Pre-16th Century
ca. 40,000–15,000 B.C
People migrate to North America from Asia at irregular intervals by way
of the Bering Land Bridge.
10,000–8000 B.C.
Paleo-Indian-period Native Americans are nomadic and hunt large animals
for food. They also eat small game and wild plants. They leave no evidence
of permanent dwellings in North Carolina.
8000–1000 B.C.
Archaic-period Native Americans move from big-game hunting to small-game
hunting, fishing, and collecting wild plants. These people change their
patterns of living because of the changing climate in North America.
ca. 1200 B.C.
Southeastern Indians begin growing squash gourds.
1000 B.C.–A.D. 1550
Woodland-culture Native Americans settle in permanent locations, usually
beside streams, and practice a mixed subsistence lifestyle of hunting,
gathering, and some agriculture. They create pottery and also develop
elaborate funeral procedures, such as building mounds, to honor their
dead.
ca. 200 B.C.
Southeastern Indians begin growing corn.
A.D. 700–1550
Mississippian-culture Native Americans create large political units called
chiefdoms, uniting people under stronger leadership than the Woodland
cultures have. Towns become larger and last longer. People construct flat-topped,
pyramidal mounds to serve as foundations for temples, mortuaries, chiefs’
houses, and other important buildings. Towns are usually situated beside
streams and surrounded by defensive structures.
Many groups of Native American peoples live in the area now called North Carolina. These include the Chowanoke, Croatoan, Hatteras, Moratoc, Secotan, Weapemeoc, Machapunga, Pamlico, Coree, Neuse River, Tuscarora, Meherrin, Cherokee, Cape Fear, Catawba, Shakori, Sissipahaw, Sugeree, Waccamaw, Waxhaw, Woccon, Cheraw, Eno, Keyauwee, Occaneechi, Saponi, and Tutelo Indians.
A.D. 1492
Italian explorer Christopher Columbus leads expeditions for Spain to explore
new trade routes in the western Atlantic Ocean. This results in European
contact with native peoples in the Caribbean and South America, creating
a continuing and devastating impact on their cultures.
16th Century
1540
A Spanish expedition led by Hernando de Soto explores the western portions
of present-day North Carolina, looking for gold. De Soto and his men visit
Indian communities and probably introduce smallpox and other deadly European
diseases to the native populations.
1566–1567
Spanish explorer Juan Pardo, seeking gold, leads an expedition through
what is now western North Carolina. Pardo visits the Catawba, Wateree,
and Saxapahaw Indians.
1584
Sir Walter Raleigh sends explorers Philip Amadas and Arthur Barlowe to
North America in search of potential colony sites. At Roanoke Island the
explorers meet Native American chief Wingina and find the site excellent
for settlement. They return to England with two Indians, Manteo and Wanchese,
who learn English and are used to create publicity for Raleigh’s
colony.
1585
The first English settlement is established at Roanoke Island, and Ralph
Lane is appointed governor. The Roanoke Indian people, some of whom initially
welcome the colonists, begin to see the English as a drain on food and
other resources.
1586
Ralph Lane leads an expedition into the interior of North Carolina in
search of gold and other precious metals. Roanoke Indians warn inland
tribes about the English, but Lane makes an alliance with the Chowanoke,
who hope to use the English against their enemies the Tuscarora. Chief
Wingina plots to get rid of the English settlers, and Lane has him killed.
Sir Francis Drake arrives at Roanoke Island and takes most of the colonists back to England, leaving an exploring party. Possibly Drake also leaves Africans and South American Indians that he captured from the Spanish. A relief ship arrives at Roanoke Island and, finding none of the colonists, leaves fifteen men to hold the area for England.
1587
Raleigh sends explorer and artist John White to Roanoke Island as leader
of a new group of settlers—the second English attempt to settle
there. The colonists find bones of the 15 men left behind in 1586. White
enlists the help of Manteo to build relationships with the Roanoke and
Croatoan Indians. Most of the native peoples decide to let the colonists
fend for themselves.
Governor White leaves Roanoke Island for England to acquire supplies for the colonists. With England and Spain at war, White cannot make an immediate return to the colony.
1590
White finally returns to Roanoke Island to find the colony deserted, with
little evidence of what happened to the colonists. He attempts to sail
to Croatoan Island in hopes of finding some of them, but severe weather
prevents him from reaching the island, and he never returns to the area.
