Fact-checked by Grok 2 weeks ago
References
-
[1]
History of the Seminole Tribe of Florida - Florida State UniversitySeminoles largely trace their ancestry to the ancient Indigenous people of Florida (Calusa, Tequesta, Ais, Apalachee, and others) and to the Muscogee Creek.
-
[2]
Introduction - Seminole Tribe of FloridaWe Seminole have lived in Florida for thousands of years. Our ancestors were the first people to come to Florida. Our ancestors were connected by family and ...
-
[3]
History - Seminole Tribal Historic Preservation OfficeOrigin of “Seminole” The word had come from the Caribbean Taino people, and the Spanish adapted for their own use. It originally meant “runaway livestock”.
-
[4]
Seminole History - Florida Department of StateThe Seminoles of Florida call themselves the "Unconquered People," descendants of just 300 Indians who managed to elude capture by the U.S. army in the 19th ...
-
[5]
The Seminole Wars - Florida Department of StateThe Second Seminole War (1835-1842), usually referred to as the Seminole War proper, was the fiercest war waged by the US government against American Indians.Missing: reliable | Show results with:reliable
-
[6]
The Seminole WarsThe Second Seminole War claimed the lives of over 1,500 U. S. soldiers and cost the government an estimated fifteen million dollars. At its conclusion in 1842, ...Missing: reliable sources
-
[7]
Seminole (tribe) | The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and CultureA minority of the Seminole (between 350 and 500) remained in Florida. A separate Seminole Nation of Florida formed in 1957. After their relocation to the Indian ...
-
[8]
FAQ - Seminole Tribe of FloridaThe Seminole people (that is, the cultural group), are the descendants of many Native Americans who have inhabited Florida, Georgia, Alabama, and parts of South ...Missing: sources | Show results with:sources
-
[9]
Seminole | History, Culture & Facts | BritannicaThe Seminole are a Creek-origin tribe who moved to Florida, located in the Everglades, and fought wars against the US, eventually being forced to move to ...<|separator|>
-
[10]
Seminole - Etymology, Origin & MeaningOriginating from Creek simano:li meaning "wild, untamed," Seminole refers to a Native people from Florida allied with Creeks, known for resisting U.S. ...
-
[11]
Seminole History - Museum of Florida HistoryAfter 1765, all Florida Indians were referred to as "Seminoles." The name comes from the Spanish word cimarrón which means "wild" or "runaway." However, a more ...
-
[12]
Seminole Words (Miccosukee and Creek) - Native-Languages.orgThere are two languages spoken by the Seminole Tribe, Miccosukee and Muscogee Creek. These are related Muskogean languages, but they are different.
-
[13]
FAQ - History - Seminole Tribe of FloridaMikisúkî is a dialect of Hitchiti, which was itself a dialect of the core language, Maskókî. Although Maskokî is spoken in Oklahoma as well as in Florida, ...
-
[14]
Seminole Tribe – Access GenealogyThe Seminole, before the removal of the main body to Indian Territory, consisted chiefly of descendants of Muscogee (Creeks) and Hitchiti from the Lower ...
-
[15]
The Muscogee Creek - 1600 - 1840 - Little River Canyon National ...May 24, 2021 · Many of the Upper Creek Muscogee refused to surrender and escaped into Spanish Florida, where they allied themselves with other remnant tribes ...
-
[16]
Florida's Indians: Past And Present - UF ResearchIn the early 19th century another large migration of Creeks took place, including ancestors of the Miccosukee Indians. Perhaps a thousand Upper Creeks moved to ...Missing: ancestral | Show results with:ancestral
-
[17]
Seminoles - Castillo de San Marcos National Monument (U.S. ...May 26, 2025 · Ancestors of the Seminoles have lived in what is now the Southeastern United States for at least 12,000 years. The arrival of the Europeans, ...Missing: sources | Show results with:sources
-
[18]
SEMINOLE INDIANS - Florida Keys History MuseumIt is believed by most to have been an Arawak Indian word from the islands. The Spanish usually used the words 'rey' (King), jefe (chief or boss) or commandante ...
-
[19]
The History of Black Seminole Indians: From Florida to MexicoSeminoles in Florida often refused to sell their slaves or to turn them over to slavehunters or other Indians without being coerced. Typically, maroons lived in ...
