder and harass the whites. With their hunting grounds so
-depleted stealing became almost a necessity. By the early 19th century
-their importance as a distinct tribe was over and survivors merged with
-other tribes.
-
-
- _Adai_—
-
-A Caddo tribe which lived near the present site of Robeline, Louisiana
-when first encountered by Europeans in the 1500’s. As a result of wars
-between France and Spain the Adai suffered severely. One portion of
-their villages was under French control and the other part under
-Spanish. An ancient trail between their villages became the noted
-“contraband trail” along which traders and travelers journeyed between
-the French and Spanish provinces. War between France and Spain almost
-exterminated the Adai. (891)
-
-Even though their vocabulary differed widely from the rest of the Caddo
-dialects, it is probable that they combined with the Kadohadacho. By the
-close of the 19th century all of the Adai had disappeared.
-
-
- _Doustioni_—
-
-A small tribe living near Natchitoches, Louisiana. They also appeared in
-European accounts under the names of Souchitiony, Dubchinsis, and
-Oulchionis.
-
-In 1702 a crop failure caused the Indian agent St. Denis to move their
-neighbors, the Natchitoches tribes, from the Red River to an area beside
-the Acolapissa on Lake Ponchartrain. The Doustioni however, chose to
-remain in their country and reverted for a time to hunting rather than
-move to the Lake Ponchartrain area.
-
-In 1714 when St. Denis brought the Natchitoches back and started an
-establishment among them the Doustioni accepted an invitation to settle
-close by the post. In 1719 they were known to be living on an island in
-the Red River not far away. Since nothing more was written about them,
-they probably lost their identity in the Natchitoches tribe.
-
-
- _Nasoni (Nissohone or Nisione)_—
-
-This tribe appears in 1542 as a “province” entered by the Spaniards
-during an attempt by DeSoto’s expedition to reach Mexico by land. It was
-southwest of the present city of Shreveport. They were poor and had very
-little corn. In 1687 there were 2 Nasoni towns, an upper town and a
-lower one. The latter was 27 miles north of Nacogdoches, Texas and Upper
-Nasoni was near Red River just south of the river.
-
-Tribal wars with the Osage Indians and disease left their villages
-destroyed and abandoned. By the close of the 18th century they had
-disappeared, or merged with the Kadohadacho.
-
-
- _Natasi_—
-
-A Caddo tribe on Red River between Natchitoches and Shreveport mentioned
-by writers between 1690-1719. It was probably part of the Yatasi.
-
-Their villages were destroyed and abandoned due to tribal wars and
-disease and by the close of the 18th century they also had disappeared.
-
-
- _Natchitoches_—
-
-When first discovered in 1690 by the French, the main tribe bearing this
-name, pronounced by the Indians themselves Nashitosh, was living near
-the city which is called after them. They were primarily farmers. In
-1702 when their crops were ruined they requested and were granted
-permission from the French to relocate. St. Denis located them on the
-north side of Lake Ponchartrain near the Acolapissa. Twelve years later
-he took them back to their country and established a French post close
-to their village. As long as he remained commandant of this post, his
-influence over the Natchitoches and other tribes which came to live
-nearby was unbounded. Even after his retirement relations between the
-settlers and Indians continued harmonious and the Indians remained in
-their old villages until the first of the 19th century, when they joined
-the rest of the Caddo tribes and accompanied them successively to Texas
-and Oklahoma.
-
-There was a second Natchitoches, the “upper” town, allied with the
-Kadohadacho. It was heard of only in earliest times and probably united
-with the Kadohadacho earlier than the other group.
-
-
- _Nanatsoho_—
-
-An obscure tribe of Caddo whose village was on the Red River in 1687.
-They were allied with other Caddo tribes, the Kadohadatcho, Natchitoches
-and the Nasoni. In 1812 another village near their earlier location was
-noted. They eventually united with their allies and disappeared as a
-distinct tribe by the early 19th century.
-
-
- _Soacatino (Xacatin)_—
-
-A Caddo tribe visited by the Spaniards in 1542 but not mentioned by
-later writers.
-
-
- _Washita (Ouachita)_—
-
-A small Caddo tribe which has given its name to Ouachita River,
-Louisiana. Their village was located near the present site of Columbia
-on the Ouachita. By 1690 a part of them had left the village and settled
-near the Natchitoches Indians. In 1730 the Louisiana Governor wrote they
-had been destroyed by the Taenso, but the greater part probably withdrew
-to the Natchitoches or other Caddo tribes farther west. (204)
-
-
- _Yatasi_—
-
-A Caddo tribe living on the Red River northwest of Natchitoches. When
-the post of Natchitoches was established they were so hard pressed by
-the Chickasaw tribe that part of them sought refuge nearby, while others
-fled to the Kadohadatcho. Later they re-occupied their own country.
-Later left Louisiana for Texas with the other Caddo tribes.
-
-Died out quickly within the 20 year period between 1690 and 1710.
-
-
- TUNICA
-
-
- _Tunica_—
-
-Tradition and early records indicate this tribe lived in the
-northwestern Mississippi and neighboring parts of Arkansas. By 1682 they
-had concentrated on Yazoo River a few miles above its mouth, though
-parties were scattered throughout northeastern Louisiana to boil salt
-which they traded. They had a village on the Ouachita as late as 1687.
-In 1706, fearing attacks by the Chickasaw and other Indians allied to
-the English, the Tunica abandoned their villages and moved to the Houma
-town site opposite the mouth of the Red River. They were well received
-by the Houma, but shortly afterward rose against their hosts killing
-more than half and driving the rest away.
-
-Sometime between 1784 and 1803 they again abandoned their villages and
-moved up the Red River to the Marksville Prairie, where settled on a
-strip of land formerly owned by the Avoyels. This land was recognized as
-the Indian Reserve and their mixed-blood descendants have continued to
-occupy land. A part of them went farther west and joined the Atakapa and
-another part moved to the Chickasaw Nation in Oklahoma where they
-established themselves along the Red River.
-
-
- _Avoyel_—
-
-Their main village was near the rapids of the Red River, a short
-distance above the present city of Alexandria. Another village was
-located near the city of Marksville.
-
-Their name which signifies “Stone People” or rather “Flint People”,
-indicates they were active in the manufacture or trade of arrow points,
-and raw flint materials. It was not until 1700 that Iberville met some
-members from this tribe when they acted as middlemen in providing a
-market for horses and cattle plundered from the Spaniards.
-
-In 1767 they were still occupying a village near the “rapids” of the Red
-River. Although they spoke a Natchezen language the tribe merged with
-the Tunicas south of Marksville by 1805, except for 2 or 3 women who
-made their homes with French families on the Ouachita. It was not until
-1932 that the last known person of Avoyel blood passed away.
-
-
- _Biloxi_—
-
-A Siouan tribe located on the Pascagoula River and Biloxi Bay in 1690’s
-probably formerly residents Ohio Valley.
-
-In early 1700-1703 they settled on Pearl River at site formerly occupied
-by Acotapissa then drifted back to Pascagoula River near the Pascagoula
-tribe.
-
-They lived near the same tribe in that general region until 1763 when
-both tribes moved across the Mississippi, the Biloxi settling first near
-the mouth of the Red River. They must have soon moved to the
-neighborhood of Marksville. They established 2 villages; one on a half
-section adjoining the Tunica. Soon afterward they sold or abandoned this
-site and moved to Bayou Rapides and then to the mouth of the Rigolet de
-Bon Dieu, crossed to the south side to Bayou Boeuf in 1794-96 below a
-band of Choctaws.
-
-Soon after 1800 they sold their lands to William Miller and Colonel
-Tulton. Although the sale was confirmed by United States government May
-5, 1805, the Biloxi remained in the immediate neighborhood and gradually
-died out or fused with the Tunica at Marksville and Choctaw where they
-still reside. A large group moved to Texas.
-
-In 1886 a few Biloxi were discovered living on Indian Creek 5-6 miles
-west of Lecompte, Louisiana by Bureau of American Ethnology.
-
-
- _Grigra (Gris)_—
-
-A small Tunican tribe which had given up its independent existence
-before the arrival of the French in Louisiana. They moved to what is now
-Mississippi and became a part of the Natchez Nation. Even though they
-inter-married, language etiquette was used to set them apart from the
-original Natchez Indians who were regarded as the noble class.