The Roanoke settlement is known afterward as the Lost Colony.
17th Century
1608
Jamestown leader John Smith sends expeditions to the Roanoke Island area
to seek information about the Lost Colony. His men find nothing conclusive.
1611
Because of Spain’s rivalry with England, the Spanish government
develops an alliance with the Tuscarora people to monitor the Jamestown
colony.
1650
White settlers begin to move into Indian lands along the coastal sounds
and rivers of North Carolina.
1653
Virginia legislator Francis Yeardly hires fur trader Nathaniel Batts to
explore the Albemarle Sound region as an area of possible settlement.
Yeardly agrees to purchase land from the Roanoke Indians but dies before
his settlement is established. Batts settles along the Chowan River in
a building that serves as both his home and a trading post. He trades
with local Native Americans and becomes the area’s first permanent
white settler.
1661
March 1: King Kilcocanen of the Yeopim Indians grants land to George Durant
in the earliest grant on record in the colony.
1675
Chowanoc Indians attack white settlements in Carolina. The uprising is
quelled with the “loss of many men.”
1690s
Cherokee traders establish trade agreements with the English at Charles
Towne (present-day Charleston, S.C.)
18th Century
1700
The Chowanoc and Weapemeoc peoples have gradually abandoned their lands.
Some have become slaves or indentured servants, and others have migrated
south to join the Tuscarora. Only about 500 Native Americans remain in
the Albemarle region.
An escaped slave serves as an architect in the construction of a large Tuscarora Indian fort near the Neuse River.
1701
Settlers begin moving west and south of the Albemarle area.
1709
Surveyor John Lawson, who began a thousand-mile journey through the colony
at the end of 1700, publishes A New Voyage to Carolina. It describes
the colony’s flora and fauna and its various groups of Native Americans.
Lawson also publishes a map of Carolina.
1710
Baron Christoph von Graffenried, a leader of Swiss and German Protestants,
establishes a colony in Bath County. The town, called New Bern, is founded
at the junction of the Trent and Neuse Rivers, displacing a Native American
town named Chattoka.
June 8: Tuscarora Indians on the Roanoke and Tar-Pamlico Rivers send a petition to the government of Pennsylvania protesting the seizure of their lands and enslavement of their people by Carolina settlers.
1711
Early September: Tuscaroras capture surveyor John Lawson, New Bern founder
Baron von Graffenried, and two African slaves. Lawson argues with the
chief, Cor Tom, and is executed. The Indians spare von Graffenried and
the slaves.
September 22: The Tuscarora War opens when Catechna Creek Tuscaroras begin attacking colonial settlements near New Bern and Bath. Tuscarora, Neuse, Bear River, Machapunga, and other Indians kill more than 130 whites.
October: Virginia refuses to send troops to help the settlers but allocates £1,000 for assistance.
1711–1715
In a series of uprisings, the Tuscarora attempt to drive away white settlement.
The Tuscarora are upset over the practices of white traders, the capture
and enslavement of Indians by whites, and the continuing encroachment
of settlers onto Tuscarora hunting grounds.
1712
January: South Carolina sends assistance to her sister colony. John Barnwell,
a member of the South Carolina Assembly, leads about 30 whites and some
500 “friendly” Indians, mostly Yamassees, to fight the Tuscarora
in North Carolina. A battle takes place at Narhantes, a Tuscarora fort
on the Neuse River. Barnwell’s troops are victorious but are surprised
that many of the Tuscarora’s fiercest warriors are women, who do
not surrender “until most of them are put to the sword.”
April: Barnwell’s force, joined by 250 North Carolina militiamen, attacks the Tuscarora at Fort Hancock on Catechna Creek. After 10 days of battle, the Tuscarora sign a truce, agreeing to stop the war.
Summer: The Tuscarora rise again to fight the Yamassee, who, unsatisfied with their plunder during earlier battles, remain in the area looting and pillaging. The Tuscarora also fight against the continued expansion of white settlement.
1713
March 20–23: Another force from South Carolina, consisting of 900
Indians and 33 whites, begins a three-day siege on the Tuscarora stronghold
of Fort Neoheroka. Approximately 950 Tuscarora are killed or captured
and sold into slavery, effectively defeating the tribe and opening the
interior of the colony to white settlement. Although a few renegades fight
on until 1715, most surviving Tuscarora migrate north to rejoin the Iroquois
League as its sixth and smallest nation.
