The Miccosukees were a group that moved between present-day
Georgia and
North Florida, with an extended range for hunting, fishing, and trading expeditions stretching from the
Appalachian Mountains to the
Florida Keys. By the late 18th century, Miccosukee-speaking villages had been built in the
Everglades. According to scholarship published in collaboration with tribal elders, multiple groups of Indians joined together to form the core group that became the Miccosukee Tribe in northern Florida; these groups included elements of the
Oconee, Hitchiti, Eufala, and
Appalachicola tribal towns in southern Georgia and northern Florida.
19th century Under continuing encroachment from European, and later, American, settlers, many Miccosukee ancestors from different locations found themselves in
North Florida by the early 18th century. The Miccosukee broke from the
Muscogee Confederacy in Northern Florida after the
First Seminole War of 1817 and 1818. In 1765, a group of Native Americans in Florida known as the "Alatchaway" (Alachua), a Muscogee-speaking group led by Cowkeeper (
Ahaya) that was a precursor of the modern Florida Seminoles, rejected a meeting between the British and the Creeks at Picolata, the site of a Spanish fort about 13 miles west of
St. Augustine in northeastern Florida. Cowkeeper and his band of Indians negotiated their own agreement with the British in a separate meeting. The spring of 1787 marked the first time that a group specifically known as Seminoles attended the Lower Creeks' annual meeting. In the 1796
Treaty of Colerain, the Creek Confederacy agreed that all Creeks in Georgia and Florida would return runaway slaves to their white American owners, an agreement that the Native Americans in Florida disputed because the Creeks did not speak for those living in Florida. Prior to 1812, the Creek national council was denying treaty annuities to the Tribes in Florida. The Indigenous people in Florida were had separated from the Muscogee by 1818 at the latest, following
Andrew Jackson's invasion of Florida. The Miccosukees eventually joined with the Seminoles in defending their Florida homeland against encroaching white settlers during the 1820s. Despite the need for such an informal alliance, the Miccosukees maintained their separate identity within the tribes of Florida. During this time, the
U.S. government and white settlers in Florida often viewed the Miccosukee Indians and the Seminole Indians as a single entity. About 2,000 Upper Creeks, known as
Red Sticks, militant Muscogee-speaking Indians, joined the tribes in Florida after being defeated in the
Creek War of 1813-1814. By the late 1830s, the dominant Indigenous language spoken in Florida was Mikasuki or other variants of Hitchiti. Muscogee was the dominant language within the Creek Confederacy, but Hitchiti had traveled with those who settled permanently in Florida and became the primary tongue, despite Muscogee often serving as the lingua franca throughout present-day
Florida,
Georgia, and
Alabama whenever Indigenous people interacted with white people. For a time during the 19th century, the Miccosukee were part of the developing Seminole identity in Florida. This identity formed in the early 19th century in Florida through a process of
ethnogenesis. The Miccosukees and the Seminoles, however, not only continued to see themselves as separate entities within Florida but also saw themselves as wholly separate from the Creek Confederacy that continued to negotiate with Europeans and claimed influence over Alabama, Georgia, and North Florida. Following this influx of people in the early 19th century, documented Indians in Florida numbered about 5,000. This entry of Muscogee-speaking Indians into Florida had the additional effect of pushing many Hitchiti-speaking (Miccosukee) people farther south. As early as 1827, and possibly earlier, Mikasuki-speaking Native Americans had a permanent presence in the Everglades. Although East and
West Florida were under Spanish control at this time (1783-1821), U.S. forces under
Andrew Jackson invaded Florida in 1817 under the pretext of retaliation for Indian raids against settlers in Georgia. The true reasons for invasion included pursuit of runaway slaves and the realization that Spain was too politically and militarily weak to protect Florida. In addition to the destruction of