-
-
-
-
- INTER-TRIBAL COUNCIL OF LOUISIANA
-
-
-The Inter-Tribal Council of Louisiana, Inc., is a non-profit
-organization which was formed as an effort in Indian self-determination,
-i.e., Indians governing Indian programs. It is presently composed of
-four of the states’ tribes: Jena Band of Choctaws, Jena; Coushatta Tribe
-of Louisiana, Inc., Elton; Chitimacha Tribe of Louisiana, Inc.,
-Charenton; and the Houma Alliance, Inc., Dulac. It was incorporated in
-May, 1975, and began administering an Employment and Training Program
-funded under the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act, 1973 (CETA),
-Section 302 by the Department of Labor that same year.
-
-The Inter-Tribal Council:
-
- —provides leadership, and services on behalf of its member tribes;
- —determines needs of tribal members to better provide services;
- —establishes supportive or gap-filling services to its member tribes;
- —provides technical assistance and input to federal, state, local and
- private providers of social services, in planning for
- services and needs of American Indians in the state.
-
-Since the Inter-Tribal Council, Inc. began serving the needs of
-Louisiana Indians in May, 1975, approximately 15 Louisiana Indians have
-earned high school diplomas through programs administered by the agency.
-An estimated 10 additional diplomas will be earned this school year.
-
-Approximately 600 Indians have successfully completed job related
-training in such fields as carpentry, clerical, auto mechanics,
-cosmetology, drafting, and electricians with approximately 550 currently
-employed. This represents a significant increase in Indian participation
-in the skilled job market since 1975.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-—Silently corrected a few typos.
-
-—Collated headings against Table of Contents and added entries to
- resolve discrepancies.
-
-—Retained any publication information from the printed edition: this
- eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.
-
-—In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
- _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Indians of Louisiana, by Anonymous
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Indians of Louisiana, by Anonymous
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Indians of Louisiana
-
-Author: Anonymous
-
-Release Date: October 30, 2020 [EBook #63583]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK INDIANS OF LOUISIANA ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
-
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-</pre>
-
-<div id="cover" class="img">
-<img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Indians of Louisiana" width="600" height="712" />
-</div>
-<div class="box">
-<h1>INDIANS OF LOUISIANA</h1>
-<p class="center small">SPONSORED BY THE INTER-TRIBAL COUNCIL OF LOUISIANA</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_i">i</div>
-<h2 id="toc" class="center">TABLE OF CONTENTS</h2>
-<dl class="toc">
-<dt class="jl"><a href="#c1">PREHISTORIC LOUISIANA INDIANS</a></dt>
-<dd><a href="#c2">1. Lithic Period</a></dd>
-<dd><a href="#c3">2. Archaic Period</a></dd>
-<dd><a href="#c4">3. Poverty Point Period&mdash;Late Archaic</a></dd>
-<dd><a href="#c5">4. Tchefuncte Period</a></dd>
-<dd><a href="#c6">5. Marksville Period</a></dd>
-<dd><a href="#c7">6. Troyville&mdash;Cole Creek Period</a></dd>
-<dd><a href="#c8">7. Plaquemine Period</a></dd>
-<dd><a href="#c9">8. Mississippian Period</a></dd>
-<dd><a href="#c10">9. 1540-Present</a></dd>
-<dt class="jl"><a href="#c11">HISTORIC PERIOD</a></dt>
-<dd><a href="#c12">I. ATAKAPA</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c13">1. Atakapa</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c14">2. Opelousa</a></dd>
-<dd><a href="#c15">II. CHITIMACHA</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c16">1. Chitimacha</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c17">2. Chawasha</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c18">3. Taensa (Tensas)</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c19">4. Washa (Quacha)</a></dd>
-<dd><a href="#c20">III. CHOCTAW</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c21">1. Choctaw</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c22">2. Jena Band</a></dd>
-<dd><a href="#c23">IV. COUSHATTA</a></dd>
-<dd><a href="#c24">V. HOUMA</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c25">1. Houma</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c26">2. Acotapissa</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c27">3. Bayogoula</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c28">4. Mugulasha</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c29">5. Okelousa</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c30">6. Quinipissa</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c31">7. Tangipahoa</a></dd>
-<dd><a href="#c32">VI. KADOHADACHO (CADDO)</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c33">1. Caddo</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c34">2. Addi (Adai)</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c35">3. Doustian</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c36">4. Nasoni</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c37">5. Natasi</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c38">6. Natchitoches</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c39">7. Nanatsoho</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c40">8. Soacatino (Xacatin)</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c41">9. Washita (Ouachita)</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c42">10. Yatasi</a></dd>
-<dd><a href="#c43">VII. TUNICA</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c44">1. Tunica</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c45">2. Avoyel</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c46">3. Biloxi</a></dd>
-<dd class="ddt"><a href="#c47">4. Grigra (Gris)</a></dd>
-<dd><a href="#c48">VIII. INTER-TRIBAL COUNCIL OF LOUISIANA</a></dd>
-</dl>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_1">1</div>
-<h2 id="c1"><span class="small">PREHISTORIC LOUISIANA INDIANS</span></h2>
-<h3 id="c2"><i>Paleo-lithic Period</i> (approximately 12,000-5,000 BC):</h3>
-<p>According to anthropologists there have been people in Louisiana for
-at least 12,000 years. They probably migrated from the northern
-United States in search of game as more and more of the northern areas
-fell under sheets of advancing ice. Louisiana was much cooler and the
-plant-life very different from modern times.</p>
-<p>These early men hunted bison, mastodon, camels, and horses with simple
-spears made by attaching a sharpened rock flake to the end of a spear.
-They were the true pioneers of this state. They came here without
-benefit of guides to show them the best hunting farm lands.</p>
-<p>One of their villages has been discovered on Avery Island. Artifacts
-found among extinct animal bones indicate the area was inhabited when
-mastodons, bison, and camels, roamed Louisiana. *(Cabildo)</p>
-<h3 id="c3"><i>Archaic Period</i> (5,000-1400 BC):</h3>
-<p>The large animals gradually became extinct as the glaciers melted, the
-climate grew warmer, and the plant life changed. The native Louisianians
-were forced by necessity to hunt smaller animals and to supplement
-their diet with shellfish. The people of the Archaic Period moved from
-place to place leaving behind huge mounds of discarded shells which
-eventually increased the elevation of area and reduced flooding. During
-this period they developed such tools as spear&mdash;throwers, knives, scrapers,
-drills, and darts.</p>
-<h3 id="c4"><i>Poverty Point Period</i> (1700-200 BC):</h3>
-<p>In northeastern Louisiana, near Epps, is an ancient village site called
-Poverty Point. It contains a unique bird effigy mound and a large
-geometrical village. Houses of palmetto were built on ridges of earth
-arranged in an octagon east of the 600 foot long and 70 foot high bird
-mound.</p>
-<p>Since they did not have clay pottery, food was cooked by placing it in
-an earthen pit lined with hot baked clay balls. Tools, called micro-flints,
-were made from stone slivers to open shellfish, nuts, and seeds.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_2">2</div>
-<p>There are also indications of developing trade with other areas.</p>
-<h3 id="c5"><i>Tchefuncte Period</i> (200 BC-400 AD):</h3>
-<p>In coastal Louisiana much of the old Archaic tradition of shellfish
-gathering, augmented by hunting, continued long after the Poverty Point
-culture was 1,000 years old. About 200 BC crude pottery was added to
-the basic Archaic Culture on the coast and around Lake Ponchartrain.