-
[20]
FAQ on the Black Seminoles, John Horse, and RebellionThe Black Seminoles were free blacks and fugitive slaves who forged a strategic alliance with Seminole Indians in Spanish Florida during the early 1800s.
-
[21]
[PDF] black seminole involvement and leadership during the secondIn Florida, free Blacks, runaway slaves, and Blacks owned by Seminoles collectively became known as Black Seminoles. Black. Seminoles either lived in separate ...
-
[22]
The War of 1812 and Indian Wars: 1812-1821 | Andrew Jackson ...Andrew Jackson at the Battle of New Orleans. 2010 Carol Highsmith photograph ... Florida invasion protected land speculation there by Jackson and friends.
-
[23]
[PDF] Florida = S Franklin Fort Gadsden Historic Memorial Negro Fort and ...exacerbated into the outbreak of the First Seminole War of 1817-1818 and the cession of ... Relating to the Destruction of Negro Fort. 15th Congress, 2nd ...
-
[24]
Africans in America/Part 3/Florida's Negro Fort - PBSIn March of 1816, under mounting pressure from Georgia slaveholders, General Andrew Jackson petitioned the Spanish Governor of Florida to destroy the settlement ...Missing: War | Show results with:War
-
[25]
The Battle of Fowltown - Decatur County, GeorgiaThe Battle of Fowltown was a sharp encounter fought on November 23, 1817 in what is now Decatur County, Georgia. The battle was fought between 300 U.S. ...
-
[26]
Seminole Wars - New Georgia EncyclopediaThe three Seminole Wars that commanded the attention and manpower of the US Army and Navy during the antebellum period intensified the violence and chaos.Missing: reliable | Show results with:reliable
-
[27]
1818 James Monroe - An Unauthorized Act of War. First Seminole ...... Andrew Jackson to take appropriate actions stop the incursions. Andrew Jackson liberally interpreted a vague instruction, gathered 3500 men and invaded Florida.
-
[28]
[PDF] Captain Hugh Young's Map of Jackson's 1818 Seminole Campaign ...Meanwhile, on the battle- field lay the bodies of nine blacks and two Indians who had been killed in the combat. Two other blacks were taken prisoner. The next ...
- [29]
-
[30]
Seminole Wars - Division of Library and Information ServicesPrimary sources. National Archives records. The State Library has an extensive collection of primary sources about the Seminole Wars from the National Archives.Missing: 1816-1818 events outcome
-
[31]
Thomas Sidney Jesup and the Second Seminole WarThe Second Seminole War began after a series of coordinated attacks by Seminoles and their African allies in late 1835 and early 1836. The swiftness of these ...Missing: casualties | Show results with:casualties
-
[32]
Timeline of the Florida Seminoles.About 1730-1750s: Lower Creeks migrate into the former territories of the Apalachee and Timucua in northern Florida. 1740s: Creek Indians participate in ...
-
[33]
Seminole Leaders - Florida Department of StateBilly Bowlegs was the principal Seminole leader in the Third Seminole War (1855-1858). Bowlegs and his war-weary band surrendered on May 7, 1858. Thirty-eight ...
-
[34]
Seminole Indian WarsThe Second Seminole Indian War began on December 28, 1835 when Osceola and a band of warriors killed the Indian Agent and four other whites at Fort King.Missing: summary reliable
-
[35]
Indian Treaties and the Removal Act of 1830 - state.govBy the end of his presidency, he had signed into law almost seventy removal treaties, the result of which was to move nearly 50,000 eastern Indians to Indian ...Missing: outcome | Show results with:outcome
-
[36]
What Happened on the Trail of Tears? - National Park ServiceApr 23, 2025 · The Trail of Tears involved forced removal of about 100,000 Indians, many treated brutally, with thousands dying during the journey. The ...
-
[37]
Seminole Nation - FamilySearchDec 13, 2024 · The Seminole Tribe, part of the Five Civilized Tribes, originated in the Southeastern US, and were removed to Indian Territory (Oklahoma) ...
