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The Croatan were a small Native American ethnic group living in the coastal areas of what is now North Carolina. They might have been a branch of the larger ...
The Croatoan Indians were a tribal group of Carolina Algonquians who probably inhabited both present-day Hatteras and Ocracoke Islands at the time of the ...
Named explicitly after the native people repeatedly denied federal recognition, the Croatan Forest stands as one of the only federally protected Atlantic ...
one of a group of people of mixed American Indian, white, and black ancestry in southern North Carolina and adjoining sections of South Carolina ...
The Croatan Indians of Sampson County, NC, written by George Edwin Butler (1868-1941) and composed only a year after Special Indian Agent Orlando ...
The Croatan Indians comprise a body of mixed-blood people residing chiefly in Sampson, Robeson, Bladen, Columbus, Cumberland, Scotland, Richmond and Hoke ...
Sep 12, 2013 · Croatan is a term used for the Croatan tribe who later became known as the Lost Colony and settled on Roanoke Island.
Ethnologists and anthropologists believe that the word "Croatoan" may have been a combination of two Algonquian words meaning "talk town" or "council town.".
Upon first contact with European colonists, the Cherokee nation encompassed over 124,000 square miles, spanning much of modern-day North Carolina, South ...
The Croatan National Forest's 160,000 acres have pine forests, saltwater estuaries, bogs and raised swamps called pocosins. Bordered on three sides by tidal ...