1715
A treaty with remaining North Carolina Tuscarora is signed. They are placed
on a reservation along the Pamlico River. The Coree and Machapunga Indians,
Tuscarora allies, settle in Hyde County near Lake Mattamuskeet. The land
will be granted to them in 1727, and a reservation will be established.
The General Assembly enacts a law denying blacks and Indians the right to vote. The king will repeal the law in 1737. Some free African Americans will continue to vote until disfranchisement in 1835.
1717
The few Tuscarora remaining in the colony, led by Tom Blount, are granted
land on the Roanoke River in Bertie County, near present-day Quitsna.
The Tuscarora left their reservation on the Pamlico River because of raids
by tribes from the south.
1721
The Cherokee cede land northwest of Charleston to the colony of South
Carolina, the first of many land cessions the Cherokee make to Europeans.
The treaty also regulates trade and establishes a boundary between the
Cherokee and European settlers.
1726–1739
The Cheraw (Saura) Indians incorporate with the Catawba living near present-day
Charlotte.
1730
Cherokee leaders visit London and confer with the king. They pledge friendship
to the English and agree to return runaway slaves and to trade exclusively
with the British.
1736
The North Carolina colony establishes an Indian Trade Commission to regulate
trade with native peoples.
1738–1739
A smallpox epidemic decimates the Indian population in North Carolina,
especially in the eastern part of the colony. The epidemic decreases the
number of Cherokee by 50 percent.
1740
Waxhaw Indians, decimated by smallpox, abandon their lands in present-day
Union County and join the Catawba. The vacated lands are taken up by German,
English, Scottish, and Welsh immigrants.
1750s
Armed conflicts arise between the Cherokee and colonists, who continue
to expand areas of settlement further into the western part of the colony.
1754
Governor Arthur Dobbs receives a report from a Bladen County agent of
50 Indian families living along Drowning Creek (present-day Lumber River).
The communication also reports the shooting of a surveyor who entered
the area “to view vacant lands.” It is the first written account
of the tribe from whom the Lumbee descended.
1754–1763
The French and Indian War is fought between England and France all along
the frontier of North America. North Carolina troops serve both in North
Carolina and in other colonies.
1755
The Indian population in eastern North Carolina is estimated at around
356. Most of these are Tuscaroras who have not moved north.
The colonial governor approves a proposal to establish an Indian academy in present-day Sampson County.
1758
North Carolina militia and Cherokee assist the British military in campaigns
against the French and Shawnee Indians. The Cherokee decide to change
sides after receiving ill treatment by the English, and they return home,
where they eventually attack North Carolina colonists.
1759
The French and Indian War intensifies as the Cherokee raid the western
Piedmont. Refugees crowd into the fort at Bethabara. Typhus kills many
refugees and Moravians there.
A second smallpox epidemic devastates the Catawba tribe, reducing the population by half.
1760
An act of assembly permits North Carolinians serving against Indian allies
of the French to enslave captives.
February: Cherokee attack Fort Dobbs and white settlements near Bethabara and along the Yadkin and Dan Rivers.
June: An army of British regulars and American militia under Colonel Archibald Montgomerie destroys Cherokee villages and saves the Fort Prince George garrison in South Carolina but is defeated by the Cherokee at Echoe.
August: Cherokee capture Fort Loudoun in Tennessee and massacre the garrison.
1761
June: An army of British regulars, American militia, and Catawba and Chickasaw
Indians under Colonel James Grant defeats the Cherokee and destroys 15
villages, ending Cherokee resistance.
December: The Cherokee sign a treaty ending their war with the American colonists.
1763
King George III issues a proclamation that demarcates the western edge
of settlement. This “proclamation line” through western North
Carolina is meant to separate the Native Americans and the colonists.
February: The Treaty of Paris ends the Seven Years’ War in Europe and the French and Indian War in North America.
1775
The Treaty of Sycamore Shoals (now Elizabethton, Tenn.), between Richard
Henderson of the Transylvania Company and the Cherokee people, is signed.