-
[38]
Seminole History - Five Civilized TribesFor nearly twenty years, the Seminoles refused to live with and under the Muscogee Creek government, in 1856, a treaty was made with the Muscogee Creeks and the ...Missing: separate | Show results with:separate
-
[39]
The Unconquered People - Florida State University - Seminoles.comOthers believe that the Seminole name comes from the Spanish word cimarron, meaning “wild men” or “unconquered.” The Indians may have been given this name ...Missing: etymology linguistic
-
[40]
Aftermath of the Seminole Wars - Florida MemoryThe 200 or so Seminoles who remained in Florida after the Seminole Wars learned to build new types of houses, hunt new animals, eat new foods, and find new ...Missing: holdouts | Show results with:holdouts
-
[41]
Seminole Nation: The Unconquered People - Native Hope BlogOct 23, 2023 · For about 40 years after the Seminole Wars, the Seminole who stayed in Florida experienced hardships related to their resistance to removal.
-
[42]
Jumper, John | The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and CultureDuring the Civil War he served as major of the First Battalion Seminole Mounted Rifles and as colonel of the First Regiment Seminole Volunteers. He participated ...
-
[43]
Into the West - Seminole Nation Museum |During the Civil War, one-third of the Seminole people chose to remain with the Union. They were led by Big John Chupco and moved to Kansas, where they fought ...
-
[44]
Billy Bowlegs (Holata Micco) in the Civil War (Part II) - ucf stars... Bowlegs was one of the principal chiefs of the Five Civilized Tribes who supported the Union in the Civil War. Although a number of Seminole chiefs, along ...
-
[45]
Billy Bowlegs: Seminole Chief By Spessard Stone - RootsWebDuring the Civil War, in 1861, Billy Bowlegs refused to sign a treaty with the Confederacy. In Kansas, he, as a captain, joined the Union forces and ...
-
[46]
[PDF] Unforgotten Threat: Florida Seminoles in the Civil War - ucf starsThe events at Fort Sumter, South Carolina, in April 1861 shattered the peace of the nation, and reverberations were felt even by the Seminoles. Florida's war ...Missing: participation | Show results with:participation
-
[47]
Treaty with the Seminole, 1866 - Tribal Treaties DatabaseThere shall be perpetual peace between the United States and the Seminole Nation, and the Seminoles agree to be and remain firm allies of the United States.
-
[48]
(1866) U.S. Treaty with the Seminole Nation | BlackPast.orgThe Seminole Nation covenant that henceforth in said nation slavery shall not exist, nor involuntary servitude, except for and in punishment of crime, whereof ...
-
[49]
[PDF] ANDREW JOHNSON, - GovInfoAnd the Seminoles agree to sell to the. United States, or any company duly authorized as aforesaid, such lands not legally owned or occupied by a member or ...
-
[50]
Allotment | The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and CultureThe agreement with the Seminole was signed on December 16, 1897, calling for the equal distribution of all tribal lands, the proceeds from mineral sales to be ...
-
[51]
Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes (The Dawes Commission ...An act of Congress approved March 3, 1893, established a commission to negotiate agreements with the Choctaw, Creek, Chickasaw, Seminole, and Cherokee Indian ...
-
[52]
Agreement Between the Dawes Commission and the Seminole ...This agreement by and between the Government of the United States, of the first part, entered into in its behalf by the Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes, ...
-
[53]
Seminole Nation - FamilySearch CatalogOn December 16, 1897 the tribe agreed to allotment and this agreement was ratified on July 1, 1898. The Curtis Act of this year provided the Seminole National ...<|separator|>
-
[54]
Statehood and Beyond - Seminole Nation Museum |Many Seminole families and individuals lost their land holdings through the sale, often by fraudulent means. By 1920, only about 20 percent of the Seminole ...Missing: Civil | Show results with:Civil
-
[55]
Oklahoma History Unit 6 - The Dawes Act and Allotment - FiveableMany Native Americans lost their allotments due to fraud, coercion, or inability to pay property taxes; Communal land ownership, which was central to many ...
-
[56]
Seminole Nation MuseumThe Seminole Nation of Oklahoma is one of thirty-nine federally recognized Native American tribes in Oklahoma. It is the largest of the three (politically ...
