Oklahoma Tribes
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Oklahoma Tribes

The state of Oklahoma has the third largest native american population of any US state, exceeded by only California and Arizona. Thirty-eight federally recognized indian tribes have their headquarters in Oklahoma, and according to the 1990 US Census, members of sixty-seven tribes reside there. More than 25 Native American languages are spoken in Oklahoma, the most of any state.

Oklahoma is the 28th most populous and 20th largest state. Its name is derived from the Choctaw words okla and humma, meaning "red people." Choctaw Chief Allen Wright suggested the name in 1866 during treaty negotiations. Equivalent to the English word Indian, okla humma was a phrase in the Choctaw language used to describe the Native American race as a whole. Formed from Indian Territory on November 16, 1907, Oklahoma was the 46th state to enter the union. Its citizens are known as Oklahomans, and the state's capital and largest city is Oklahoma City. The state nickname is the Sooners, after the claim jumpers who entered Oklahoma Territory "sooner" than they were supposed to during the Great Land Rush.

Evidence exists that native peoples traveled through Oklahoma as early as the last ice age, but the first permanent Oklahoma tribes settled in communities with mound-like structures near the Arkansas border between 850 and 1450 AD.


Comanche Nation Police Dept. shut down two meth. labs in Indian Country
The Comanche Nation Police Department (CNPD) defused an explosive situation at Comanche Casino and busted a meth lab North of the Comanche Nation Complex.
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Marietta man leads Delaware Nation, works to revive its culture
When Lisa Holton tells people her husband moved to Oklahoma to become president of the Delaware Nation, she can sense their confusion. So she puts it more simply: "Actually, he's an Indian chief." Then they get it.
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'Seminole Freedman' lends perspective to state's history

Author: Paul Lehman

Many view history as never changing. But history changes every time new information is added to it. Such is the case with Kevin Mulroy's new book, "The Seminole Freedmen — A History” (University of Oklahoma Press, $36.95). It provides a new perspective on the Oklahoma story. The book tells the story of the Seminole tribe with emphasis on the Africans and African-Americans who shared their history as slaves, freedmen, mix-bloods and "maroons.”

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Oklahoma tribes disagree with state Supreme Court ruling
A recent state Supreme Court ruling against an Oklahoma tribe could wind up in federal court. The state court voted 7-2 this week that a lawsuit against the Absentee Shawnee Tribe could continue. The lawsuit says a woman who had been drinking at a tribal-owned casino caused an auto accident that seriously injured another woman.
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Did You Know...
Spiro Mounds, Oklahoma's only archaeological park, is a 140-acre site encompassing 12 southern mounds that contain evidence of an Indian culture that occupied the site from 850 A.D. to 1450 A.D. The Mounds are considered one of the four most important prehistoric Indian sites east of the Rocky Mountains.
 
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