Negro Fort on the
Apalachicola River by American forces in 1816, these events were the initial conflicts in the
First Seminole War. Florida became a
U.S. territory in 1821, and the American government soon increased pressure for
removal against all Indians living in Florida. This was the period of numerous treaties between the U.S. and various bands of Indians living in Florida as white settlers increasingly pushed for more available land, and the government in Washington, D.C. sought to support those who wished to take advantage of settling the new territory. Treaties such as
Moultrie Creek (1823) and
Payne's Landing (1833) were agreements that attempted to aggregate the Native Americans in Florida into isolated tracts of land, first in central Florida, and later in southwestern and southeastern Florida. Despite the appearance of numerous agreements between the tribes of Florida and the U.S. government, these negotiations were never balanced between the parties involved because of the presence of the U.S. military at these negotiations and difficulties in translation and understanding. There also was never true representation of all of the Native Americans in Florida because the groups of men who represented the Indians during treaty negotiations did not represent all of the bands living in Florida at that time. Following the
Indian Removal Act of 1830, the U.S. relocated several thousand Seminole and hundreds of
Black Seminoles, who lived in close association as allies, west to the
Indian Territory (present-day Oklahoma). The U.S. government still believed that the Florida Seminoles were a part of the Creek Confederacy, and the American agents involved in relocation attempted to place the Florida Indians with land under the Creek administration. Eventually, the Florida Seminoles in Oklahoma gained their own reservation and federal recognition as the
Seminole Nation of Oklahoma. Those who remained in Florida fought against U.S. forces during the second and third
Seminole Wars. Both of these conflicts resulted in groups of Indians being relocated to Indian Territory. The Second Seminole War began in 1835 after the Indians of Florida retaliated for repeated abuses by white settlers in Florida, including theft, violence, and illegal entry into Indian lands. One of the longest, most expensive, and most deadly conflicts between Native Americans and the U.S. military, the Second Seminole War is a nearly forgotten conflict that had an extraordinary impact on southeastern U.S. history, American military tactics, and modern development of the U.S. Navy. The Indians of Florida conducted a guerrilla-style war against a numerically superior and technologically advanced enemy. The result of the war was many more Indigenous people dead or deported but a U.S. failure at complete removal of Indians from Florida. By 1842, perhaps 300 Native Americans remained in Florida; more than 4,000 were forcibly relocated to Indian Territory between 1835 and 1842. The Miccosukee chief
Ar-pi-uck-i, also known as Sam Jones (Abiaki, Abiaka), proved an effective leader during the
Second Seminole War; his strategy of hiding the tribe on tree islands, or
hammocks, in the Big Cypress Swamp and the Everglades ensured that the ancestors of present-day Miccosukees and Seminoles remained in Florida. The Third Seminole War began in 1855 after a small band of Indians led by
Billy Bowlegs (Holatta Micco) attacked American encampments in response to repeated harassment and destruction of property by U.S. military forces. The result of this conflict was the removal of Billy Bowlegs's band for Oklahoma, having accepted a monetary settlement. The sole remaining Indians in Florida in 1858 were those sheltering in the swamp and wetlands in the south. By 1858, perhaps 200 ancestors of the modern Miccosukee and Seminole Tribes remained in Florida. They survived by moving into central and southern Florida to take advantage of the topography of Big Cypress and the Everglades, which was largely unknown to the remainder of the U.S. The American Civil War during the 1860s meant that the U.S. let the Indigenous people in Florida live their lives as they saw fit as American military attention focused elsewhere.
