Nottoway people

Cheroenhaka (Nottoway) Tribe
Chief Walter D. "Red Hawk" Brown III of the Cheroenhaka (Nottoway) Indian Tribe
Total population

Courtland, Virginia

Cattashowrock Reservation : 500
Regions with significant populations

Southampton County, Virginia

Isle of Wight, Virginia

Nottoway, Virginia

Alexandria, Virginia
Languages
English, Iroquoian Nottoway (historical)
Related ethnic groups
Nansemond, Chowanoke, Susquehannock, Meherrin, Tuscarora, Iroquoian people
Nottoway Indian Tribe of Virginia,Inc.
Chief Lynette Allston of the Nottoway Indian Tribe of Virginia
Total population
Nottoway Indian Tribe of VA: Southampton County into Surry County: 180
Regions with significant populations
 United States, Virginia
Languages
English, Iroquoian Nottoway (historical)
Related ethnic groups
Meherrin, Tuscarora, Nansemond, Chowanoke

The Nottoway (Nottoway) are a Native American tribe in Virginia. Historically, the Nottoway spoke an Iroquoian language and were related to other Iroquoian speakers.

The Nottoway Indian Tribe of Virginia live from Southampton County into Surry County and the Tidewater region,[1] and the Cheroenhaka (Nottoway) Indian Tribe live in Southampton County in their traditional tribal territory called Cattashowrock Town in Courtland.[2] Since colonial times, treaties by regional government with the Nottoway attested to their presence as a distinct people.

The Nottoway Indian Tribe of Virginia and the Cheroenhaka (Nottoway) Tribe are distinct, with separate identities. However, both contemporary tribes received state recognition in February 2010.[3][4] They were among several Virginia tribes that were deprived of their land during the colonial era and their records were distorted during the early 20th century. The Cheroenhaka (Nottoway) Indian Tribe has filed their letter of intent to petition for federal recognition and hope to receive federal recognition soon. The Chickahominy, Eastern Chickahominy, Rappahanock, Nansemond, Monacan, and Upper Mattaponi received federal recognition in January 2018. The Pamunkey tribe received their federal recognition in 2015. Only four tribes in Virginia still await the title of federal recognition: The Nottoway Indian Tribe of Virginia, The Cheroenhaka (Nottoway) Tribe, the Mattaponi Indian tribe and Reservation, and the Patawomeck tribe.

Name

The meaning of the name Cheroenhaka (Tuscarora: Čiruʼęhá·ka·ʼ[5]) is uncertain. (It has been spelled in various ways: Cherohakah, Cheroohoka or Tcherohaka.) The late Iroquoian scholar Blair A. Rudes analyzed the second element as -hakaʼ meaning "one or people who is/are characterized in a certain way". He conjectured that the first element of the name was related to the Tuscarora term čárhuʼ (meaning "tobacco", as both tribes used this product in ceremonies).[6] The term has also been interpreted as "People at the Fork of the Stream".[7]

The term Nottoway may derive from Nadawa or Nadowessioux (widely translated as "poisonous snake"), an Algonquian-language term which speakers used to refer to members of competing language families, specifically the Iroquoian- or Siouan-speaking tribes. Because the Algonquian occupied the coastal areas, they were the first tribes met by the English. The colonists often adopted use of such Algonquian ethnonyms, names for other tribes, not realizing at first that these differed from the tribes' autonyms, or names for themselves.

Frank Siebert suggests the term natowewa stems from Proto-Algonquian *na:tawe:wa and refers to the Massasauga, a pit viper of the Great Lakes region. The extension of the meaning as "Iroquoian speakers" is secondary. In Algonquian languages beyond the geographical range of the viper (i.e. CreeInnuNaskapi and Eastern Algonquian), the term's primary reference continues to focus on *na:t- 'close upon, mover towards, go after, seek out, fetch' and *-awe: 'condition of heat, state of warmth,' but no longer refers to the viper. Instead, particularly in the South, the 'Iroquoian' designation is primary. The semantic meaning may not relate to snakes at all, but refer to the cultural trading position of the Virginia-Carolina Iroquois as middle men between Algonquian and Siouan speakers. Other historical developments in Algonquian languages extend the meaning of *-awe to 'fur or hair' (i.e. Cree, Innu, Ojibway, Shawnee), an obvious relationship to 'state of warmth.' A potential etymology in Virginia of *na:tawe:wa (Nottoway) refers to *na:t- 'seeker' + -awe: 'fur,'[8] or literally 'traders'[9] The earliest colonial Virginia reference to "Nottoway" also frames Algonquian/Iroquoian exchanges in terms of trade: roanoke (shell beads) for skins (deer and otter).[10]