It opens for settlement the area from the Ohio River south to the Watauga
settlement. The Shawnee people, who inhabit the lands, refuse to accept
the terms of the treaty.
1775–1776
The Coharie, Catawba, and ancestors of the Lumbee join the Patriot cause.
1776
May–June: Cherokee village councils discuss going to war against
the American colonists. The Cherokee decide to fight, knowing that the
consequences are enormous. However, the Cherokee are fighting to protect
the existence of their society, so they ignore the overwhelming odds against
them.
June: White settlements in Watauga and South Carolina are raided by the Cherokee, allies of the British, who have promised to protect the Indians from encroachments by colonial borders.
July 29–November: General Griffith Rutherford with 2,400 men invades Cherokee country, destroying 32 towns and villages. Rutherford is joined by Colonel Andrew Williamson with South Carolina troops and Colonel William Christian with Virginians. This expedition breaks the power of the Cherokee and forces them to sue for peace.
1777
July 20: By the Treaty of Long Island of Holston, the Cherokee cede territory
east of the Blue Ridge and along the Watauga, Nolichucky, Upper Holston,
and New Rivers (the area east of present-day Kingsport and Greenville,
Tenn.).
1783
Despite the Indian treaty of 1777 fixing the boundary at the foot of the
Blue Ridge, the assembly declares lands open for settlement as far west
as the Pigeon River.
1791
July 2: The Cherokee sign the Treaty of Holston, by which they cede a
100-mile tract of land in exchange for goods and an annuity of $1,000.
1798
October 2: By the Treaty of Tellico, the Cherokee cede a triangular area
with its points near Indian Gap, east of present-day Brevard, and southeast
of Asheville.
19th Century
1808
The Cherokee establish a law code and the “Light Horse Guards”
to maintain law and order.
1810
The Cherokee abolish clan revenge as a mechanism for social control.
1814
March 27: Cherokee Indians aid General Andrew Jackson in defeating the
Creek Indians in the Battle of Horseshoe Bend in Alabama. After the battle,
Jackson tells the Cherokee chief Junaluska: “As long as the sun
shines and the grass grows there shall be friendship between us, and the
feet of the Cherokee shall be toward the East.” As president, Jackson
later plays a major role in the effort to move the Cherokee west.
1817
The Cherokee cede land in exchange for land on the Arkansas River, and
2,000 Cherokee move west.
1819
The Cherokee agree to a treaty by which a large amount of their land in
present-day Henderson, Transylvania, and Jackson Counties is ceded to
the federal government. The Cherokee are allowed to receive land grants
as individuals and can resell the land to white settlers to earn money.
1820
The Cherokee establish a judicial administration and eight judicial districts.
1821
Sequoyah completes his work of establishing the Cherokee alphabet, making
the Cherokee people the only group of Native Americans to have a written
language.
1822
The Cherokee National Supreme Court is established.
1827
The Cherokee approve a new tribal constitution.
1828
The first edition of the Cherokee Phoenix, a newspaper printed
in Cherokee and English, is released.
1830
President Andrew Jackson signs the Indian Removal Act calling for Native
Americans to be forced from their homes to lands west of the Mississippi.
1835
The state constitution is extensively revised, with amendments approved
by the voters that provide for the direct election of the governor and
more democratic representation in the legislature. However, new laws take
voting rights away from Native Americans and free blacks.
A small, unauthorized group of men signs the Cherokee Removal Treaty. The Cherokee protest the treaty, and Chief John Ross collects more than 15,000 signatures, representing nearly the entire Cherokee population, on a petition requesting the United States Senate to withhold ratification.
1836
The Senate approves the Cherokee Removal Treaty by one vote.
1838
Approximately 17,000 North Carolina Cherokee are forcibly removed from
the state to the Indian Territory (present-day Oklahoma). This event becomes
known as the Trail of Tears. An estimated 4,000 Cherokee people die during
the 1,200-mile trek. A few hundred Cherokee refuse to be rounded up and
transported. They hide in the mountains and evade federal soldiers. Eventually,
a deal is struck between the army and the remaining Cherokee. Tsali, a
leading Cherokee brave, agrees to surrender himself to General Winfield
Scott to be shot if the army will allow the rest of his people to stay
in North Carolina legally. The federal government eventually establishes
a reservation for the Eastern Band of Cherokee.