20th century From the end of the
Third Seminole War in 1858 until the 1920s, the Indigenous people in Florida lived their lives in
Big Cypress and the
Everglades, intentionally isolated from interactions with white Floridians except for the occasional meeting for trade. Groups of Native Americans tended to gather in bigger camps until 1900, and then they began to separate into smaller groups in the face of increased development in Central and South Florida. The isolation of camps in South Florida began to end in the late 1920s with the construction of the
Tamiami Trail (U.S. 41). Construction of the Tamiami Trail as the route between Tampa and Miami concluded in 1928. This brought new forms of traffic through Big Cypress and the Everglades. Not long before the completion of the Trail, Florida outlawed hunting for alligator and fur-bearing animals. With traffic in the region increasing, various drainage and canal projects throughout Florida changing the water levels around the tree islands, and declining opportunities for economic stability, Indians began to relocate to sites along the Trail. Over a dozen camps, or villages, moved closer to the Trail between 1928 and 1938. From these sites, Miccosukee people sought to improve their economic situation by offering
airboat tours of the Everglades,
Indigenous artworks for sale, and other goods and services to tourists traveling across the state. Still viewed by many as Seminole Indians during this time, the Miccosukees who moved to live along the Trail also became known as the Trail Indians. The distinction between "Miccosukee" and "Seminole" began to grow as the former believed the latter were more willing to assimilate to the majority culture by moving onto designated
Indian reservations in Florida starting in the 1930s and 1940s. The federal and state governments persisted in treating the Indians of Florida as a unified people, eventually including a third group, known as Independents or Traditionals, who did not affiliate with either the Miccosukee or the Seminole groups. One issue that further divided the tribes in Florida was a small group of Seminoles filing with the
Indian Claims Commission in 1950 to claim compensation for lands taken by the U.S. government. Many of the Miccosukees contended that they never reached an official peace with the U.S., and they wanted their land returned rather than financial compensation. The U.S. settlement of the claims with the Miccosukee and Seminole of Florida, as well as the
Seminole Nation of Oklahoma, finally concluded in 1976; division of shares among the tribes took until 1990 to settle. Divisions between the Miccosukees and Seminoles peaked during the 1950s. Under the federal government's program of termination of recognition, it proposed terminating the U.S. recognition of the Florida Seminoles in 1953. The Miccosukee response was the Buckskin Declaration in 1954, which a Miccosukee delegation personally delivered to one of president
Dwight D. Eisenhower's aides. The declaration stated that the Trail Indians wanted nothing from the U.S. government; the Indians only wanted to be able to live their lives on the land as they always had. Meanwhile, the reservation Indians in Florida became known as the
Seminole Tribe of Florida after they developed a constitution and corporate charter to organize a government; they achieved federal recognition in 1957. The land claims and termination controversies heightened the distinction for the Miccosukee living near the Tamiami Trail. Unable to gain similar federal recognition of their own right to sovereignty, a group of Miccosukees, led by the young councilmember
Buffalo Tiger (Heenehatche), visited Cuba in July 1959 during the brand-new
Castro regime's celebration of the
26th of July Movement in Havana. The nation congratulated Castro in his success in the Cuban revolution, and Castro responded by offering to “formally recognize” the Miccosukee as a sovereign nation. This strategy was successful for the Miccosukees, as the U.S. government began negotiations upon the group's return to Florida. The Trail Indians gained federal recognition of their sovereignty in 1962 as the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida. This preference for self-determination was later enshrined as the
Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act of 1975.
21st century The tribe today occupies several
reservations in southern Florida, collectively known as the
Miccosukee Indian Reservations. The most populous area is known as the Miccosukee Reserved Area (MRA) or the Tamiami Trail Reservation, located about 40 miles (64 kilometers) west of Miami. The largest land section is an 87,000-acre (352 square kilometers) reservation on the northern border of
Everglades National Park, known as the
Alligator Alley Reservation, which includes 20,000 acres (81 square kilometers) of developable land, much of which the Miccosukee Tribe uses for a cattle grazing lease, and nearly 55,000 acres (223 square kilometers) of wetlands. The Miccosukee Tribe provides use permits for non-Natives to use some of the wetlands for hunting camps. Miccosukees may use "this land for the purpose of hunting, fishing, frogging, and
subsistence agriculture to carry on the traditional Miccosukee way of life." In 1990, the tribe opened Miccosukee Indian Bingo & Gaming to generate revenue for tribal citizens and facilitate developing new opportunities for tribal citizens. Following the great success of the bingo hall, the tribe opened the 302-room
Miccosukee Resort & Gaming Facility, now called the Miccosukee Casino & Resort, in 1999, which includes gaming facilities, entertainment venues, bingo, and numerous restaurants and other amenities. The revenue from this enterprise has supported economic development and improvements to education and welfare. Most Miccosukees today reside in the modern housing on the MRA along a single road known as Old Tamiami Trail or an extension to the west known as Loop Road. Some tribal citizens live farther west along Tamiami Trail in traditional clan camps in Big Cypress,
Fakahatchee Strand Preserve State Park, and
Collier-Seminole State Park. Some Miccosukees live in suburban Miami. Old Tamiami Trail is the center of tribal activities in the 21st century, and it contains all of the essential needs for the tribe, including residences, the school, the police department, the health clinic, recreational amenities, and the tribe's administration building. ==Citizenship==