The Georgia Tribe of Eastern Cherokee accepts for enrollment all persons who can fully document their Cherokee Heritage from one of the many Cherokee census rolls listed below, as required for enrollment by the rules of the Bureau of Indian Affairs. The Tribe is open for enrollment to all such descendants .
Please email the Georgia Tribe of Eastern Cherokee tribal office for enrollment application gteci@aol.com.
CHEROKEE ROLLS:
Battle of Horeshoe Bend – 1814 – This is a muster roll of a regiment of Cherokees commanded by Colo. Gideon Morgan in the division commanded by Major General Cocke & Jackson in the Service of the United States against the Hostile Creeks.
Reservation Rolls – 1817 – A listing of those Cherokees desiring a 640 acre tract in the east and permitted to reside their. No record exists of the 2,000 Cherokees who emigrated before 1817.
Emigration rolls – 1817 – A listing of those Cherokees emigrating to 1835 Arkansas territory & later 1828 to Oklahoma In 1828, the Cherokees ceded their lands in Arkansas for land in Oklahoma.
Henderson Rolls – 1835 – A listing of 16,000 Cherokees living in Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, & North Carolina to be removed to Oklahoma, per Treaty New Echota.
Mullay Roll -1848 A listing of 1,517 Cherokees living in in North Carolina after the removal of 1838 Agent John C. Mullay took the Census pursuant to an act of Congress in 1848.
Siler Roll – 1851 A listing of 1,700 Cherokees living in Eastern Cherokee entitled to a per capita payment pursuant an act of Congress in 1850. In 1851, David W. Silar was appointed to take a census of the Cherokees east of the Mississippi to determine who could be eligible to participate in a per capita payment based on the 1835 treaty. Silar submitted his census list which contained 1,959? individuals by state and county in North Carolina, Tennessee, Georgia and Alabama.
Old Settler Roll- 1851 A listing of Cherokees still living in 1851 who already residing in Oklahoma when the main body of the Cherokee arrived in the winter of 1839 (Trail of Tears) Approximately one third were Old Settlers and two third were new arrivals. The 1851 Old Settler Roll lists each individual by district and his/her children unless the mother was an emigrant Cherokee. In this case, the children were listed with their mother on the Drennen Roll 1852. There were 44 family groups listed as non-residents. Guion Miller used this roll in compiling the 1910 record.
Chapman Roll – 1852 Prepared by Albert Chapman as a listing of those Cherokee actually receiving payment based on Siler 1851 Eastern Census. In 1851 and 1852 the per capita payments were made by Alfred Chapman based on Silar’s census to 2,134 individuals. This roll played an important part in Guion Miller’s preparation of his roll completed in 1910. Anyone who could trace their ancestry to an individual on the Chapman Roll was included on Miller’s roll.
Drennen Roll – 1852 Prepared by John Drennen as a listing of first Census of the “new arrivals” (Trail of Tears) from 1838-1839 in Oklahoma.
Federal Census 1860 contains Indian lands in Arkansas
Swetland Roll – 1869 Prepared by S.H. Swetland as a listing of those Cherokee, and their decedents, who were listed as remaining in North Carolina by Mullay 1848 Census. Made pursuant to an act of Congress 1868 for a removal payment authorization. S. H. Swetland was appointed to take a census in 1868. He was touse the Mullay Roll of 1848 as the basis for his census. This census was completed in 1868 and gives the families in the Eastern Cherokee band.
Hester Roll – 1883 Prepared by Joseph G. Hester as a listing of Eastern Cherokee in 1883. (This Roll is an excellent source of information. Includes ancestors, Chapman Roll Number, age English name and Indian name.)
FederalCensus – 1880 (Note the 1880 Indian Schedules for this Federal Census were destroyed.) In 1879, the Cherokee National Council authorized a census and this 1880 Census was arranged in 6 schedules. Again, in 1883 and 1886, The Cherokee National Council authorized another census. Federal Census – 1890 In 1890, another census of the Cherokee Nation was made and it is probably the most complete of any of the census. It included Cherokees and adopted whites, Shawnees and Delawares, orphans under 16 yrs, those denied citizenship by the Cherokee authorities, those whose claims to citizenship were pending, intruders and whites living in the Cherokee Nation by permission.
Dawes roll – 1898 to 1907 The Federal government embarked on the policy of extinguishing tribal title to land and allotting it to individual Indians. This “final roll” contains the names of more than 101,000 people who were eligible for tribal membership and thus entitled to an allotment of land.
Federal Census – 1900 This lists members of the Five Civilized Tribes as well as Whites and Blacks living in the Indian Territory.
Churchill Roll – 1908 Prepared by Frank C. Churchill as a listing of Eastern Cherokee to “Certify Members” of the Eastern Band. (Like the Hester above has lots of Information)
Guion Miller Roll – 1909 Prepared by Guion Miller of all Eastern Cherokee (Not Old Settlers), residing in the either East or West of the Mississippi River. Ordered by the Court of Claims as result of “Suit” won by Eastern Cherokees.
Federal Census – 1920 Native American Indians may be identified as Black, Indian, Other, or white.
Baker Roll – 1924 This was supposed to be the “final Roll” of the Eastern Cherokee. The land was to be allotted and all were to become citizens. Fortunately the Eastern Cherokee avoided the termination procedures, unlike their brothers of the Cherokee Nation West. The Baker Roll Revised is the currant membership Roll of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians in North Carolina.
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A Society Volunteer will search the Dawes and the Guion Miller Roll and send either copies of the research by mail or by email. A request for a brief search for other genealogical information can be conducted upon request.
All Things Cherokee, your online source for Cherokee genealogy information, history, culture, art, as well as a section full of gifts & books.
LIST OF INDIAN ROLLS ON MICROFILM
The records listed below have been microfilmed for preservation purposes and to facilitate reference.
The Cherokee Family Research Center Research admission to the Cherokee Heritage Center includes access to the CFRC and genealogy library. Also the museum exhibits, the Trail of tears exhibit, a guided tour of the Ancient Cherokee Village and a self-guided tour of Adams Corner Rural Village.
Our mission is to preserve and document the history, culture, and genealogy of descendants of the historical Cherokee Nation. The registry operates as a repository for family history in text, audio, and video recordings. The free tools and resources on this site are meant to aid families in researching their Cherokee ancestry.
For anyone trying to prove Cherokee blood and establish Cherokee membership, This information in this site has assisted many individuals in proving their Cherokee lineage and establishing Cherokee enrollment.
Copyright © 1975 Georgia Tribe of Eastern Cherokee - All Rights Reserved.
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