-
[57]
[PDF] Seminole Tribe of Florida Tribal Update• Federally recognized by Section 16 of the Indian. Reorganization Act of 1934 (25 U.S.C. § 476). • Recognized by the State of Florida under Chapter.
-
[58]
Federal Recognition in the 1950s - Florida Seminole TourismJan 27, 2023 · The Seminole Tribe of Florida gained federal recognition from the United States in 1957. This would allow the Seminole Tribe of Florida to coalesce into the ...
-
[59]
Section 5: 1957-1962--Variants of RecognitionWhile the newly organized Seminole tribal government worked on refining its relationship with the U.S., the Miccosukee Tribe campaigned to gain full acceptance ...
-
[60]
Miccosukee TribeFollowing this, on January 11, 1962, the U.S. Secretary of the Interior approved the Miccosukee Constitution and the Tribe was officially recognized as the ...Missing: process | Show results with:process
-
[61]
S. Rept. 105-361 | Congress.gov | Library of Congress - Congress.govOn January 11, 1962, the Miccosukee Tribe's Constitution and Bylaws were certified by the Secretary of the Interior. Later that year, a permit was issued by the ...
-
[62]
Florida Cattle RanchingA new era of Seminole cattle ranching began in the 1930s, when the Dania and Brighton Seminoles acquired starter herds. The Seminole Tribe established the ...<|separator|>
-
[63]
The Legacy of Red Barn and Seminole CattleAug 4, 2023 · Built on the Brighton Reservation in 1941, Red Barn is an important historic structure that helped launch the Seminole cattle industry into the modern era.
-
[64]
Historic Role of Seminole Cattle RanchingIn 1944 the Seminole Tribe created separate ranch operations in Brighton and Big Cypress, which were supervised by the Central Tribal Cattle Organization. Today ...
-
[65]
Empowering Economies: Trade and Tourism as Acts of Resistance ...Jun 20, 2025 · Bingo halls and casinos are one of these incredible economies that have transformed not only the Seminole Tribe of Florida, but Indian Country ...Missing: pre- | Show results with:pre-
-
[66]
Florida Seminoles in the Depression and New Deal, 1933-1942Then a series of events plunged the Florida Indians into an economic tailspin from which they had not begun to recover when the depression arrived. Recommended ...Missing: 1970s | Show results with:1970s
-
[67]
[PDF] Florida Seminoles in the Depression and New Deal, 1933-1942Nevertheless, in the 1930s economic conditions had led a few Seminole families to take up semi-permanent residence on farms in the vicinity of Lake ...Missing: challenges | Show results with:challenges
-
[68]
Seminole - Summary - eHRAF World CulturesThe origins of these so-called Black Seminole goes back to the period of Seminole ethnogenesis in North Florida, when escaped slaves joined Seminole society ...
-
[69]
[PDF] PART FOUR FLORIDA'S SEMINOLE PEOPLEThe Seminoles are a mixture of native people and refugees who came to Florida from the lower southeastern part of. America. By the early 1700s, ...Missing: origins | Show results with:origins
-
[70]
HUNTING, FISHING, COOKING & FOODS OF THE SEMINOLESFreshwater species readily available in the Everglades, and along the coastal zones, include; gar, catfish, carp, bass, eel, and pickerel. Either from a ...
-
[71]
Traditional Seminole Foods: Resistance and ResilienceFeb 18, 2022 · Sofkee, coontie, fry bread, gar, and swamp cabbage are only a few of the traditional Seminole foods. Some, like sofkee, have been made for many, many ...
-
[72]
Seminole Chickees | Eckerd College in Florida“Chickee” is the word that the Seminoles use for an elevated house constructed of palmetto leaves and cypress-log stilts. During the early 19th century wars ...
-
[73]
[PDF] Plant GuideEthnobotanic: The Seminole, Alabama, and many other Native American tribes in the southeastern United States used the fruits and roots of coontie for food. ...Missing: traditional | Show results with:traditional<|control11|><|separator|>
-
[74]
Florida's Fab Five: Plants - UF/IFAS Extension Manatee CountyFeb 15, 2022 · In Seminole culture the seeds and berries of the sabal palms were used to reduce fevers and treat headaches. The trunks of Sabal Palms were used ...
