Record Number | Citation |
---|---|
58 |
Dial, Adolph L. The Lumbee. Indians of North America. New York : Chelsea House, 1993. 112 p. Key source |
358 |
Rinzler, Kate. “The Miracle of Maxton Field.” Unpublished typescript. 1988. |
36 |
Parramore, Thomas C. North Carolina: The History of an American State. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1983. Pp. 55-56, 292-94. |
54 |
Dial, Adolph L., and David K. Eliades. The only land I know: A history of the Lumbee Indians. San Francisco: Indian Historian P, 1975. Rpt. |
634 |
Blu, Karen I. “‘We People’: Understanding Lumbee Indian Identity in a Tri-Racial Situation.” Diss. U of Chicago, 1972. |
1118 |
Evans, W. McKee. To die game: the story of the Lowry Band, Indian guerillas of Reconstruction. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State UP, 1971. Reprinted, with a new foreword by James M. McPherson. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse UP, 1995 Key source |
630 |
Johnson, Guy B. “What’s In a Name: The Case of the Lumbee Indians.” Paper delivered at the Annual Meeting of the Southern Anthropological Society, Athens, GA. 9 April 1970. 8 p. [Included in entry 468.] |
53 |
Barton, Lew. The most ironic story in American history: An authoritative, documented history of the Lumbee Indians of North Carolina. Charlotte, NC: Associated Printing Corp., 1967. |
710 |
Berry, Brewton. “The Myth of the Vanishing Indian.” Phylon 21.1 (1960): 51-57. |
1364 |
State of North Carolina v. James Cole, James Garland Martin and Others to the State Unknown. 249 N.C. 733, 107 S.E.2d 732 (25 March 1959). |
625 |
Maynor, Lacy W. “The Trail of the 20th Century Brave.” Address. National Congress of American Indians, 15th Annual Convention, Missoula, Montana, 15 (?) Sept. 1958. |
405 |
Lowry, D. F. “Stresses Unity for Advance in Indian Church.” Robesonian 6 March 1958. |