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Seminole
(Hitchiti-Mikasuki)

Seminole,
Native American tribe of the Muskogean language family
and of the Southeast culture area.
Most
now live in Oklahoma and southern Florida.
The
Seminole tribe developed in the 18th century from
members of the Creek Confederacy, mostly Creeks
and Hitchiti, who raided and eventually settled
in Florida, which was then Spanish territory. Joined
by other refugee Native Americans and escaped black
slaves, they were cut off from the Creek Confederacy
when the United States-Florida border was settled.
Most spoke Muskogee, or Creek; those speaking Hitchiti,
a related Muskogean language, are known as the Hitchiti-Mikasuki
Seminole (see Native
American Languages).
Historical
Seminole culture resembled that of the Creek people.
After
the United States acquired Florida
in 1819, the territorial governor (and later U.S.
president), Andrew Jackson, initiated a vigorous policy
of tribal removal to open the land for white settlers.
Seminole resistance was fierce, and the Seminole
wars were among the most costly of the U.S. Indian
wars.
After
the capture of their leader Osceola
in 1837 and the end of the Second Seminole War in
1842, several thousand Seminole were forcibly moved
west to Indian Territory (now Oklahoma).
At
the end of the Third Seminole War in 1858, about 250
more were sent west. The rest were allowed to remain,
and their descendants signed a peace treaty with the
United States in 1935.
In
1964 the Miccosukee signed a 50-year agreement with
the National Park Service that allows the Miccosukee
access to more than 300 acres of the Everglades.
The
Florida Seminole have five reservations. They farm,
hunt, and fish, and some run tourist-related businesses.
Many still live in thatch-roofed, open-sided houses
on stilts (chickees) and wear patchwork and appliqué
clothing.
The
Seminole in Oklahoma were given a smaller reservation
after the American Civil War. In the late 19th century
they yielded to pressure to divide their tribal land
into individual allotments and cede the surplus to
the United States; this land was opened to settlers
in 1889.
In
1990 Seminole descendants numbered 13,797. Many were
Baptists, but both the Florida and Oklahoma groups
retained traditional Muskogean observances.
"Seminole,"
Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2000 http://encarta.msn.com
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