Judge: Cherokee slave descendants have right to tribal citizenship

A U.S. District Court judge ruled Wednesday in favor of Cherokee Freedmen descendants, saying they have a right to tribal citizenship a decade after Cherokee Nation rescinded those rights.

Judge Thomas F. Hogan, with the District of Columbia court, upheld an 1886 treaty between the Oklahoma Cherokee Nation and the U.S. that stated all African-American slaves who were taken as property by the tribe would become citizens of that tribe.

The tribe eventually amended its rules and required that citizens be directly descended from an ancestor listed on the “Cherokee By Blood” section of the Dawes Rolls, a list of individuals who were deemed eligible for tribal membership by a federal commission in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

That move essentially stripped descendants of the Cherokee Freedmen of their right to citizenship.

In the judge’s decision, he wrote: “The Court finds it confounding that the Cherokee Nation historically had no qualms about regarding Freedmen as Cherokee ‘property’ yet continues, even after 150 years, to balk when confronted with the legal imperative to treat them as people.”

The Cherokee Supreme Court ruled in favor of the descendants in 2006, when it found the Freedmen were unconstitutionally prevented from enrolling as citizens. But in 2007, a CN special election was held, and voters rescinded the citizenship of Freedmen descendants.

Since then, Freedmen descendants have pursued citizenship rights through several legal proceedings in U.S. and tribal courts.

In 2014, the U.S. Department of Interior filed a motion for summary judgment, asking the U.S. District Court to rule in favor of the Freedmen. 

Hogan determined this week that the Treaty of 1886 guarantees descendants of Cherokee Freedmen have all the rights of native Cherokees, including the right to citizenship.

CN Attorney General Todd Hembree said Wednesday evening that he and his staff are still digesting Hogan’s decision, but expects to formulate a legal action for the tribe “in the very near future.”

“There’s nothing final in this case at this point,” Hembree said.

Crawford writes for the Tahlequah, Oklahoma, Daily Press. 

Local News

Piedmont Athens Regional and Akins Ford partner to enhance breast health services

Local News

Johnson named Sales Executive of the Month for January

Local News

Tickets on sale this week for Lake Country Players’ latest production

Local News

Friday, March 14 Breeze will be delayed

Local News

Greene Chamber welcomes Lake Country Books and Gifts

Local News

Zeb Hartline named director of Culinary Operations for Reynolds Lake Oconee

Local News

Second Harvest food distribution March 15

Local News

Brooke Adams joins Coldwell Banker Lake Oconee Realty/Lake Country

Community

New CASA board members

Local News

Bulldogs Battling Breast Cancer raises $245,000 for St. Mary’s Breast Health Services

Local News

Rotary Week 4 raffle winner

Local News

Record-breaking Heart and Soul Gala raises over $800,000 for Good Samaritan Hospital

Call To Worship

Lenten season offerings at Church of the Redeemer

Community

Baskets of Hope bringing Easter joy to local foster and disadvantaged children

Local News

St. Mary’s new Ion robot makes lung cancer biopsies faster, safer

Local News

Rotary Week 3 winner

Local News

The greatest hits of the ‘70s coming to Festival Hall to Benefit Circle of Love Center

Local News

Coldwell Banker Lake Oconee Realty celebrates Brian Quinn as top real estate agent in Georgia

Local News

Reynolds Lake Oconee announces 3rd Quarter 2024 Employee Awards

Local News

KofC new Sir Knights of Assemble 3799 Christ Our King and Savior Church

Local News

Artist Bonnie Beauchamp-Cookie brings evocative style to ‘Equipoise’ exhibit at Madison-Morgan Cultural Center

Local News

BBB: Scammers impersonating road toll collection services

Local News

Seuss on the Loose festival March 1

Local News

Rotary Week 1 raffle winner