-
[75]
Healing Plants - University Press of FloridaThe first published record of Florida Seminole herbal medicine and ancient healing practices, Healing Plants is a colorfully illustrated compendium of knowledge ...
-
[76]
Ethnobotany in Florida : Seminole cosmology and medicinal plant useThe Seminole people of Florida have used plants as traditional remedies for hundreds of years. After European contact their knowledge was transformed from ...
-
[77]
Creek Language - Sam Noble Museum - The University of OklahomaSeminole Creek is member of the eastern branch of the Muskogean language family. Related languages include Alabama, Koasati, Hichiti, Mikasuki, Choctaw, and ...
-
[78]
Mikasuki language and alphabet - OmniglotJun 10, 2024 · Mikasuki is an Eastern Muskogean language spoken in southern Florida on the Big Cypress, Immokalee, Hollywood, and Tampa Seminole reservations.Missing: Mvskoke | Show results with:Mvskoke
-
[79]
[PDF] Department strives to preserve language, cultureSep 29, 2023 · The Seminole Tribe's Language Department aims to preserve Elaponke and Creek languages through community programs and an audio dictionary.
-
[80]
Endangered Languages – Florida's Native AmericansAug 11, 2016 · There are just two recognised tribes still in the state: the Miccosukee, and the Seminole, with native languages considered endangered.
-
[81]
Legends - Seminole Tribe of FloridaMany of these stories, which tell about the way of life and beliefs of the Seminoles of Florida, have been collected and told on a riviting CD called Seminole ...Missing: credible | Show results with:credible
-
[82]
A Legendary Storyteller - Seminole Tribe of FloridaDr. Betty Mae Jumper, second chairperson of the Seminole Tribe of Florida, is also known as a storyteller. She comes from the Muscogee of Creek origins.Missing: credible | Show results with:credible
-
[83]
[PDF] Florida Seminole Traditions - Orange County Regional History CenterRattles made of turtle shells are also used in some Seminole ceremonies. This kind of rattle has been used by many different groups of Native Americans and ...
-
[84]
Seminole Stomp Dance - National Museum of the American IndianOct 6, 2012 · The Stomp Dance is part of the Green Corn Ceremony, a four-day gathering held each year to mark the renewal of seasons and express gratitude ...
-
[85]
Florida Seminole Religious Ritual - eHRAF World CulturesA lengthy and detailed description of the Green Corn Dance is presented, based on observations of the busk held by the Brighton community in the summer of 1970.Missing: life | Show results with:life
-
[86]
[PDF] Florida Historical Quarterly - ucf starsMusical instruments used by Florida Seminole are described in detail. There are the rattles, made of coconut shells contain- ing seeds; tin cans with pellets of ...Missing: traditional | Show results with:traditional
-
[87]
Songs of the Seminole Indians of Florida | Smithsonian Folkways ...The songs include Calusa Corn Dance, Cypress Swamp Hunting, Buffalo, Corn, Bird and Animal Dance, Snake Dance, and songs for the sick and removal to Oklahoma.Missing: ceremonies | Show results with:ceremonies
-
[88]
Seminole Patchwork - Florida Seminole TourismAug 26, 2022 · In the early 20th century, Seminoles began to sell crafts like dolls, sweetgrass baskets, and patchwork at tourist camps.
-
[89]
The Art of Patchwork - Ocala Style MagazineMay 1, 2023 · Patchwork is a clothing style where small cloth pieces are sewn into geometric patterns, unique to Seminole and Miccosukee cultures, and ...
-
[90]
1910s-1920s: Seminole DollsAug 12, 2022 · Seminole dolls, as well as other crafts like sweetgrass baskets and patchwork, are important pieces of Seminole culture and identity. They hold ...
-
[91]
Oklahoma Seminoles: Medicines, Magic, and ReligionDec 8, 2015 · Much of the Seminole culture is held in common, but many differences have grown up between the two groups since the “Trail of Tears” separated ...