-They continued to eat shellfish, supplemented with small game and wild
-plants. They lived on shell middens in circular houses made from poles
-and thatch.</p>
-<h3 id="c6"><i>Marksville Period</i> (100-550 AD):</h3>
-<p>The development of agriculture during this period freed the early
-Louisianians from daily hunting and food gathering which allowed
-them time for more religious and recreational activities. They began
-making fine pottery and flint projectile points for ceremonial and
-burial purposes rather than for purely utilitarian uses.</p>
-<p>They continued building earthen mounds and added rather elaborate
-burial practices by placing the deceased in the mound with pottery
-and recreational items such as chunkey stones. Some of these burial
-artifacts were made from materials from as far away as Yellowstone
-Park and marine shells from the Gulf. Their artifacts included copper
-items.</p>
-<h3 id="c7"><i>Troyville-Coles Creek Period</i> (500-1200)</h3>
-<p>This was basically a continuation of the Marksville Period. Mound
-building became more advanced with a shift toward large flat topped
-pyramidal mounds as foundations for temples. These were probably used
-for sacred and ceremonial activities. The burial mounds continued to
-be built in conical shapes.</p>
-<p>Agriculture improvements included clearing fields by slashing the trees
-and burning them in the fields to provide fertilizer for crops. Bows
-and arrows were used for the first time which increased their hunting
-successes. With these improvements came larger populations as the
-people developed methods for feeding their growing numbers.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_3">3</div>
-<p>It also meant time for improving the art of pottery making. Archaeologists
-are able to tell the tribe and with whom they traded by examining
-the styles of decoration and the lines incised on the pottery.</p>
-<h3 id="c8"><i>Plaquemine Period</i> (1100-1450)</h3>
-<p>Maize agriculture was important during this period. Villages were
-located on bluffs and terraces near large streams and rivers to utilize
-the rich alluvial bottom land for farming and water for the villagers.</p>
-<p>Rectangular shaped houses were built by digging trenches 12-18 inches
-wide and as deep. Poles 6 inches or smaller were set upright in the
-trench and earth was packed around them until the trench was filled.
-Sometimes rocks or horizontal logs were laid in the trench to brace
-the upright poles. The spaces between the rows of upright poles were
-intertwined and woven with vines and mud smeared over the entire structure.
-When the first Europeans came to Louisiana this type of house
-was very common among the Indians.</p>
-<p>The houses were usually arranged in small clusters around several large
-mounds which surrounded a central plaza. The plaza was used primarily
-for ceremonies. The famous Emerald Mound near Natchez, said to be the
-second largest prehistoric man-made object in the United States, is a
-nearby example of such a village arrangement.</p>
-<h3 id="c9"><i>Mississippian Period</i> (1400-1700)</h3>
-<p>Trade routes with other Indians in the Southwest and Mexico increased
-and cultural diffusion was extensive. Trade with the first Europeans
-began during the 16th century.</p>
-<p>After 1,000 years the elaborate burial practices from the Tchefuncte
-Period were revived and expanded into a &ldquo;Cult of the Dead&rdquo;. Great
-burial mounds were built to contain the dead and their burial artifacts.
-Many wooden forms of men and animals covered with hammered copper,
-pottery shaped as human or animal heads, and pottery depicting bones,
-skulls, rattlesnakes, and &ldquo;feathered serpents&rdquo; were placed with the
-corpse in the mound.</p>
-<p>Villages were enclosed by walls of poles plastered with mud. During
-this period Indian populations decreased significantly. As they
-decreased and the palisade walls rotted, smaller and smaller compounds
-<span class="pb" id="Page_4">4</span>
-were built around the remaining village.</p>
-<h3 id="c10"><i>1540-Present</i></h3>
-<p>It is not known how many Indians lived in Louisiana, however, archaeological
-evidence, as well as written accounts by early Spanish and French
-explorers indicate there were large numbers. From the northern farmlands
-of the Caddo and Tunica to the southern swamps and bayous of the
-Chitimacha; from the southwestern prairie of the Atakapa to the eastern
-hills and rivers of the Natchez and the Muskhogee (Houma) were many
-tribes who adapted their culture, their lives, and their economy to
-available products in their segment of Louisiana&rsquo;s environment. Following
-is a brief history of the major tribes and those groups which merged
-with them.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_5">5</div>
-<h2 id="c11"><span class="small">HISTORIC PERIOD</span></h2>
-<h3 class="center" id="c12">ATAKAPA</h3>
-<h4 id="c13"><i>Atakapa</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>This large group of Indians occupied the prairies of southwestern
-Louisiana from Bayou Teche to the Sabine River and from Opelousas
-to the coastal marshes. They were a semi-settled, partially agricultural
-people occupying a number of favorable villages along waterways; the
-lower coast of the Calcasieu and around the shores of Calcasieu Lake,
-lower Mermentau, Grand Lake, along Bayou Plaquemine, along the
-Vermillion near the present site of Abbeville and a site near the
-present town of Opelousas.</p>
-<p>They were culturally less advanced than their neighbors, however they
-were more advanced than their reputation as wandering cannibals would
-lead us to imagine. They had several semi-permanent villages and are
-known to have participated in trade with other Indians along the Texas
-coast. They traded fish to the Opelousas for flints and other items
-they did not manufacture.</p>
-<p>Although individuals frequented various French posts with other Indian
-tribes, it was well into the 18th century that the Atakapa began to
-feel the influences of the Europeans on their culture. This was
-probably due in part to the relative isolation of their villages.</p>
-<p>In 1760 Skunnemoke (&ldquo;Short Arrow&rdquo;) sold the land on which his village
-stood along with a wide strip between Bayou Teche and Vermillion
-village, the group did not abandon their site until the early 19th
-century. Other lands of the Atakapa were steadily sold and the
-villages moved and combined to survive the advance of the Europeans.</p>
-<p>In 1787 the principle Atakapa village was at the &ldquo;Island of Woods&rdquo;
-later known as the &ldquo;Island Lacasine&rdquo;. It was abandoned about 1799
-when they moved to a village on the Mermentau. This was the last
-village of the Eastern Atakapa and is said to have been occupied as
-late as 1836. Some of the Indians united with the Western Atakapa
-around Lake Charles, but others scattered as far as Oklahoma. The last
-village of the Western Atakapa was on &ldquo;Indian Lake&rdquo;, later called &ldquo;Lake
-Prein&rdquo;, which was occupied until after the middle of the 19th century.</p>
-<p>In 1885 a considerable vocabulary of Atakapa was gathered from two
-women living in Lake Charles who had belonged to this last Atakapa
-town. A later survey disclosed a few former residents of the old
-<span class="pb" id="Page_6">6</span>
-town were still living in 1907-1908 but, by 1942 all known villagers
-of the last Atakapa town were dead.</p>
-<h4 id="c14"><i>Opelousa</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>Probably a divergent group of Atakapa. They lived in the
-vicinity of the present city of Opelousas and acted as middlemen in
-trade between other Indians in the South. They bought fish from the
-Chitimacha and Atakapa which they exchanged for flints from the Avoyels.
