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MOWA Band of Choctaw Indians

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
State-recognized tribe in Alabama, United States
MOWA Band of Choctaw Indians
Named afterMobile andWashington Counties,[1]Choctaw
Founded atMount Vernon, Alabama
Typestate-recognized tribe,nonprofit organizations
EIN 63-0820577 (MOWA Band of Choctaw Indian Commission),[2]
EIN 01-0766792 (MOWA Choctaw Cultural Center[3]
Legal statuscivic/social organization, human service organization, ethnic center, charity[2]
PurposeP84: Ethnic, Immigrant Center[2]
HeadquartersMount Vernon, Alabama[2]
Location
Official language
English
CEO
Lebaron Byrd
SubsidiariesMOWA Choctaw Cultural Center
Revenue$2,050,083[2] (2022)
Expenses$1,869,347[2] (2022)
Fundinggrants, program services[2]
Staff0 (Commission)[2]
3 (Cultural Center)[4] (2022)
Websitemowachoctawindians.com
Formerly called
Mobile-Washington County Band of Choctaw Indians of South Alabama[1]

TheMOWA Band of Choctaw Indians is astate-recognized tribe, located in southwestAlabama, with a population largely based in southernWashington County and some membership in northernMobile County.

The termMOWA is aportmanteau of Mobile and Washington Counties.[5] They were formerly named theMobile-Washington County Band of Choctaw Indians of South Alabama.[1]

The MOWA Band of Choctaw claims to descend fromChoctaw people who evadedIndian Removal in the 1830s and remained in Alabama.[6] TheCherokee Nation includes the MOWA Band of Choctaw on its list of fraudulent tribes.[7]

Petition for federal recognition

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The MOWA Band of Choctaw Indians sent a letter of intent forfederal recognition in 1983.[8] They completed their petition for federal acknowledgment in 1988.[9]Kevin Gover (Pawnee), then Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs, and the US Department of the Interior denied their petition in 1997 and again in 1999.

The final determination stated that "the Alabama group did not descend from the historical Choctaw tribe or from any one of the other five tribes it claimed."[1]

It went on to state, "The Final Determination noted that the petitioning group is derived from two core families that were resident in southwestern Alabama by the end of the first third of the nineteenth century. All persons on the petitioner's membership (3,960) roll descend from these two families. About one percent of the members have documented Indian heritage but it derives from an ancestor whose grandchildren married into the petitioning group after 1880, and from another individual who married into the petitioning group in 1904. This insignificant Indian ancestry for a few individual members does not satisfy the criterion that the group as a whole descends from a historical tribe. The MOWA ancestors, most of whom were well documented, were not identified as American Indians or descendants of any particular tribe in the records made in their own life times."[1]

The MOWA Band of Choctaw requested a reconsideration of the Final Determination in 1998, and the US Department of the Interior reaffirmed its declining of the MOWA petition in 1999, stating, "The Final Determination concluded that there was no evidence that established Choctaw or other Indian ancestry of 99 percent of the MOWA membership. Rather, the evidence tended to disprove Indian ancestry."[9]

State recognition

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In 1979, the State of Alabama formally acknowledged the MOWA Band of Mobile and Washington County as a state-recognized tribe, through legislation introduced by State Representative J. E. Turner.[10]

MOWA members Galas Weaver and Framon Weaver became active leaders in Indian affairs in the state of Alabama.[10] Galas Weaver was instrumental to the formation of the Alabama Indian Affairs Commission, created by the 1984 Davis-Strong Act.[11]

Reservation

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Location of the MOWA Reservation

The MOWA is a rare state-recognized tribe with a reservation. The MOWA Reservation is a few miles west of US 43.[12] It is 160 acres in size.[11]

Organization

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The organization descends from "three core families, the Weavers, Byrds, and Reeds. ... these families generally were classed as nonwhites, either as 'free persons of color' or black in the antebellum period, with certain individuals listed in government documents as white. Socially they were not accepted by local whites, and because they were free the MOWA ancestors were set apart from the enslaved blacks of the area," as historian Mark Edwin Miller writes.[13] The isolated rural group increasingly identified as being American Indian and Choctaw in the 1960s.[10]