-
[92]
[PDF] The Seminole Nation of OklahomaJul 1, 2014 · Some are ancient, others are Woodland, and still others are Mississippian cultures. The Seminoles were composed of remnants of many tribal ...Missing: ancestral | Show results with:ancestral<|separator|>
-
[93]
General Council - The Seminole Nation of OklahomaThe Seminole Nation General Council is the governing body of the Seminole Nation and is comprised of 28 elected representatives (2 from each of the 14 bands).Missing: structure principal
-
[94]
Executive Office - The Seminole Nation of OklahomaGovernment. EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT Chief - Sena Yesslith Assistant Chief - Sheila Harjo Judy Jones - Executive Secretary 405.257.7205. Contact Us. Main Number ...Missing: structure | Show results with:structure
-
[95]
Seminole Nation of Oklahoma elects first woman as principal chiefSep 10, 2025 · Sena Yesslith has been elected as the principal chief of the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma, becoming the first woman to hold this position ...Missing: structure | Show results with:structure
-
[96]
Constitution and Code of Laws of The Seminole Nation of OklahomaCONSTITUTION AND CODES Constitution and Code of Laws of The Seminole Nation of Oklahoma ...Missing: 1969 | Show results with:1969
-
[97]
Seminole Nation changes tribal enrollment - ICT NewsIn a recent referendum election, tribal members voted to require a one-eighth quantum of Seminole blood as a part of enrollment requirements.Missing: population criteria
-
[98]
Tribal Enrollment - The Seminole Nation of OklahomaProvides membership statistics and verification of Seminole Nation membership to State/Federal governments and other Tribal Nations. Verification of current ...
-
[99]
Wewoka Agency | Indian AffairsServices are provided by the Wewoka Agency to the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma and its Tribal members residing in Seminole County, Oklahoma.<|separator|>
-
[100]
Seminole Tribe of FloridaAbiaka (Sam Jones) When the Seminole Wars began, Abiaka was already a respected medicine man of the Mikasuki tribe. By the time the wars ended, he had helped...EmploymentTribal CouncilContact UsHistoric SeminoleSeminole Clothing
-
[101]
Government - Seminole Tribe of FloridaThat same year, the U.S. Congress officially recognized the unconquered Seminole Tribe Florida; the Tribe immediately began wading into the mainstream of the ...
-
[102]
Tribal Council - Seminole Tribe of FloridaTribal Council ; Marcellus W. Osceola Jr. Chairman ; Holly Tiger. President/Vice-Chairwoman ; Christopher Osceola. Hollywood Councilman ...
-
[103]
bylaws of the seminole tribe of floridaThe governing body of the Seminole Tribe of Florida shall be known as the Tribal Council and shall consist of eight (8) members elected by secret ballot.Missing: governance structure
-
[104]
Board of Directors - Seminole Tribe of FloridaThe board includes a President, Vice President, and directors from Brighton, Big Cypress, Hollywood, and Immokalee (non-voting). The President is Vice Chairman ...Missing: structure | Show results with:structure
-
[105]
CONSTITUTION OF THE MICCOSUKEE NATIONMay 23, 2019 · The authority of the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians shall be vested in the Miccosukee General Council. The Miccosukee General Council shall be ...
-
[106]
[PDF] approval of miccosukee tribe of indians leasing ordinance - BIA.govThis Ordinance is enacted by the General Council pursuant to the inherent powers of the Miccosukee. Tribe of Indians of Florida ("Tribe"), as a sovereign, ...<|control11|><|separator|>
-
[107]
Talbert Cypress, Chairman - Miccosukee Casino & ResortTalbert Cypress has served in the Miccosukee Business Council since 2017, first elected as Secretary and later becoming the official Chairman of the Council ...
-
[108]
William J. Osceola, Secretary - Miccosukee Casino & ResortOsceola taught language, culture, and digital arts at the Miccosukee Indian School before he was elected Secretary of the Miccosukee Business Council in 2021.
-
[109]
H. Rept. 105-708 - MICCOSUKEE RESERVED AREA ACTThe Congress finds the following: (1) Since 1964, the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida have lived and governed their own affairs on a strip of land on the ...
-
[110]
Miccosukee Tribe AdministrationThis commission allows the police officer to enforce all of the U.S. Title 18 crimes on the Indian Reservation. Each Miccosukee police officer is also ...
-
[111]
The 2025 Florida Statutes - Online Sunshine285.18 Tribal council as governing body; powers and duties.—. (1) The respective governing bodies of the Seminole Tribe of Florida and the Miccosukee Tribe ...
