CHICKASAW


Meaning of CHICKASAW in English

North American Indian tribe of Muskogean linguistic stock who formerly inhabited what is now northern Mississippi and Alabama. In their earlier history the Chickasaw and the Choctaw (q.v.) may have been a single tribe. The Chickasaw were a seminomadic people who not only patrolled the immense territory that they claimed for themselves but also raided tribes far to the north. They absorbed the remnants of the tribes that they conquered, thus becoming a mixed-blood group. At the beginning of colonial times they were known to traders as the "breeds." Their dwellings were scattered for miles along a stream or river rather than clustered in villages. They traced descent through the maternal line. The supreme deity was associated with the sky, sun, and fire; and a harvest and new-fire rite similar to the Green Corn ceremony of the Creek was celebrated annually. Probably the earliest contact between Europeans and the Chickasaw was Hernando de Soto's expedition in 1540-41. In the 18th century the Chickasaw became involved in the power struggles between the British and French, siding with the British against the French and the Choctaw. They also gave refuge to the Natchez in their wars with the French. Relations with the United States began in 1786, when their northern boundary was fixed at the Ohio River. In the 1830s they were forcibly removed to Indian Territory (present Oklahoma) where, with the Creek, Cherokee, Choctaw, and Seminole, they were among the Five Civilized Tribes. For three-quarters of a century each tribe had a land allotment and a quasi-autonomous government modeled on that of the United States. In preparation for Oklahoma statehood (1907), some of this land was allotted to individual Indians; the rest was opened up to non-Indian homesteaders, held in trust by the federal government, or allotted to freed slaves. Tribal governments were effectively dissolved in 1906 but have continued to exist in a limited form. Some Indians now live on tribal landholdings that are informally called reservations. Early estimates placed the tribe's population at 3,000-4,000. At the time of their removal to Indian Territory they numbered about 5,000. In the late 20th century, descendants of the Chickasaw numbered about 25,000. city, northern suburb of Mobile, Mobile county, southwestern Alabama, U.S., on Chickasaw Bogue, a tributary of the Mobile Bay delta region. Named after the Chickasaw Indian tribe, it was founded during World War I as a shipbuilding community. It also has fisheries and port facilities for exporting steel from Birmingham but is primarily residential. Inc. village, 1917; town, 1946. Pop. (1990) 6,649.

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