Thursday, July 4, 2013

Tonto, Creeks and Seminoles

Actor Johnny Depp has recently gained scrutiny for basing his depiction of Tonto, in the film The Lone Ranger, on a painting not derived from any particular Native American tradition.  The depiction includes a crow’s body perched on Tonto’s head. 

This depiction, coincidentally, is not entirely inconsistent with the practice of Creek Indians of the Southeast and their relations among the Seminoles. 

William Bartram remarked of the Creek Indians that “the junior priests or students…have a great owl skin cased and stuffed very ingeniously, so well executed, as almost to represent the living bird, having large sparkling glass beads, or buttons fixed in the head for eyes….”

Bartram remarked that priests-in-training sometimes wear “this insignia of wisdom and divination” “as a crest on the top of the head,” while “at other times the image sits on the arm, or is borne on the hand.”

Please consult William Bartram, William Bartram on the Southern Indians, ed. Gregory A. Waselkov and Kathryn L. Holland Braund (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1995), page 123.

Friday, April 19, 2013

Origins of Many Americans in the Southeast

A 1785 advertisement in a Charleston, South Carolina newspaper announced that 152 Africans from the Gambia River would go on sale June 7, 1785. The advert appealed to a preference for Gambians already well established in Carolina: “The Negroes from this part of the coast of Africa are well acquainted with the cultivation of Rice, and are naturally industrious.”

In a landmark 1969 book, Philip D. Curtin estimated that almost 30% of Africans brought to South Carolina came from Senegambia (the region around the Senegal & Gambia Rivers).  Please consult Philip D. Curtin, The Atlantic Slave Trade: A Census (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1972 [1969]).

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Jews Arabs and Blacks Together in Jacksonville

In the first few minutes of this video, US Air Force veteran and Civil Rights activist Alton Yates describes how Arab-Americans and Jewish-Americans were part of the African-American community in Jacksonville, Florida in the mid-1900s.