-
[112]
Miccosukee Tribe Co-Stewardship Agreement - National Park ServiceAug 27, 2024 · The National Park Service (NPS) and the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida today entered into two historic co-stewardship agreements for ...
-
[113]
The Seminole Tribe and the Origins of Indian GamingThe Seminole Tribe of Florida has played perhaps the most important role in the origins and development of Indian gaming in the United States of any single ...Missing: economic 20th century pre-
-
[114]
Seminoles TodayThe opening of the first "smoke shop" (offering discount, tax free tobacco products) in 1977 gave the Seminoles a stable enterprise which continues, even today.
-
[115]
Oklahoma tribes drive $23.4B economic impact, support 140,000 jobsJun 21, 2025 · Gaming drove much of the economic activity, generating $7.4 billion in revenues for the 19 tribes studied. The industry has become a significant ...
-
[116]
Economic Empowerment: How Tribal Gaming Benefits the Seminole ...Aug 23, 2023 · The 90% gaming revenue of the Seminole tribe positively impacts the tourism, hospitality, and infrastructure sectors. Presumably, the Native ...
- [117]
-
[118]
[PDF] Statewide Economic Impacts from Oklahoma Tribal Government ...DIRECT IMPACT Oklahoma Tribal Government Gaming output was $4.75 billion in 2015, representing 3 percent of private production in the Oklahoma economy. ...
-
[119]
About The Seminole Tribe of FloridaNearly 3,300 Seminole Indians live on and off reservations throughout Florida. Seminoles pay taxes, serve in the U.S. Armed Forces and vote in elections. They ...Missing: facts | Show results with:facts<|separator|>
-
[120]
Seminole Tribe Buys Hard Rock - ForbesDec 7, 2006 · Last year, Hard Rock posted revenue of $493 million and profit before interest and taxes of $68.6 million. Shares of the U.K.-traded Rank fell ...
-
[121]
Seminole Gaming/Hard Rock International Named a 2024 US Best ...May 22, 2024 · Seminole Gaming / Hard Rock International have been selected as a US Best Managed company for the fourth consecutive year.
-
[122]
Seminole Nation Casinos Selects Pavilion Payments to Power ...Oct 2, 2025 · Seminole Nation Casinos Selects Pavilion Payments to Power Funding Solutions at Three Oklahoma Properties · Contacts · Pavilion Payments Appoints ...
-
[123]
Oklahoma tribal nations contributed $23.4B to state economy in ...Jun 16, 2025 · Gaming and related enterprises generated $7.4 billion in revenue in 2023, with tribal gaming compacts contributing $208 million to the state in ...
-
[124]
[PDF] The Seminole Tribe's Legal Battle for Online Sports Betting Rights in ...185 Class III gaming in Florida reverted back to the 2010 Compact, and any further online sports betting in Florida would violate federal law.186 The Seminole ...
-
[125]
Supreme Court Declines to Hear Challenge to Florida's Gaming ...Jun 20, 2024 · A gambling compact between the state of Florida and the Seminole Tribe of Florida, which allows for sports betting off tribal lands, will remain in place
-
[126]
DOI Rule Endorses Seminole Tribe's Model of Remote WageringApr 19, 2024 · The new rule confirms that compact provisions regarding remote wagering must directly relate to the operation of gaming activities on the tribe's lands.
-
[127]
Seminole Tribe settles legal challenges to online sports gambling ...Oct 28, 2024 · The Seminole Tribe of Florida and a group of businesses that operate racetracks and poker rooms have settled a yearslong legal dispute.Missing: sovereignty | Show results with:sovereignty
-
[128]
Lawsuit reignites fight over Seminole Tribe's exclusive online sports ...Apr 30, 2025 · A lawsuit filed by Protect the Constitution LLC argues Florida violated state constitution by allowing statewide online sports betting ...
-
[129]
[PDF] Oklahoma Gaming Report 2024The State of Oklahomacollected over $210 million in tribal gaming exclusivity fees in fiscal year 2024 under state-tribal gaming compacts.
-
[130]
Native population soars in new Census count - The Seminole TribuneAug 17, 2021 · The number of people who identify as Native American or Alaska Native alone grew by 27.1% to 3.7 million people from 2010 to 2020.