-Some of these flints were passed on to the Karankawas from the Texas
-coast for globular or conical oil jugs. They traded such items as
-Caddo pottery, Texas pots, stone beads, arrow points and salt along
-routes from the interior of Texas to the coast and inland through
-Caddo country in northern Louisiana and onward through Arkansas. (737)</p>
-<p>The last representatives of this tribe apparently joined the Atakapa
-to whom they were probably related.</p>
-<h3 class="center" id="c15">CHITIMACHA</h3>
-<h4 id="c16"><i>Chitimacha</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>The Chitimacha are the only Louisiana Indians known to currently live
-in the vicinity of their ancestral homelands. It is evident they were
-one of the largest tribes in Louisiana. Their large population was
-probably the result of a favorable environment which provided an abundant
-food supply of plants, animals and marine life without the
-necessity of extensive hunting or fishing expeditions, or the necessity
-to periodically abandon their village sites for lack of food. The men
-did the hunting and fishing.</p>
-<p>Although the women planted such crops as maize and sweet potatoes, many
-of their foods grew wild. Foods such as beans, wild potatoes, pond lily
-seeds, palmetto grains, rhizoma of common sagittaria and large leaf
-sagittaria, persimmons, strawberries, blackberries, mulberries, white
-berries, many kinds of tree fruits, pumpkins, and several others grew
-close to their villages.</p>
-<p>The Chitimacha inhabited two groups of villages. One group was located
-along the upper reaches of Bayou Lafourche near the Mississippi River
-while the other group was located on Grand Lake and the Bayou Teche
-area. These areas consist of many bayous and swamps which were easy to
-protect.</p>
-<p>They made their houses from poles covered with palmetto leaves on the
-roofs and walls. All the necessary building materials were readily
-<span class="pb" id="Page_7">7</span>
-available and easily replaced when damaged or destroyed by storms and
-hurricanes.</p>
-<p>Women exerted strong influence in the tribe&rsquo;s affairs because important
-political positions were available to them. Usually the men controlled
-the governmental offices, however if a chief died his widow could assume
-his responsibilities if she were a capable leader. Women could also
-work as medicine men. Only the leadership of religious affairs was
-denied them.</p>
-<p>The political system was run by a group of powerful men. One head chief
-controlled the affairs of the entire confederation, with sub-chiefs
-governing the outlying villages. These leaders inherited their offices,
-lived in large homes, and carried heavily decorated peacepipes to all
-ceremonies and social affairs as reminders of their importance. They
-ruled by personal edicts, which were enforced by sub-administrators
-appointed especially for that purpose. They maintained groups of
-warriors to protect them, and to defend their villages against raids by
-neighboring tribes.</p>
-<p>The head chief, sub-chiefs, sub-administrators and war leaders were
-entrenched by the rules of a rigidly stratified society. The Chitimacha
-were the only southeastern tribe with a true caste system. The leaders
-and their respective families comprised the &ldquo;noble class&rdquo;; all others
-belonged to the &ldquo;commoner&rdquo; class. Noblemen addressed commoners in popular
-language, but commoners spoke to noblemen only in terms that were
-used solely for that purpose. With rare exceptions, noblemen married
-only noblemen because the husband joined the clan of the wife, therefore
-he would become a commoner. A nobleman was inclined to remain
-unwed if no woman of his class was free to marry.</p>
-<p>Religious affairs were controlled by Holy Men (and assistants who were
-to succeed them after their deaths). Holy Men were in charge of the
-sacred ceremonies of their respective clans. They had the responsibility
-of perpetuating the ancient parables and stories of miraculous events
-which embodied the moral codes of their villages, and which contained
-beliefs concerning man&rsquo;s kinship to nature and to nature&rsquo;s creatures.</p>
-<p>The Chitimacha men wore long hair, weighted with pieces of lead to hold
-their heads erect. They wore necklaces, bracelets and rings made of
-copper, gold and silver. Women wore their hair in braids, used makeup
-of red and white dyes, and wore bracelets, earrings and finger rings.</p>
-<p>Their aesthetic appreciation is revealed in their manufacture of objects
-<span class="pb" id="Page_8">8</span>
-from shells and stones and in their excellent baskets. Basket-makers
-gathered swamp cane, split it into strands then dyed it either black or
-yellow or red, and let it dry. When the strands were completely dry
-they wove them into baskets in two layers, in such a way as to produce
-symbolic designs on the exterior walls. Their first contact with
-Europeans in 1699. Between 1701 and 1705 war broke out after a party of
-French soldiers reinforced by Acolapissa and Natchitoches Indians took
-twenty Chitimacha women and children prisoner. In retaliation, Chitimacha
-warriors killed French missionary, St. Cosme, and his 3 companions in a
-battle near the Mississippi River. When news of the incident reached New
-Orleans the governor of the new French colony declared war.</p>
-<p>When peace finally came thirteen years later many Chitimacha had been
-killed, displaced, or enslaved. This mighty Chitimacha nation was not only
-reduced in population; it had lost its power and political importance among
-the southern Louisiana tribes.</p>
-<p>In 1762 another important milestone in Chitimacha history occurred. The
-Acadians from Nova Scotia began to arrive at New Orleans and move out along
-the bayous to escape persecution from British colonial authorities. These
-cajun French people married Chitimachas and within a century full bloods
-became scarce. The Chitimachas began to speak &ldquo;cajun French&rdquo; instead of
-their own language. Many converted to the Roman Catholic religion.</p>
-<p>By 1880 the remaining Chitimacha people were struggling for survival.
-Since they were too poor to own any of the large sugar plantations they
-worked on them during summer and harvest time for wages, some of them cut
-timber, manufactured baskets or raised small quantities of vegetables and
-sugar cane the rest of the year to supplement their wages. They were an impoverished
-remnant of the old culture.</p>
-<p>In 1905 the Chitimacha fought a court battle to retain the last 505 acres
-of their once vast territory. An out of court settlement was made and
-they were given title to 280.36 acres of the disputed tract. This too
-was almost lost when the attorney in the litigation presented them a
-bill plus interest almost a decade later. However, Miss Sarah Avery
-McIlhenney, a wealthy philanthropist intervened and purchased the judgement
-on the land for $1450. She agreed to assign ownership to the United
-States government on behalf of the Chitimacha, therefore preventing the
-loss of the last of their land.</p>
-<p>In response to Miss McIlhenney&rsquo;s efforts government officials took an
-interest in the Chitimacha affairs for the first time. On May 8, 1916,
-Congress placed the land in trust for the benefit of the tribe and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_9">9</span>
-established a roll of all known living members. Only 60 members were
-named. However, they did not receive any actual government assistance
-until a reservation school was established in 1934.</p>
-<p>Until the 1940&rsquo;s they still relied upon traditional occupations because
-there were few job opportunities near the reservations. Many Chitimacha
-shuttled back and forth between the reservation and area lakes where
-fishing was good, while others lived out on the lakes. It took all day
-to get to the outlying lakes from the reservations in their &ldquo;push-skiff&rdquo;
-or pirogue.</p>
-<p>World War II marked a general turning point in tribal history as returning
-war veterans infused the tribe with new ideas, enthusiasm and a desire to
-insure tribal identity for the future. On November 28, 1946 Chief Earnest
-Darden resigned as chief and urged the tribe to appoint someone to engineer
-the formation of a constitutional form of government, thus ending the
-traditional chief-type of rule that had existed since prehistoric times.</p>
-<p>Through the years there were many obstacles to obtaining the education
-necessary for the Chitimacha to secure well paying jobs. Until recently
-those desiring a high school education had to attend the Haskell High
-School in Kansas. Since few tribesmen could afford to send their children
-to Kansas for a high school degree a cycle of low education and low paying
-jobs continued.</p>
-<p>After World War II several Chitimachas began working in the oil industry
-on &ldquo;in-shore&rdquo; drilling crews and more were working &ldquo;off-shore&rdquo; operations
-by the early 1950&rsquo;s. Their success soon attracted others to more middle
-income jobs and today there are Chitimacha working as mechanics, plant
-workers, carpenters, mental health directors, community health representatives
-and administrators and other such professions.</p>
-<p>On January 14, 1971 the Chitimachas became members of the first organized
-tribe in the state of Louisiana to be recognized by the United States
-government.</p>
-<p>They were also one of the founding members of the Inter-Tribal Council in
-May, 1975 and have continued to play an important role in the agency.</p>
-<h4 id="c17"><i>Chawasha</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>A small tribe allied to the Chitimacha living in the alluvial
-country about the mouth of the Mississippi River. It is possibly this
-tribe which survivors of DeSoto&rsquo;s expedition found using atlatls in 1543.</p>
-<p>Their village and that of the related Washa was on Bayou Lafourche in
-1699 when the colony of Louisiana was founded.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_10">10</div>
-<p>In 1713 British slave traders formed a party of Natchez, Chickasaw and
-Yazoo to attack the Chawasha under the guise of a peace embassy.
-They killed the head chief and took 11 prisoners including the chief&rsquo;s
-wife.</p>
-<p>There seems to have been 2 or possibly 3 successive villages by 1722
-all on the Mississippi River. In 1730 in order to quiet panic fears
-of the French in New Orleans, Governor Perrier allowed a band of slaves
-to destroy the Chawasha town. Although he described it as a total
-massacre it is more likely the adult men were absent from the village
-on a hunting trip and possibly only 7 or 8 of the Indians were murdered.</p>
-<p>In 1758 Governor de Kerlerec states they had formed a little village 3-4
-leagues from New Orleans. Afterward the population steadily declined,
-and they seemed to disappear toward the close of the 18th or beginning
-of the 19th century.</p>
-<h4 id="c18"><i>Taensa (Tensas)</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>The Taensa occupied 7 or 8 villages near Lake St.
-Joseph, on the west bank of the Mississippi River in Northeastern
-Louisiana.</p>
-<p>In March, 1700 the temple near Newellton on the west end of the lake
-was destroyed by lightning and was never rebuilt, fearing raiding
-parties from the Yazoo and Chickasaw the tribe abandoned their villages
-in 1706 and moved down the Mississippi River to the Bayogoula village.
