Florida The history of the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma derives from the
ethnogenesis of the tribe in Florida. The Seminole were composed of Indigenous American peoples who migrated into Florida after most of the original Indigenous tribes had declined or moved. The Spanish explorer Pedro Menéndez de Avilés founded St. Augustine in 1565, the first permanent settlement in Florida after at least 60 years of sporadic Spanish visitation. He encountered complex Indigenous cultures whose people lived by hunting, fishing, farming and raising stock. Tribes from three different basic language groups: the Timuquan, Calusan, and Muskhogean, occupied Florida and lived in small and well-organized villages. Although today the term Seminole is used, this name originated due to a European misnomer, which categorized a diverse group of autonomous tribes together under the name Seminole. The Spanish first recognized the speakers of the "core language" Mvskoke, and called them
cimarrones, or "free people" (Seminole). Translated through several languages to English, this term came to apply to all of Florida's 18th-century inhabitants, and their neighbors who later fled to join them under pressure of European encroachment into their territories. The Seminole absorbed remnants of other Florida tribes into their own. The
Oconee were the original "Seminole," who later included the Hecete,
Eufaula,
Mikasuki, Horrewahle,
Tallahassee,
Chiaha, and Apalachicola. The
Muscogee Creek Confederacy had a strong, longstanding presence in the Southeast. Fugitive runaway
slaves and those freed under Spanish rule set up neighboring
maroon communities and were close allies of the Indians. There was some intermarriage, but mostly the two peoples retained independent cultures, according to studies since the late 20th century. The blacks were armed and became allies in military conflicts. The African Americans became known as
Black Seminoles or Seminole Maroons. The term
cimarrones in Spanish was initially transliterated by the Creek as
semvlonē. Semvlonē eventually morphed into
Semvnole (still pronounced sem-uh-no-lee by Indigenous speakers). In 1823 the US forced most of the Seminole from northern areas of the territory to a reservation in central Florida under the
Treaty of Moultrie Creek. Seminoles continued to leave the reservation and a second war was begun, the most expensive for the US, with many troops committed. After the Second Seminole War of the 1830s, an estimated 3,000 Seminole and 800 Black Seminoles were
removed to Indian Territory, with many taken by ship across the Gulf of Mexico and up the Mississippi for part of the journey. They were first put under the Creek on their reservation. The 1830s was the period of removal for the other of the "
Five Civilized Tribes" of the American Southeast. A few hundred Seminole remained in the Florida Everglades. With guerilla warfare, they resisted US forces during the Third and last Seminole War, when the US withdrew. Today their descendants have formed the federally recognized
Seminole Tribe of Florida and
Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida.
Indian Territory , Principal Chief of the Seminole Nation After removal, the Oklahoma and Florida Seminole developed independently and had little contact for nearly 100 years. By the terms of a 1832 treaty, Seminole people were initially forced to share a reservation with the
Muscogee Nation, however in 1845 United States promised to give the Seminole people their own reservation.
Micanopy, who had been principal chief since 1825, led the Seminole struggle to gain an independent reservation which succeeded in 1856. He died in 1849, after separate lands had been promised by the US for 1855. His sister's sons,
John Jumper (1849–1853) and Jim Jumper (1853–1866), succeeded him as principal chiefs before the US began to interfere with tribal government. While the Seminole maintained political independence from the Creek, the two peoples became closer through the 19th and early 20th centuries, as they shared strong cultural traditions and began to intermarry. The Seminole reservation originally encompassed what is now Seminole County, a roughly 15-mile strip between the
Canadian River and
North Canadian River, a total of . The United States urged the Indians on reservations to adopt subsistence agriculture, but less than half the land was good for agriculture, and a third was not useful for stock raising or agriculture. Following the Seminole Agreement of 1909, the Seminole lands were allotted to individual households registered on the
Dawes Rolls, in a federal plan to encourage subsistence farming and assimilation. Numerous interests wanted to extinguish the communal tribal lands to gain admission of Oklahoma (including Indian Territory) as a state. In 1900 the Seminole Freedmen numbered about 1,000, nearly one-third of the total Seminole tribe in Oklahoma. The Dawes Commission established two separate registration rolls for Seminole Indians and Freedmen. They became United States citizens in a racially segregated state. The Seminole Freedmen suffered extra legal discrimination and restrictions in the state. Some left for Canada or other states. The segregation of the larger society drove a wedge between the communities. The Freedmen quickly lost land through unscrupulous land sharks, as their land sales were not supervised by the Indian Bureau. The Seminole also lost land, sometimes through the actions of overseers who were supposed to help them.
Current conditions Today the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma is located in
Seminole County, Oklahoma. The entire county of Seminole is a portion of the original Seminole Nation jurisdiction, and covers approximately 633 square miles. The county is a checkerboard of tribal trust property, Indian allotments, restricted Indian lands, and dependent Indian communities. Native Americans make up 22% of the population of Seminole County. The Seminole County service population is 5,315 Tribal citizens, according to the Seminole Nation Tribal Enrollment Office. The total enrollment of the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma is approximately 17,000 citizens. According to 2000 U.S. Census data for Seminole County, the self-identified Native American (one race only) population is 4,328, and the Native American (one race or combination with other race) population is 5,485. As of the Spring of 2022, the Chief was Lewis Johnson. ==Government==