Indigenous Carolinians: A History from Original Peoples to Present-Day Tribes

Author:   David Rahahę́-Tih Webb
Publisher:   McFarland & Co Inc
ISBN:  

9781476697277


Pages:   412
Publication Date:   07 October 2025
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Indigenous Carolinians: A History from Original Peoples to Present-Day Tribes


Overview

This comprehensive work decolonizes our understanding of Carolina's Indigenous People and presents the complete histories and cultures of the region's First Peoples. Applying traditional academic and Indigenous research methodologies, the author examines the oral histories, languages, and cultures of four diverse ethnolinguistic groups. These groups, although among the first to be colonized on this continent, underwent ethnogenesis and adapted. They partnered with politicians, married traders, and other free people. They fought in wars beside and against the colonists and formed alliances that would divide ancient kinships. They were disenfranchised, persecuted, and all but erased by the newcomers. Powerful and sophisticated societies became stateless diasporic refugees, coalesced into small bands where they spoke English. Except for the Catawba, Tuscarora, and remnants on a few reservations, their tribal identities faded, and they collectively referred to themselves as their race--Indian. After reorganizing their tribal governments in the twentieth century, they reclaimed their identities and heritage. This is their complete journey.

Full Product Details

Author:   David Rahahę́-Tih Webb
Publisher:   McFarland & Co Inc
Imprint:   McFarland & Co Inc
ISBN:  

9781476697277


ISBN 10:   1476697272
Pages:   412
Publication Date:   07 October 2025
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

""David Rahahę́-tih Webb's Indigenous Carolinians offers a deeply respectful and well-researched account of the Ękwehę̀-we (Indigenous or real people) of the Carolinas and Virginia, tracing our histories from ancient times to the present. I found this work both grounding and affirming. Rahahę́-tih weaves oral tradition, language, archaeology, and ethnography into a narrative that uplifts our voices and challenges long-held colonial assumptions. For those seeking clarity, validation, or a deeper connection to our past, this book is more than history, it is medicine. It reminds us that our stories are not lost, but have simply been waiting to be retold in our own voices, on our own terms.""--Thrarę́anęh (Greg Holman), Meherrin Historian and Language Revitalization Administrator ""Indigenous Carolinians adds to a growing number of community voices about the Native history and culture of the southern Mid-Atlantic. Using primary sources, oral traditions, and works in history and anthropology, David Rahahęì-tih Webb provides readers valuable insights and an insider's perspective into the Indigenous past and contemporary descendant communities of the eastern Carolinas.""--Buck Woodard, assistant professor of Anthropology and Native Studies, William & Mary


""Indigenous Carolinians adds to a growing number of community voices about the Native history and culture of the southern Mid-Atlantic. Using primary sources, oral traditions, and works in history and anthropology, David Rahahęì-tih Webb provides readers valuable insights and an insider's perspective into the Indigenous past and contemporary descendant communities of the eastern Carolinas.""-Buck Woodard, assistant professor of Anthropology and Native Studies, William & Mary ""David Rahahę́-tih Webb's Indigenous Carolinians offers a deeply respectful and well-researched account of the Ękwehę̀-we (Indigenous or real people) of the Carolinas and Virginia, tracing our histories from ancient times to the present. I found this work both grounding and affirming. Rahahę́-tih weaves oral tradition, language, archaeology, and ethnography into a narrative that uplifts our voices and challenges long-held colonial assumptions. For those seeking clarity, validation, or a deeper connection to our past, this book is more than history, it is medicine. It reminds us that our stories are not lost, but have simply been waiting to be retold in our own voices, on our own terms.""-Thrarę́anęh (Greg Holman), Meherrin Historian and Language Revitalization Administrator


""Indigenous Carolinians adds to a growing number of community voices about the Native history and culture of the southern Mid-Atlantic. Using primary sources, oral traditions, and works in history and anthropology, David Rahahęì-tih Webb provides readers valuable insights and an insider's perspective into the Indigenous past and contemporary descendant communities of the eastern Carolinas.""--Buck Woodard, assistant professor of Anthropology and Native Studies, William & Mary


""David Rahahę́-tih Webb is an ancestral truth speaker profoundly shaped by elder guidance, voiced in sovereign language, and rooted in Native lands. His sweeping work, Indigenous Carolinians, connects rigorous research with living memory to show us how tribal nations persevere through lineages and community resilience. Webb especially brings together the Indigenous peoples--on their own terms--who bridged linguistic, cultural, and political differences to create an important region critical to the formation of the United States. This work is a comprehensive, detailed resource for scholars, educators, and community members across many sectors. Indigenous Carolinians brings us on a journey as vast and intertwined as the waterways that forge memory and identity from mountains to marshes to coast.""--Gabrielle Tayac, Ph.D (Piscataway), associate professor of public history, George Mason University ""David Rahahę́-tih Webb's Indigenous Carolinians offers a deeply respectful and well-researched account of the Ękwehę̀-we (Indigenous or real people) of the Carolinas and Virginia, tracing our histories from ancient times to the present. I found this work both grounding and affirming. Rahahę́-tih weaves oral tradition, language, archaeology, and ethnography into a narrative that uplifts our voices and challenges long-held colonial assumptions. For those seeking clarity, validation, or a deeper connection to our past, this book is more than history, it is medicine. It reminds us that our stories are not lost, but have simply been waiting to be retold in our own voices, on our own terms.""--Thrarę́anęh (Greg Holman), Meherrin Historian and Language Revitalization Administrator ""Indigenous Carolinians adds to a growing number of community voices about the Native history and culture of the southern Mid-Atlantic. Using primary sources, oral traditions, and works in history and anthropology, David Rahahęì-tih Webb provides readers valuable insights and an insider's perspective into the Indigenous past and contemporary descendant communities of the eastern Carolinas.""--Buck Woodard, assistant professor of Anthropology and Native Studies, William & Mary


Author Information

David Rahahę́-tih Webb is an award-winning author, artist, conservationist, scientist, and historian. He is Tuscarora--a citizen of the Tuscarora Indians of Kahtenuaka Territories and resides on his traditional territory.

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