-The Bayogoula treated them well but soon after their arrival the Taensa
-turned on the Bayogoula killing many and driving the rest away. The
-Taensa had intended to return to their ancient villages after this
-massacre, but apparently they remained in the neighborhood of the old
-Bayogoula town, for they were at the Manchac in 1715. They also had
-a village during this period on the south side of the Mississippi,
-(about 30 miles) above New Orleans.</p>
-<p>Before 1744 they had moved to the Tensaw River, to which they gave their
-name and where they remained until the country was ceded to England in
-1763. They then removed to the Red River and were later granted permission
-to settle on the Mississippi at the entrance of Bayou Lafourche.</p>
-<p>They were living beside the Apalachee, the settlements of the two tribes
-extending from Bayou d&rsquo;Appo to Bayou Jean de Jean and their own village
-standing at the head of the turn. Subsequently both tribes sold their
-land and moved to Bayou Boeuf.</p>
-<p>Later the Taensa parted with this land also and drifted farther south
-to a small bayou at the head of Grand Lake, still known on local maps
-<span class="pb" id="Page_11">11</span>
-as Taensa Bayou.</p>
-<p>They intermarried with the Chitimacha and the Alabama becoming gradually
-lost as a distinct people.</p>
-<h4 id="c19"><i>Washa</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>Small tribe living on Bayou Lafourche west of present city of
-New Orleans in 1699. By 1805 only 5 individuals living with French
-settlers in 1805.</p>
-<h3 class="center" id="c20">CHOCTAW</h3>
-<h4 id="c21"><i>Choctaw</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>The Choctaw were the second largest tribe in the Southeastern
-United States. They were excellent farmers who lived in permanent towns
-in the territory which is now Southern Mississippi and Southeastern
-Alabama. Although they were non-nomadic they developed and maintained
-extensive trade routes with other tribes as far away as Canada. Some
-of our modern road and highway routes follow those established by this
-tribe.</p>
-<p>The women did most of the farm work, fetched the water and cut firewood.
-They spun cloth for long skirts from buffalo wool and strong herb fibers,
-silk grass or mulberry bark. It was a thick canvas-like material which
-could be worn with either side out.</p>
-<p>The men did the hunting, built the houses, made wood and stone tools,
-and helped the women in the fields. They were fond of games, wrestling
-and jumping contests as well as ball and chunkey games.</p>
-<p>Their houses were circular with clay mixed with straw sides and thatched
-roofs. Cane seats about 2 feet off the ground lined the walls inside.
-During the day they were used for seating and for beds at night. The
-space under these seats was used to store vegetables. In the center of
-the house was an open fireplace.</p>
-<p>Their society was divided into different classes or castes. There were
-the chiefs, one to preside over war ceremonies and another over peace
-ceremonies, the upper class (&ldquo;their own people&rdquo; or &ldquo;friends&rdquo;), and 5
-classes of slaves.</p>
-<p>The Choctaw women had their babies alone and it was not until later times
-they accepted the practice of mid-wives. When the mother was about to
-give birth the father retreated to another house and would not eat until
-after sunset. He also abstained from pork and salt until the baby was
-born.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_12">12</div>
-<p>When the baby was born the mother washed him and placed him in a cradle
-with a bag of sand tied over his forehead to flatten it. This is why
-the Choctaw were called &ldquo;flat heads&rdquo; by neighboring tribes.</p>
-<p>Mothers were not allowed to discipline their sons. This was the duty
-of the maternal uncle who acted as the boy&rsquo;s teacher. All the boys were
-schooled morning and afternoon in tribal legends, hunting with bows and
-arrows, and other manly tasks.</p>
-<p>In 1540 the Spanish explorer, DeSoto, began trading with them. The
-Choctaw were intrigued by Spanish goods, especially metal. They also
-established trade with the French and by the 1700&rsquo;s had adopted many
-French ideas, life styles, cultural attitudes and incorporated French
-words into their language. Unlike their Indian neighbors, the men
-continued to wear their hair in full length styles.</p>
-<p>The Choctaws served as guides for the European expeditions across
-Louisiana which resulted in many Choctaw words being used as name locations
-throughout our state.</p>
-<p>As colonization increased pressures to choose alliances with either the
-French to keep the English and their powerful allies, the Chickasaw and
-Creek Nations, from closing trade routes to the north and Canada.</p>
-<p>From 1754-1763 the Choctaws were in almost constant warfare. In 1763
-the French and Indian wars ended with France ceding all her lands east
-of the Mississippi River to the English. This resulted in half the
-Choctaw towns being allied to the French and the other half with the
-English. War pressures eroded inter-tribal tranquility in the Choctaw
-Nation, leading to civil war.</p>
-<p>When the French retreated to New Orleans they in effect deserted their
-Choctaw allies. On January 3, 1786, the Treaty of Hopewell was negotiated
-with the United States Government recognizing the Choctaw Nation
-as a nation and defining the eastern boundary of the Choctaw Lands.</p>
-<p>Hostilities with their former Indian allies during the wars, coupled
-with increasing pressures from settlers desiring their lands, led the
-tribe to migrate west of the Mississippi River in search of farm land
-and tranquility.</p>
-<p>Between 1801 and 1830 they were methodically negotiated off their tribal
-homelands in Alabama and Mississippi. In 1830, they signed the treaty
-of Dancing Creek, agreeing to leave their homelands and not return. The
-following year the greater part of the nation moved to lands along the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_13">13</span>
-Red River in Oklahoma granted by the treaty. There they established
-a small republic modeled after that of the United States government.
-However, this republic came to an end when the State of Oklahoma was
-organized.</p>
-<p>A considerable number of Choctaw remained in Mississippi while smaller
-bands migrated to northern and central Louisiana.</p>
-<p>Prior to 1778 Choctaw communities moved from north Central Louisiana
-to LaSalle, Rapides, Jackson, and Grant Parishes in the vicinity of two
-saw mill towns, Jena and Eden. Other Choctaw communities were scattered
-throughout the Florida parishes north of Lake Pontchartrain.</p>
-<h4 id="c22"><i>Jena Band</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>Although they function autonomously, the Jena Band of Choctaw
-continue to maintain a close relationship with their parent tribe, the
-Mississippi Band in Philadelphia, Mississippi and continue to speak their
-native language.</p>
-<p>In 1974 they incorporated as a non-profit organization and are currently
-preparing for federal recognition as a separate tribe from the
-Mississippi Band.</p>
-<p>They are basically rural people, but maintain a community at Jena,
-Louisiana on Highway 167, approximately 46 miles northeast of Alexandria.</p>
-<p>The Jena Band of Choctaws are a founding member of the Inter-Tribal
-Council.</p>
-<h3 class="center" id="c23">COUSHATTA</h3>
-<p>The Coushatta occupied many villages in their Alabama homeland. They lived
-in towns and farmed the surrounding lands. The tribe was divided into clans.
