Delaware Tribe of Indians, Oklahoma
Official web site of the Delaware Tribe of Indians located in Oklahoma. The name Delaware was given to the people who lived along the Delaware River, and the river in turn was named after Lord de la Warr, the governor of the Jamestown colony. The name Delaware later came to be applied to almost all Lenape people. In our language, which belongs to the Algonquian language family, we call ourselves Lenape (len-NAH-pay) which means "The People."
http://www.delawaretribeofindians.nsn.us/
(Added: February 13, 2000 Hits: 223 Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
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Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma
The official web site of the Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma. We are one of three (3) federally-recognized Shawnee tribes that constitute the modern successor tribes of the historic Shawnee Nation. The historic Shawnee People lived throughout the region east of the Mississippi River, centered around today’s states of Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Tennessee. They were a highly mobile, wide-ranging, nomadic people who lived as hunters and planters organized into small bands. Their historic geographical territories were mountainous regions, dense forests, and scattered prairies. Because of their geographic location and the focus of their subsistence pursuits, the Shawnee People are generally known as Eastern Woodlands Indians.
http://www.easternshawnee.org/
(Added: November 10, 2005 Hits: 140 Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
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Fallon Paiute-Shoshone (aka Toi Ticutta) Tribe
Official web site of the Fallon Paiute-Shoshone (aka Toi Ticutta) Tribe. The Fallon Paiute Shoshone Tribe, also known as the Toi Ticutta (cattail eaters) is located in the Lahontan Basin, in the shadow of the sacred Fox Peak Mountain in the state of Nevada.
http://www.fpst.org/
(Added: November 10, 2005 Hits: 153 Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
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Fernandeño/Tataviam Tribe
Official web site of theFernandeño/Tataviam Tribe in the state of California. The Fernandeño/Tataviam Tribe's region stretches from the San Fernando Valley and Santa Clartia Valley to the Antelope Valley and can be traced as far back as 450 A.D. At that time the Tataviam people migrated from the north and settled in villages throughout the area. The villages were constructed on the south-facing sides of hills and mountains because they received the most sun light. The word Tataviam means "people facing the sun" and decribes the Tataviam's villages.
http://www.tataviam.org/
(Added: November 10, 2005 Hits: 140 Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
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Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe of South Dakota
Official web site of the Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe of South Dakota. The Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe is comprised primarily of descendents of "Mdewakantonwan", a member of the Isanti division of the Great Sioux Nation, and refer to themselves as Dakota, which means friend or ally. The Flandreau Santee Sioux Indian Reservation is 5,000 acres of combined trust and fee tribal land located along and near the Big Sioux River in Moody County, South Dakota, in a region know as the Prairie Coteau, which consists primarily of undulating or gently rolling land.
http://www.fsst.org/
(Added: November 10, 2005 Hits: 143 Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
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Forest County Potawatomi Community
Official web site of the Forest County Potawatomi Community (Wisconsin) (previously Forest County Potawatomi Community of Wisconsin Potawatomi Indians).
http://www.fcpotawatomi.com/
(Added: November 10, 2005 Hits: 134 Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
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Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation (Arizona)
Official web site of the Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation Tribe in the state of Arizona (formerly the Fort McDowell Mohave-
Apache Community of the Fort
McDowell Indian Reservation).
http://www.ftmcdowell.org/
(Added: November 08, 2005 Hits: 126 Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
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Gila River Indian Community of the Gila River Indian Reservation
Official web site of the Gila River Indian Community of the Gila River Indian Reservation in the state of Arizona. The Gila River Indian Community (GRIC) is an alliance of two tribes, the Akimel O’odham (Pima) and the Pee Posh (Maricopa). The community was established by Executive Order in 1859 and formally established by Constitution in 1939. The largest reservation in the Phoenix metropolitan area, the Gila River Indian Community covers nearly 600 square miles and borders such cities as Phoenix, Tempe, Mesa, Gilbert, Coolidge, and Casa Grande. In the last few years, with concentrated economic development that lead to a continuing increase of agriculture, industrial, and recreational activities, the “People of the River” significantly have moved the community from federal reliance toward greater self-sufficiency.
one another.
http://www.gric.nsn.us/
(Added: October 11, 1999 Hits: 300 Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)
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