sketching The
Shawnee are an
Algonquian-speaking people, and at the time of European encounter, they had bands living in present-day
Eastern United States and parts of the
Southeastern United States. During the
American Revolutionary War, many Shawnee moved from the area later defined as the
Northwest Territory near the Great Lakes to
Cape Girardeau, Missouri; some later moved into
Spanish Louisiana. These bands were later joined by other Shawnee groups from
Alabama. Some relocated southward into
Arkansas Territory,
Spanish Texas, and
French Louisiana after the 1803
Louisiana Purchase by the
United States of former French-controlled lands west of the Mississippi River. Due to encroaching European-American settlement, the Shawnee in Missouri negotiated an 1825 treaty, ceding their Missouri lands for
reservations in
Kansas. However, prior to the treaty, a group of Shawnee (later known as the Big Jim band) had already left the region to migrate to
Texas Territory, then controlled by Spain. Collectively, the band would become known as Absentee Shawnee, as they were referred to as such in the provisional clause of an 1854 treaty regarding Kansas reservation lands. Later, the
Texas-Mexico War compelled numerous Absentee Shawnee to leave Texas Territory and to relocate into
Indian Territory of Oklahoma. Historians believe that other Shawnee bands, also once in Kansas, had already resettled in Indian Territory beginning around 1839, the year that the
Cherokee Nation were removed from the Southeast to this territory. In the late 19th century, an Indian Agent of the
US government brought soldiers from
Fort Reno to force the traditionalist Big Jim band of Absentee Shawnees out of the
Deep Fork River area, southward to Hog Creek and Little River area near present-day
Lake Thunderbird, Norman. Their descendants, federally recognized since 1936 as the Absentee Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma, continued to live here, in communities now called
Little Axe, and
Shawnee. In 1872, the
US Congress gave the Absentee Shawnee title to shared lands occupied on the
Citizen Potawatomi Nation-Absentee Shawnee Oklahoma Tribal Statistical Area (OTSA). In the late 19th century, the communal land was allotted to individual households in an effort to force the tribes to adopt subsistence farming and assimilate to mainstream European-American ways. They lost control of considerable land in the process. In 1936, the tribe reorganized and gained
federal recognition as the Absentee Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma under the new
Oklahoma Indian Welfare Act, with the current constitution ratified on December 5, 1938. ==Language==