The Algonquian speakers also referred to the Nottoway, Meherrin and Tuscarora people (also of the Iroquoian-language family) as Mangoak or Mangoags, a term which English colonists used in their records from 1584 to 1650. This term, Mengwe or Mingwe, was transliterated by the Dutch and applied to the Iroquoian Susquehannock ("White Minquas") and Erie people ("Black Minquas"). Another variation was the later Mingo, which referred to descendants of remnant tribes who had been partly assimilated into the Six Nations of the Iroquois and later migrated into Ohio and the Midwest.

Language

The Nottoway language became extinct well before 1900.[11] At the time of European contact (1650), speakers numbered only in the hundreds. From then until 1735, a number of colonists learned the language and acted as official interpreters for the Colony of Virginia, including Thomas Blunt, Henry Briggs and Thomas Wynn. These interpreters also served the adjacent Meherrin, as well as the Nansemond, who spoke Nottoway in addition to their own Algonquian dialect of Powhatan.[12] The last two interpreters were dismissed in 1735, since the Nottoway by then were using English.

By 1820, there were said to be only three elderly speakers of Nottoway remaining.[13] In that year John Wood collected over 250 word samples from one of these, Chief "Queen" Edith Turner. He sent them to Thomas Jefferson, who shared them with Peter Stephen Du Ponceau. In their correspondence, these two men quickly confirmed the Nottoway language as being of the Iroquoian family. Several additional words, for a total of about 275, were collected by James Trezvant after 1831, and published by Albert Gallatin in 1836.

In the early 20th century, John Napoleon Brinton Hewitt (1910) and Hoffman (1959) analyzed the Nottoway vocabulary in comparison with Tuscarora, and found them closely related. The Tuscarora had all lived in North Carolina at one time. Due to warfare and colonial pressure, most of the Tuscarora migrated north to New York in the early eighteenth century to seek protection by alliance with the Iroquois Confederacy. They declared their migration ended in 1722, and said Tuscarora living elsewhere were no longer members of the tribe. A significant population in North Carolina claim descent from the Tuscarora and identify under that name.

Since the early 2000s, the Cheroenhaka (Nottoway) Indian Tribe has been working hard to revitalize their traditional language by looking closely at Tuscarora vocabulary and grammar. The two languages are mutually intelligible and in fact only vary interms of dialect.

History

The Nottoway, like their close Iroquoian neighbours, the Meherrin and Tuscarora, lived just west of the Fall Line in the Piedmont region. They were first visited and described by the explorer Edward Bland on an expedition from Fort Henry, as he noted in his journal for August 27, 1650. At the time, the people numbered no more than 400–500. Bland visited two of their three towns, on Stoney Creek and the Rowantee Branch of the Nottoway River, in what is now Sussex County. These towns were led by the brothers Oyeocker and Chounerounte.

The Nottoway and Meherrin became friendly with the English. They were the only tribes to send warriors to help the English against the Susquehannock (also an Iroquoian tribe) in 1675. Following Bacon's Rebellion, both tribes signed the Treaty of 1677, thereby becoming Tributary Nations to the Colony of Virginia.