1839
Yonaguska, chief of the Eastern Band of Cherokee, dies at age 80. His
adopted white son, William Holland Thomas, becomes chief of the Cherokee
and fights to secure reservation land for them.
1840
The General Assembly passes a law prohibiting Indians from owning or carrying
weapons without first obtaining a license.
1842
Those Cherokee who avoided forced removal in 1838 and remained in North
Carolina are given citizenship. In 1848 Congress grants them a small amount
of money to use for the purchase of land.
1859
The Coharie community establishes subscription schools for Indian children.
1861–1865
Approximately 42,000 North Carolinians lose their lives in the Civil War.
Native Americans have varying experiences during the war. Many Cherokee
in western North Carolina support the Confederacy. Thomas’s Legion,
a well-known fighting unit, has two companies of Cherokee soldiers. The
Lumbee in eastern North Carolina are treated quite differently. They are
forced to work on Confederate fortifications near Wilmington. Many flee
and form groups to resist impressment by the army. Henry Berry Lowry leads
one such group, which continues to resist white domination long after
the war’s end.
1865
March 3: The killings of Allen and William Lowry, the father and brother
of Henry Berry Lowry, spark what becomes known as the Lowry War in Robeson
County.
1865–1874
The Lowry band employs guerilla tactics in its war against Robeson County’s
power structure, robbing prominent citizens and killing law enforcement
officers. Indians, blacks, and poor whites unite in support of the outlaw
group.
1872
February: Henry Berry Lowry vanishes, leading to years of speculation
about his death.
1874
After the death of Steve Lowry at the hand of bounty hunters, the Lowry
War ends.
1875
The North Carolina constitution is changed, giving free men of color over
the age of 21 the right to vote.
1882–early 1900s
Three schools are established in Halifax and Warren Counties to serve
Haliwa-Saponi children.
1885
February 10: The state recognizes the Croatan Indians, now known as the
Lumbee, as an official Native American tribe. With recognition come separate
schools for Indian students.
1887
A normal school for Indians opens in Pembroke, Robeson County. This school
evolves into the present-day University of North Carolina at Pembroke.
1888
Hamilton McMillan publishes Sir Walter’s Lost Colony, which
claims that Lumbee Indians are descended from the ill-fated Roanoke settlers.
December 4: Fifty-four Croatan Indians in Robeson County petition the federal government, requesting funds for schools.
The Indians of Person County construct a school on land donated by Green Martin; another school will be constructed within the next few years.
1889
The Eastern Band of Cherokee is incorporated under North Carolina law.
20th Century
1904
Diotrion W. and Mary Epps deed land for a school for Indians in Person
County, North Carolina, and southern Virginia. The school will be rebuilt
in 1925 by Person County, North Carolina, and Halifax County, Virginia.
1910
Shiloh Indian School is established in Dismal Township, Sampson County,
to serve Coharie children.
1911
March 8: A North Carolina law changes the name of the Croatan Indians
to the Indians of Robeson County.
The Coharie receive state recognition, but this recognition is rescinded two years later.
The State of North Carolina names recognizes a group of Indians descended from the Saponi, Tutelo, and Occaneechi tribes as the Indians of Person County.
New Bethel Indian School is established in New Bethel Township, Sampson County, to serve Coharie children.
1913
March 11: The Indians of Robeson County change their name to Cherokee
Indians of Robeson County.
1917
Eastern Carolina Indian School is established in Herring Township, Sampson
County. The school will operate until school desegregation in 1966, eventually
serving children in grades 1–12. In 1942 the school begins accepting
children from Indian communities in other eastern North Carolina counties,
including Harnett, Hoke, Columbus, Cumberland, Bladen, and Person.
1925
Cherokee lands are placed in trust status with the federal government.
1934
Wide Awake Indian School opens in the Waccamaw-Siouan community of Buckhead
in Bladen County, with Welton Lowry, a Lumbee, as teacher. The school,
serving students in grades 1–8, follows the tradition of Doe Head
School, founded in 1885; Long Boy School, founded in 1901; and St. Mark’s
School, founded in 1920. It will close in 1952.
1935
A federal memorandum allows Indians in Robeson County to organize under
the Wheeler-Howard Indian Reorganization Act of 1934. To receive recognition,
individuals must be at least one-half Indian.