-Each clan was allotted specific fields and a portion of their crops were
-collected for the public granary to protect against poor harvests, war
-emergencies and to feed the needy and hungry travelers.</p>
-<p>The clans elected their best orator as chief who in turn appointed a town
-chief and war chief for each town. In the center of the town was a square
-where the tribal leaders met to discuss the religious, political and economic
-affairs.</p>
-<p>The Coushatta were primarily farmers who supplemented their crops of maize,
-peas, beans, squashes, pumpkins, melons, potatoes, and rice by hunting,
-fishing and trading with other tribes. They were accomplished archers and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_14">14</span>
-were reluctant to accept the use of guns. They also used their bows and
-arrows for fishing or they used blow guns, hook and lines, spears, traps
-and handnets.</p>
-<p>In 1540 a Spanish exploration party led by DeSoto robbed an outlying
-Coushatta village, kidnapping the chief and other leaders. They threatened
-to burn their hostages alive unless the tribe agreed to give future explorers
-whatever they wanted.</p>
-<p>Co-existence with the Spanish and French assumed relatively peaceful proportions
-and was mutually beneficial until the end of the Revolutionary
-War when land seeking settlers pushed farther and farther into Coushatta
-territory.</p>
-<p>The years were marked by a continuing struggle over land, warfare, broken
-treaties, migration away from white settlements and a dwindling Coushatta
-population. The final blow came when 3,000 warriors were killed and 22
-million acres of Indian land lost in the Creek War of 1813-1814.</p>
-<p>The Coushatta migrated through Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana
-and Texas in their search for unclaimed land where they could re-establish
-their peaceful agricultural way of life.</p>
-<p>By the beginning of the Civil War in 1861, some 250 Coushattas had settled
-along the Calcasieu River near Kinder. Here the tribe continued its
-traditions and enjoyed amicable relations with their neighbors, until their
-peaceful and prosperous existence was again lost when American settlers became
-interested in Coushatta lands. In 1884 most of the Coushattas remaining
-in Louisiana moved to a site 15 miles east of the Calcasieu River and
-3 miles north of Elton in Allen Parish. Life was hard for the Coushattas,
-but by 1920 individual tribespeople had carved out an Indian community
-that encompassed more than 1,000 acres of farmland, forest and lush, green
-swamps.</p>
-<p>In 1898 the United States government placed 160 acres in trust for the
-tribe and assumed partial responsibility for educating the children. Later
-a federally sponsored elementary school for grades 1-5 was established and
-medical services were added for the tribal members. During the repudiated
-&ldquo;termination&rdquo; policy in 1958 the United States government ended its trusteeship
-of tribal lands and discontinued its meager services. Legally
-this meant the Coushatta tribe no longer existed.</p>
-<p>In 1973 a newly formed corporation, the Coushatta Alliance, Inc. finally
-succeeded in getting the United States government to legally re-establish
-recognition of the Coushatta tribe.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_15">15</div>
-<p>With the development of a strong tribal government came the revival of a
-culture almost lost; a heritage almost forgotten.</p>
-<h3 class="center" id="c24">HOUMA</h3>
-<h4 id="c25"><i>Houma</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>The Houmas were accomplished farmers who lived in towns or villages
-and farmed the surrounding lands. Certain unique cultural traits indicate
-they may have migrated to Louisiana centuries ago from a homeland somewhere
-in South America. It is evident they had some contacts, directly
-or indirectly, with other Indian cultures in Mexico and South America.
-Several varieties of squash and pumpkin native to the Indian south of
-the equator were part of the Houma agriculture. Also, grew peas, beans,
-and other vegetables. They relied heavily on their maize crop but also
-grew several varieties of peas and beans in addition to squash and
-pumpkins.</p>
-<p>Another indication of ties with South America is their composite type
-grooved blow-gun. It was made in two pieces and tightly bound with
-sinew or fiber cord. Although this type of blow-gun was very common
-among South American tribes it is quite different from the cane blow-guns
-used by other Southeastern tribes of the United States.</p>
-<p>When anyone in their village fell ill two wise men were summoned to the
-cabin to chase evil spirits away by singing. Their cabins were perfectly
-square structures made with pole frames covered with a plaster of mud and
-Spanish moss. There were no openings in the house except for a very small
-door 2 X 4 feet or less. There were no smoke holes for their fireplaces
-either. After the house was plastered woven cane mats were attached to
-the walls inside and out. These mats were then covered with bunches of
-tall grass canes. Such a structure would last 20 years without repairing.</p>
-<p>A red crawfish was recognized as their war symbol. War parties were led
-by women as well as men. One woman was so fierce and respected, she
-occupied first place on the council of Houma villages. Women could also
-serve as chief.</p>
-<p>French explorer, LaSalle, first encountered the Houma in 1682 in the area
-now known as Wilkinson County, Mississippi and West Feliciana Parish,
-Louisiana near Angola. This was the first known contact with Europeans.
-When the French returned to the area in 1700 half of the Houma tribe had
-died of abdominal flu.</p>
-<p>In 1706 the Houma and Tunica formed an alliance to strengthen themselves
-against the Chickasaw and their British allies. Three years later the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_16">16</span>
-Tunicans turned on their allies and many Houma were massacred in the
-ensuing battle. Those who survived, fled southward and settled briefly
-on the Mississippi River near Donaldsonville.</p>
-<p>During much of the 1700&rsquo;s they migrated from place to place searching for
-a suitable location, free from pressures of other groups, where they could
-resume their agricultural economy. As their tribe decreased they united
-with other tribes and pursued hunting, fishing, and trapping to feed and
-clothe their shrinking group. With other tribes joining and merging with
-the Houma their cultures and customs were interchanged and blended until
-the tribes were indistinguishable from one another. Only the various
-chiefs attempted to maintain their tribal identities.</p>
-<p>From 1820-1840 the Houma migrated farther and farther south until they
-reached the Gulf of Mexico and settled along the bayous and swamps in
-Terrebonne and Lafourche Parishes. They shared this territory with the
-French Acadians and gradually adopted the French language and Catholic
-religion.</p>
-<p>Although they formerly had the skills to weave finely decorated cane
-baskets similar to Chitimachan baskets, this skill was lost and replaced
-with palmetto, cypress and cane weaving and moss mat making. Many
-of the men are skilled wood carvers.</p>
-<p>By 1940 they supported themselves almost exclusively by trapping muskrats
-and raccoons in the coastal marshes, by fishing with nets for shrimp and
-other fish in season, gathering oysters, and in a small part hiring out
-to cane and rice growers in the lower parishes. Thus their traditional
-agricultural economy evolved into a hunting and fishing one on the coastal
-fringes.</p>
-<p>Today tribal members are concentrated primarily in Terrebonne, Lafourche
-and Jefferson Parishes with the majority located in Terrebonne Parish.</p>
-<p>They have historically held the concept of each community retaining a
-large measure of autonomy, existing separately and possessing different outlooks
-and goals. With such tradition it is not surprising that two distinctly
-separate tribal governments currently exist. The Houma Tribe
-Inc., domiciled in Golden Meadow in Lafourche Parish serves Lafourche,
-St. Bernard, St. Tammy, Orleans, Plaquemine, Jefferson and Terrebonne
-Parishes while the Houma Alliance Inc., is domiciled in Dulac, in
-Terrebonne Parish.</p>
-<p>The Houma Alliance, Inc. was a founding member of the Inter-Tribal Council.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_17">17</div>
-<h4 id="c26"><i>Acotapissa</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>In 1699 this tribe was living on the Pearl River about 11
-miles from its mouth. It is said to occupy 6 villages and the
-Tangipahoa occupied one which had formerly constituted a 7th.</p>
-<p>In 1702 or 1705 they moved to Bayou Castine on the North shore of Lake
-Pontchartrain, six months later the Natchitoches, whose crops had been
-ruined, were settled beside them by the commanders of the Mississippi
-fort.</p>
-<p>In 1718 they moved to the Mississippi River and settled 35 miles above
-New Orleans on the east bank. In that year a Frenchman described their
-village and said the chief&rsquo;s house was 36 feet in diameter. Six feet
-more than that of the Natchez Great Sun.</p>
-<p>A little higher up the river they had a small village, then abandoned.