-
[131]
[PDF] American Indian - Population - BIA.govTypically, Indians included in a tribe's Service Population live within ... Seminole Nation. OK. 15,123. 4,504. 1,462. 2,714. 328. 130. Eastern Oklahoma Region ...
-
[132]
Black Seminoles were left behind in COVID-19 Tribal reliefMar 2, 2021 · After these wars concluded in the 1840s, approximately 3,000 members of the Seminole Tribe were removed to “Indian territory” and forced to live ...
-
[133]
[PDF] The Florida Seminole Land Claims Case, 1950-1990 - ucf starsAs part of his presentation Coulter provided a comprehensive legal history of the Seminole claims case through 1978. See “Seminole Land Rights in. Florida and ...
-
[134]
[PDF] Florida's Seminole Indian Land Claims AgreementJan 1, 1991 · Introductlon. In November 1987, the Seminole Tribe of the State of Florida entered into the Florida Indian (Seminole) Land Claims Settle-.
-
[135]
[PDF] The Seminole Land Claims Case in - An Assumption of SovereigntyIntro – the Florida Seminoles were engaged in defending their rights in two legal cases before their federal recognition in 1957.
-
[136]
S.1684 - Seminole Indian Land Claims Settlement Act of 1987Seminole Indian Land Claims Settlement Act of 1987 - Prohibits the approval of certain prior transfers and the extinguishing of certain claims and aboriginal ...
-
[137]
Judgement Fund Program Applications AvailableThe Judgement Fund Program is a special revenue fund of the Seminole Nation created to provide for tribal programs and services established pursuant to the ...
-
[138]
Repatriation Committee - Seminole Tribal Historic Preservation OfficeThe Repatriation Committee includes tribal members and is related to NAGPRA, which facilitates the return of Native American remains.
-
[139]
NAGPRA, Repatriation, and Relearning History - The PeabodyJan 28, 2022 · Last year the Peabody Institute repatriated ancestors from Florida to the Seminole. We continue to work with them on repatriation of other ...
-
[140]
No More Stolen Ancestors: The Seminole Tribe's Quest for ... - EsriApr 10, 2025 · The Seminole Tribe is fighting to bring them home. Their mission is rooted in the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA).
-
[141]
Tribe's repatriation efforts extend beyond SmithsonianAug 31, 2021 · NAGPRA, the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, was put in place in 1990 to protect the cultural and biological remains of ...
-
[142]
[PDF] Journeys to Repatriation - National Park ServiceThe first grants were awarded in 1994. Over the past 15 years more than $31 million supported the NAGPRA activities of 260 Indian tribes, Native Hawaiian ...
-
[143]
Seminole Tribe calls 'Alligator Alcatraz' threat to 'sacred lands'Jul 2, 2025 · Florida's largest federally-recognized tribe has come out in opposition of Alligator Alcatraz, the state's immigration processing center in the Everglades.Missing: conflicts legal 2020-2025
-
[144]
Biden signs bill removing real estate restrictions for tribeDec 3, 2021 · The law now allows the tribe to lease, sell, convey, warrant or transfer its real property that is not held in trust by the United States.Missing: conflicts | Show results with:conflicts
-
[145]
Land Run of 1889 | The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and ...The surrounding tribal-owned lands included the Cherokee Outlet on the north, bordering Kansas; the Iowa, Kickapoo, and Pottawatomie reservations on the east; ...<|separator|>
-
[146]
[PDF] Are the Black Seminoles Native Americans? Sylvia Davis v. The ...Jan 1, 2003 · This note addresses some of the issues associated with the controversy between the Black Seminoles and the Seminole Nation (the Nation).
-
[147]
The long fight for Freedmen citizenship continues in Oklahoma tribal ...Mar 4, 2022 · 'Voting privileges only' in the Seminole Nation In 2000, the Seminole Nation voted to restrict citizenship to those who had one-eighth Seminole ...
-
[148]
Davis v. United States, 199 F. Supp. 2d 1164 (W.D. Okla. 2002)Plaintiffs allege they are entitled to receive benefits from a $56 million judgment awarded to the Seminole Tribe in 1976.