1938
December 12: Only 22 of 209 Robeson County Indians qualify for recognition
under the Wheeler-Howard Act of 1934. Qualification is based on “race”
testing to determine an individual’s Indian blood.
1939
The Indian Normal School (now the University of North Carolina at Pembroke)
in Robeson County grants its first college degree.
1942
East Carolina Indian School is established in Sampson County to serve
American Indians in seven surrounding counties. The school will close
in 1965.
1947
The first Indian mayor of the town of Pembroke is elected. Previously
the governor appointed the mayors, all of whom were non-Indian.
1950
The Cherokee Historical Association receives funding, and the first performance
of the outdoor drama Unto These Hills takes place.
1952–1954
Waccamaw Indian School opens in Columbus County. The school will close
in 1969 following the desegregation of North Carolina schools.
1953
The State of North Carolina recognizes the Lumbee (formerly called the
Cherokee of Robeson County).
1955
The Hickory Hill School in the Waccamaw-Siouan community of St. James,
Columbus County, closes after having operated since at least 1927.
1956
Congress passes the “Lumbee Bill,” which recognizes the Lumbee
as an Indian tribe but denies them services from the Bureau of Indian
Affairs.
1957
The Haliwa School opens in Warren County, serving children in grades 1–12.
The school is tribally controlled and state recognized under the county
school system. It will close in 1970 as a result of school desegregation.
1958
January 18: A large group of Lumbee, angered by racist agitation and threats
of cross burnings, descend on a Ku Klux Klan rally near Maxton, scattering
the Klan. Two Klan members are later indicted on charges of incitement
to riot.
June: English E. Jones becomes the first Lumbee president of Pembroke State College (now the University of North Carolina at Pembroke).
1965
The Haliwa receive state recognition as an Indian tribe.
1971
The state recognizes the Coharie and Waccamaw-Siouan tribes.
July 2: The General Assembly establishes the North Carolina Commission of Indian Affairs. Bruce Jones, a Lumbee, serves as the first director.
December 22: The Lumbee Bank is established in Pembroke. It is the first bank in the United States owned and operated by Indians.
1972
August: The new Department of American Indian Studies at Pembroke State
University (now the University of North Carolina at Pembroke) begins offering
courses.
The Carolina Indian Voice, an Indian-owned newspaper, begins operation.
September: Horace Locklear, a Lumbee, becomes the first Indian to practice law in North Carolina.
October: Tuscaroras from Robeson County join other Indians from across the nation in occupying the Bureau of Indian Affairs building in Washington, D.C., during the Trail of Broken Treaties protest. The Tuscarora steal 7,200 pounds of records from the building and bring them to Robeson County.
1973
March 18: Old Main, the oldest building on the campus of Pembroke State
College (now the University of North Carolina at Pembroke), is gutted
by fire. The building is reconstructed and will eventually house the Department
of American Indian Studies and the Native American Resource Center.
March 19: Henry Ward Oxendine, a Lumbee from Robeson County, becomes the first American Indian to serve in the General Assembly in North Carolina.
September 5: The Guilford Native American Association incorporates in Greensboro.
1976
January 5: The Metrolina Native American Association incorporates in Charlotte.
The Waccamaw-Siouan tribe begins governing by tribal council and tribal chief.
1984
The Eno-Occaneechi Indian Association forms with the goal of researching
and preserving the tribe’s heritage.
1986
The Meherrin Indian tribe receives recognition from the North Carolina
Commission of Indian Affairs.
1988
February 1: Two Tuscarora Indians, Eddie Hatcher and Timothy Jacobs, hold
17 people hostage in the offices of the Robesonian newspaper
in Lumberton. The two demand to speak with Governor Jim Martin, hoping
to publicize corruption and drug dealing among Robeson County’s
law enforcement officials. They will be acquitted of federal charges but
convicted on state charges.
1995
The Eno-Occaneechi Indian Association amends its name to Occaneechi Band
of the Saponi Nation.
1997
November: Harrah’s Cherokee Casino opens on Qualla Boundary reservation,
with 175,000 square feet of space and 1,800 video gambling machines.
2002
February: The Occaneechi Band of the Saponi Nation receives recognition
from the North Carolina Commission of Indian Affairs.
2003
May: The Indians of Person County ammends its name to the Sappony.