-In their old town was a temple which they rebuilt after they moved to the
-Mississippi River.</p>
-<p>This tribe, the Bayogoula and Houma who had settled nearby were gradually
-becoming amalgamated. The Bayogoula and the Acotapissa seem to have
-combined first and then united with the Houma.</p>
-<h4 id="c27"><i>Bayogoula</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>When the colony of Louisiana was founded in 1699, this tribe
-was living on the west bank of the Mississippi River about 5 miles below
-Plaquemine at a place which still bears their name. The Mugulasha tribe
-was then living with them.</p>
-<p>The Bayogoula were at war with the Houma. When the Mugulasha became too
-friendly with the Houmas, the Bayogoula attacked their fellow villagers,
-destroyed a considerable number and drove the rest away. They then
-invited the Acotapissa and Tiou to take their places. In 1706 the Taensa,
-who had abandoned their towns on Lake St. Joseph, settled in the Bayogoula
-as they had attacked the Mugulasha. The survivors were given a place to
-settle near the French fort on the Mississippi River. By 1725 they had
-moved above New Orleans. In 1739 they were living between the Acotapissa
-and the Houma and had partially become fused with them. Their subsequent
-history is given with the Houma.</p>
-<h4 id="c28"><i>Mugulasha</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>This tribe was living at a site a few miles above the present
-site of New Orleans on the opposite side of the river when LaSalle first
-encountered them in 1682. In 1699 they shared a village with the
-Bayogoula north of their former settlement. Between 1682 and 1699 the
-Mugulasha and the Quinipissa joined together. The chief of the
-Quinipissa in 1682, when the French first entered the territory, also
-served as the chief of the Mugulasha in 1699. In May, 1700 they were
-<span class="pb" id="Page_18">18</span>
-attacked by their fellow villagers, the Bayogoula, and were almost completely
-destroyed. Survivors probably united with the Bayogoula or
-Houma.</p>
-<h4 id="c29"><i>Okelousa</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>In 1541 the Spaniards described them as a tribe &ldquo;of more than
-ninety villagers not subject to anyone, with a very warlike people and
-much dreaded&rdquo;, occupying a fertile land.</p>
-<p>In 1682 they appear as allies of the Houma in the destruction of a
-Tangipahoa village on the east bank of the Mississippi River. They were
-a wandering people living west of the river on two little lakes to the
-west of and above Point Coupee.</p>
-<p>By the 18th century they were a small tribe living west of the lower
-course of the Mississippi River. They evidently joined the Houma tribe
-and ceased to exist as a distinct group.</p>
-<h4 id="c30"><i>Quinipissa</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>This tribe was found by LaSalle in 1682 a <i>few miles above the
-present site of New Orleans</i>, but on the <i>opposite side</i> of the river. The
-people received him with flights of arrows, and on his return used peacemaking
-overtures as a mask for a treacherous but futile attack upon his
-force. Four years later, Tonti made peace with this tribe. In 1699
-Iberville hunted for them in vain, but later learned that they were
-identical with the Mugulasha, then living with the Bayogoula about 20
-leagues above their former settlement. According to Sauvolle, however,
-the Quinipissa were not identical with the Mugulasha, but had united with
-them. In any case, there can be no doubt that the <i>chief of the Quinipissa
-in 1682 and 1686 was the same man as the chief of the Mugulasha in 1699</i>.</p>
-<p>In May, 1700, shortly after Iberville had visited them for the second
-time, the Mugulasha were attacked and almost completely destroyed by
-their fellow townsmen, the Bayogoula. The destruction was not as complete
-probably as the French writers would have us believe, but we do not hear of
-either Mugulasha or Quinipissa afterward, and the remnant must have united
-with the Bayogoula or Houma, the latter having been their allies.</p>
-<h4 id="c31"><i>Tangipahoa</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>A tribe <i>probably related to the Acotapissa</i> and perhaps originally
-a part of them, whose home at the end of the 17th century was on an
-<i>affluent of Lake Pontchartrain</i> which still bears their name. Some may at
-one time have moved to the Mississippi, Sioucie. LaSalle in 1682, found,
-on the east side of the river, 2 leagues below the Quinipissa settlement,
-a town recently destroyed and partly burned by enemies, which some said
-was named &ldquo;Tangibao&rdquo;, though others called it &ldquo;Maheonala&rdquo; or
-&ldquo;Mahehoualaima&rdquo;. The remnants of this tribe probably united or reunited
-with the Acotapissa and eventually merged with the Houmas.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_19">19</div>
-<h3 class="center" id="c32">KADOHADACHO (CADDO)</h3>
-<h4 id="c33"><i>Caddo</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>The name Caddo is applied collectively to an important group of
-approximately 25 tribes forming 3 or more confederated groups of
-Kadohadacho covering the present states of Arkansas, Louisiana, and
-Oklahoma.</p>
-<p>Their culture was considerably different from those of other Louisiana
-tribes. They allied themselves with the plains cultures and unlike the
-other tribes of the state, who were afraid of horses, the Caddo readily
-accepted and utilized them for hunting buffalo and other game.</p>
-<p>The Caddo was very large and powerful before the arrival of the Europeans.
-They had highly developed social and ceremonial organizations with
-surrounding tribes. They were excellent farmers and noted for their outstanding
-pottery. Their importance in history however quickly diminished
-with the arrival of the white man.</p>
-<p>Their name comes from their own word Kadohadacho which was later shortened
-to Caddo by the white man. They seem to have always lived on the Red
-River where they planted corn, pumpkins, and various vegetables. They
-did not tolerate idleness and those who did not work were punished. They
-worked their fields in good weather and attended their handiwork, made
-bows and arrows, clothing, and tools during cold rainy weather. The
-women kept busy making mats out of reed and leaves and by making pots and
-bowls from clay.</p>
-<p>When it was time to till the fields all the men assembled and worked first
-one field and then another until every field of all the households were
-ready for planting. The planting was never done by the men; only the
-women. To supplement their crops the men hunted and fished.</p>
-<p>Each tribe had a chief called a Caddi, who ruled within the section of
-country occupied by his tribe. The larger tribes also had sub-chiefs,
-the number depending on the size of the tribe.</p>
-<p>They lived in a communal arrangement. Eight to ten families lived in a
-single conical shaped grass house or one made of thatch supported by a
-pole frame. Mat couches lined the walls and served for seating during the
-day and for beds at night. A fire burned in the center of house night
-and day. (883)</p>
-<p>Their houses were arranged around an open town square which was used for
-social and ceremonial functions. The members of each house were responsible
-for farming the fields adjacent to their house.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_20">20</div>
-<p>For their role as ambassadors of peace under the rule of the French,
-Spanish and American governments, the Caddo were promised they would
-never be disturbed from their land. However, the purchase of the
-Louisiana Territory resulted in increased immigration into Caddo country.
-Even with military assistance it soon became impossible for the United
-States government to restrain the white settlers from inhabiting the
-Caddo lands. Finally the Indian agent was authorized to purchase the
-Caddo land and the Indians moved westward to Texas.</p>
-<p>As a result of an extermination policy by the Texans who did not want the
-Caddo either, those who weren&rsquo;t killed were driven from Texas east of the
-Red River where in retaliation, the Caddo sent small bands into Texas to
-plunder and harass the whites. With their hunting grounds so depleted
-stealing became almost a necessity. By the early 19th century their
-importance as a distinct tribe was over and survivors merged with other
-tribes.</p>
-<h4 id="c34"><i>Adai</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>A Caddo tribe which lived near the present site of Robeline,
-Louisiana when first encountered by Europeans in the 1500&rsquo;s. As a result
-of wars between France and Spain the Adai suffered severely. One portion
-of their villages was under French control and the other part under
-Spanish. An ancient trail between their villages became the noted &ldquo;contraband
-trail&rdquo; along which traders and travelers journeyed between the
-French and Spanish provinces. War between France and Spain almost exterminated
-the Adai. (891)</p>
-<p>Even though their vocabulary differed widely from the rest of the Caddo
-dialects, it is probable that they combined with the Kadohadacho. By
-the close of the 19th century all of the Adai had disappeared.</p>
-<h4 id="c35"><i>Doustioni</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>A small tribe living near Natchitoches, Louisiana. They also
-appeared in European accounts under the names of Souchitiony, Dubchinsis,
-and Oulchionis.</p>
-<p>In 1702 a crop failure caused the Indian agent St. Denis to move their
-neighbors, the Natchitoches tribes, from the Red River to an area beside
-the Acolapissa on Lake Ponchartrain. The Doustioni however, chose to
-remain in their country and reverted for a time to hunting rather than
-move to the Lake Ponchartrain area.</p>
-<p>In 1714 when St. Denis brought the Natchitoches back and started an establishment
-among them the Doustioni accepted an invitation to settle
-close by the post. In 1719 they were known to be living on an island in
-the Red River not far away. Since nothing more was written about them,
-they probably lost their identity in the Natchitoches tribe.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_21">21</div>
-<h4 id="c36"><i>Nasoni (Nissohone or Nisione)</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>This tribe appears in 1542 as a &ldquo;province&rdquo;
-entered by the Spaniards during an attempt by DeSoto&rsquo;s expedition to
-reach Mexico by land. It was southwest of the present city of Shreveport.