By 1681, hostile tribes caused the Nottoway to relocate southward to Assamoosick Swamp in modern Surry County. In 1694 they moved again, to the mouth of a swamp in what is now Southampton County. Around this time, they absorbed the remnants of the Eno — an Algonquian-speaking tribe that had formerly been part of the Powhatan confederacy.[14] In the early 1700s, the Nottoway also absorbed a group of Nansemonds known as the "Traditonal Nansemonds." The Nansemond were the only Powhatan tribe that regularly traded with the Nottoway and spoke the Nottoway language. In fact, in a famous court case against tribal treasurer Jeremiah Cobb in 1849-1852, James and Jincy Taylor led the "Nottoway and Nansemond Tribe of Indians" as headmen.

Although never numerous, the Nottoway were able to maintain cultural continuity. They did not disappear from records identified as Indian, merge into other tribes, or get pushed too far from their original homeland. Scholars believe the early Nottoway were similar in culture to the Tuscarora and Meherrin. The Nottoway, much like the Tuscarora, consisted of 7 clans: Wolf, Deer, Eel, Beaver, Bear, Snipe, and Turtle. The tribe depended on the cultivation of staples, such as the three sisters — varieties of maize, squash, and beans. This cultivation and processing of crops was typically done by women, who also selected and preserved varieties of seeds to produce different types of crops. The men hunted game and fished in the rivers. They built multi-family dwellings known as longhouses in communities that they protected by stockade fences.

The Nottoway suffered high fatalities from epidemics of new Eurasian diseases such as measles and smallpox, to which they had no natural immunity. These accompanied European contact, as the diseases were by then endemic among Europeans. Tribal warfare and encroaching colonists also reduced the population. When the Tuscarora migrated northward ca. 1720 to become the Sixth Nation of the Iroquois Confederacy in New York, some Nottoway also migrated there, while others remained in Virginia. It is likely that some descendants of the Iroquois nations, especially among the Tuscarora and Oneida, with whom they lived in New York and Canada, also have Nottoway ancestry.

Some Nottoway returned to the South, with bands of Tuscarora and Meherrin joining and merging with them. These groups went to South Carolina.

Some common surnames among the Nottoway are Turner,Woodson,Rogers/Roger,Bozeman,Wineoak,Weaver, Bass,Step, Skipper, Kersey, Bennett, Blount, Scholar, Robins, Williams/Will, Edmunds, Bartlett, Bailey, Gabriel, Pearch, Kello, Walden, John, and Taylor.

References

  1. Nottoway Indian Tribe of Virginia, Inc., Nottoway Indian Tribe of Virginia, Inc.
  2. Cheroenhaka (Nottoway) Indian Tribe, Cheroenhaka (Nottoway) Indian Tribe
  3. SJ12 Nottoway Indian Tribe; extending state recognition thereto and grants representation on VCI., Legislative Information System
  4. SJ127 Cheroenhaka (Nottoway) Indian Tribe; extending state recognition thereto, representation on VCI., Legislative Information System
  5. Rudes, Blair A. Tuscarora English Dictionary Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1999
  6. Rudes, Blair, Sketch of the Nottoway Language from a Historical-Comparative Perspective, University of Chicago Press, 1981.
  7. Cheroenhaka Nottoway Indian Tribe History
  8. Siebert, Frank T. (1996) Anthropological Linguistics, Vol. 38, No.4, pp. 635–642.
  9. Woodard, Buck (2010). Ethnographic View of the Nottoway, 1700–1750
  10. Bland, Edward (1650). The Discovery of New Brittaine
  11. Rudes, Sketch of the Nottoway Language.
  12. Helen Rountree, Pocahontas's People p. 108.
  13. Rudes, Sketch of....
  14. Thomas C. Parramore, 1978, Southampton County p.1-5.

Cheroenhaka (Nottoway) Indian Tribe Location-27345 Aquia Path - Cattashowrock Trail, Cattashowrock Town, Courtland, VA 23837

Further reading

  • "Cheroenhaka (Nottoway) State and Federal Recognition", Cheroenhaka website
  • Swanton, John R. The Indian Tribes of North America. Smithsonian Institution Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 145. Washington DC.: Government Printing Office, 1952.
  • Hodge, Frederick W. Handbook of North American Indians. Washington, DC.: Government Printing Press, 1910.
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