-They were poor and had very little corn. In 1687 there were 2 Nasoni
-towns, an upper town and a lower one. The latter was 27 miles north of
-Nacogdoches, Texas and Upper Nasoni was near Red River just south of the
-river.</p>
-<p>Tribal wars with the Osage Indians and disease left their villages destroyed
-and abandoned. By the close of the 18th century they had disappeared,
-or merged with the Kadohadacho.</p>
-<h4 id="c37"><i>Natasi</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>A Caddo tribe on Red River between Natchitoches and Shreveport
-mentioned by writers between 1690-1719. It was probably part of the
-Yatasi.</p>
-<p>Their villages were destroyed and abandoned due to tribal wars and disease
-and by the close of the 18th century they also had disappeared.</p>
-<h4 id="c38"><i>Natchitoches</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>When first discovered in 1690 by the French, the main tribe
-bearing this name, pronounced by the Indians themselves Nashitosh, was
-living near the city which is called after them. They were primarily
-farmers. In 1702 when their crops were ruined they requested and were
-granted permission from the French to relocate. St. Denis located them
-on the north side of Lake Ponchartrain near the Acolapissa. Twelve years
-later he took them back to their country and established a French post
-close to their village. As long as he remained commandant of this post,
-his influence over the Natchitoches and other tribes which came to live
-nearby was unbounded. Even after his retirement relations between the
-settlers and Indians continued harmonious and the Indians remained in
-their old villages until the first of the 19th century, when they joined
-the rest of the Caddo tribes and accompanied them successively to Texas
-and Oklahoma.</p>
-<p>There was a second Natchitoches, the &ldquo;upper&rdquo; town, allied with the
-Kadohadacho. It was heard of only in earliest times and probably united
-with the Kadohadacho earlier than the other group.</p>
-<h4 id="c39"><i>Nanatsoho</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>An obscure tribe of Caddo whose village was on the Red River
-in 1687. They were allied with other Caddo tribes, the Kadohadatcho,
-Natchitoches and the Nasoni. In 1812 another village near their earlier
-location was noted. They eventually united with their allies and
-disappeared as a distinct tribe by the early 19th century.</p>
-<h4 id="c40"><i>Soacatino (Xacatin)</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>A Caddo tribe visited by the Spaniards in 1542 but
-<span class="pb" id="Page_22">22</span>
-not mentioned by later writers.</p>
-<h4 id="c41"><i>Washita (Ouachita)</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>A small Caddo tribe which has given its name to
-Ouachita River, Louisiana. Their village was located near the present
-site of Columbia on the Ouachita. By 1690 a part of them had left the
-village and settled near the Natchitoches Indians. In 1730 the Louisiana
-Governor wrote they had been destroyed by the Taenso, but the greater
-part probably withdrew to the Natchitoches or other Caddo tribes farther
-west. (204)</p>
-<h4 id="c42"><i>Yatasi</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>A Caddo tribe living on the Red River northwest of Natchitoches.
-When the post of Natchitoches was established they were so hard pressed
-by the Chickasaw tribe that part of them sought refuge nearby, while
-others fled to the Kadohadatcho. Later they re-occupied their own country.
-Later left Louisiana for Texas with the other Caddo tribes.</p>
-<p>Died out quickly within the 20 year period between 1690 and 1710.</p>
-<h3 class="center" id="c43">TUNICA</h3>
-<h4 id="c44"><i>Tunica</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>Tradition and early records indicate this tribe lived in the
-northwestern Mississippi and neighboring parts of Arkansas. By 1682
-they had concentrated on Yazoo River a few miles above its mouth, though
-parties were scattered throughout northeastern Louisiana to boil salt
-which they traded. They had a village on the Ouachita as late as 1687.
-In 1706, fearing attacks by the Chickasaw and other Indians allied to
-the English, the Tunica abandoned their villages and moved to the Houma
-town site opposite the mouth of the Red River. They were well received
-by the Houma, but shortly afterward rose against their hosts killing more
-than half and driving the rest away.</p>
-<p>Sometime between 1784 and 1803 they again abandoned their villages and
-moved up the Red River to the Marksville Prairie, where settled on a
-strip of land formerly owned by the Avoyels. This land was recognized as
-the Indian Reserve and their mixed-blood descendants have continued to
-occupy land. A part of them went farther west and joined the Atakapa and
-another part moved to the Chickasaw Nation in Oklahoma where they established
-themselves along the Red River.</p>
-<h4 id="c45"><i>Avoyel</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>Their main village was near the rapids of the Red River, a short
-distance above the present city of Alexandria. Another village was
-located near the city of Marksville.</p>
-<p>Their name which signifies &ldquo;Stone People&rdquo; or rather &ldquo;Flint People&rdquo;,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_23">23</span>
-indicates they were active in the manufacture or trade of arrow points,
-and raw flint materials. It was not until 1700 that Iberville met some
-members from this tribe when they acted as middlemen in providing a market
-for horses and cattle plundered from the Spaniards.</p>
-<p>In 1767 they were still occupying a village near the &ldquo;rapids&rdquo; of the
-Red River. Although they spoke a Natchezen language the tribe merged with
-the Tunicas south of Marksville by 1805, except for 2 or 3 women who made
-their homes with French families on the Ouachita. It was not until 1932
-that the last known person of Avoyel blood passed away.</p>
-<h4 id="c46"><i>Biloxi</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>A Siouan tribe located on the Pascagoula River and Biloxi Bay in
-1690&rsquo;s probably formerly residents Ohio Valley.</p>
-<p>In early 1700-1703 they settled on Pearl River at site formerly occupied
-by Acotapissa then drifted back to Pascagoula River near the Pascagoula
-tribe.</p>
-<p>They lived near the same tribe in that general region until 1763 when
-both tribes moved across the Mississippi, the Biloxi settling first near
-the mouth of the Red River. They must have soon moved to the neighborhood
-of Marksville. They established 2 villages; one on a half section adjoining
-the Tunica. Soon afterward they sold or abandoned this site and
-moved to Bayou Rapides and then to the mouth of the Rigolet de Bon Dieu,
-crossed to the south side to Bayou Boeuf in 1794-96 below a band of
-Choctaws.</p>
-<p>Soon after 1800 they sold their lands to William Miller and Colonel Tulton.
-Although the sale was confirmed by United States government May 5, 1805,
-the Biloxi remained in the immediate neighborhood and gradually died out
-or fused with the Tunica at Marksville and Choctaw where they still reside.
-A large group moved to Texas.</p>
-<p>In 1886 a few Biloxi were discovered living on Indian Creek 5-6 miles west
-of Lecompte, Louisiana by Bureau of American Ethnology.</p>
-<h4 id="c47"><i>Grigra (Gris)</i>&mdash;</h4>
-<p>A small Tunican tribe which had given up its independent
-existence before the arrival of the French in Louisiana. They moved to
-what is now Mississippi and became a part of the Natchez Nation. Even
-though they inter-married, language etiquette was used to set them apart
-from the original Natchez Indians who were regarded as the noble class.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_24">24</div>
-<h2 id="c48"><span class="small">INTER-TRIBAL COUNCIL OF LOUISIANA</span></h2>
-<p>The Inter-Tribal Council of Louisiana, Inc., is a non-profit organization
-which was formed as an effort in Indian self-determination, i.e., Indians
-governing Indian programs. It is presently composed of four of the states&rsquo;
-tribes: Jena Band of Choctaws, Jena; Coushatta Tribe of Louisiana, Inc.,
-Elton; Chitimacha Tribe of Louisiana, Inc., Charenton; and the Houma
-Alliance, Inc., Dulac. It was incorporated in May, 1975, and began administering
-an Employment and Training Program funded under the Comprehensive
-Employment and Training Act, 1973 (CETA), Section 302 by the Department of
-Labor that same year.</p>
-<p>The Inter-Tribal Council:</p>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0">&mdash;provides leadership, and services on behalf of its member tribes;</p>
-<p class="t0">&mdash;determines needs of tribal members to better provide services;</p>
-<p class="t0">&mdash;establishes supportive or gap-filling services to its member tribes;</p>
-<p class="t0">&mdash;provides technical assistance and input to federal, state, local and private providers of social services, in planning for services and needs of American Indians in the state.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Since the Inter-Tribal Council, Inc. began serving the needs of Louisiana
-Indians in May, 1975, approximately 15 Louisiana Indians have earned high
-school diplomas through programs administered by the agency. An estimated
-10 additional diplomas will be earned this school year.</p>
-<p>Approximately 600 Indians have successfully completed job related training
-in such fields as carpentry, clerical, auto mechanics, cosmetology, drafting,
-and electricians with approximately 550 currently employed. This represents
-a significant increase in Indian participation in the skilled job market
-since 1975.</p>
-<h2>Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes</h2>
-<ul>
-<li>Silently corrected a few typos.</li>
-<li>Collated headings against Table of Contents and added entries to resolve discrepancies.</li>
-<li>Retained any publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.</li>
-<li>In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by _underscores_.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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