Under the leadership of Framon Weaver in 1979, they formally organized as a nonprofit organization in Alabama,[11] theMOWA Band of Choctaw Indian Commission.[2]

As of 2022, the commission's administration includes:

  • CEO: Lebaron Byrd
  • Treasurer: John Byrd
  • Chairman: Edward Orso
  • Vice Chairman: Kesler Weaver.[2]

The commission received grants from organizations such as the Gulf Coast Resource Conservation and Development Area, Ala-Tom RC&D Council, Alabama Business Charitable Trust Fund, and others.[2]

TheMOWA Choctaw Cultural Center in Mount Vernon is subordinate to the MOWA Band of Choctaw Indian Commission. It was formed in 2003 as an A90: Arts Service Organization. Lebaron Byrd is its president.[3]

Activities

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The MOWA operates a health clinic and a museum.[14] The MOWA hosts an annualpowwow each year.[15]

Health concerns

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Members of the MOWA Band of Choctaw Indians have a high frequency ofMarinesco–Sjögren syndrome, a rareautosomalrecessive disorder which can lead to intellectual disability, muscle weakness, and balance and coordination problems.[16][17] They are the only known population in the United States to suffer from the rare disease.[18]

Proposed legislation

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In 2022, US SenatorRichard C. Shelby (R-AL) introduced S.3443 MOWA Band of Choctaw Indians Recognition Act to extend federal recognition to the MOWA Choctaw. The bill has been referred to the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs.[19]

Notes

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  1. ^abcdeSweeney, Thomas W. (December 19, 1997)."BIA Declines Recognition to Alabama Group".Indian Affairs. US Department of the Interior. Retrieved16 January 2022.
  2. ^abcdefghijk"MOWA Band of Choctaw Indian Commission".Cause IQ. Retrieved31 January 2025.
  3. ^ab"Mowa Choctaw Cultural Center".Cause IQ. Retrieved16 January 2022.
  4. ^"Mowa Choctaw Cultural Center".Manta. Retrieved16 January 2022.
  5. ^Mark Edwin Miller,Claiming Tribal Identity, page 210.
  6. ^Mark Edwin Miller,Claiming Tribal Identity, page 217.
  7. ^Mark Edwin Miller,Claiming Tribal Identity, page 187.
  8. ^"Letter of Intent"(PDF).Petitioner #086: MOWA Band of Choctaw, AL. US Department of the Interior Indian Affairs. Retrieved16 January 2022.
  9. ^abLeshy, John D. (26 November 1999)."Secretary's Decision Documents"(PDF).US Department of the Interior. Office of the Solicitor. Retrieved16 January 2022.
  10. ^abcMiller, page 213.
  11. ^abcMiller, 214.
  12. ^Mark Edwin Miller,Claiming Tribal Identity, page 74.
  13. ^Mark Edwin Miller,Claiming Tribal Identity, page 210.
  14. ^Miller,Claiming Tribal Identity, page 75.
  15. ^"MOWA Indians conduct annual Pow-Wow". The South Alabamian. 22 June 2006. Retrieved16 January 2022.
  16. ^Georgy, B. A.; Snow, R. D.; Brogdon, B. G.; Wertelecki, W. (1 February 1998)."Neuroradiologic findings in Marinesco-Sjögren syndrome".American Journal of Neuroradiology.19 (2):281–283.ISSN 0195-6108.PMC 8338194.PMID 9504478. Retrieved12 November 2022.
  17. ^Superneau, D. W.; Wertelecki, W.; Zellweger, H.; Bastian, F. (1987). "Myopathy in Marinesco-Sjogren syndrome".European Neurology.26 (1):8–16.doi:10.1159/000116305.ISSN 0014-3022.PMID 3469098.
  18. ^Stoffle, Richard (1 February 2014).The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture: Volume 6: Ethnicity. UNC Press Books.ISBN 978-1-4696-1658-2. Retrieved12 November 2022.
  19. ^"S.3443 - MOWA Band of Choctaw Indians Recognition Act".congress.gov. Retrieved24 January 2022.

References

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External links

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Municipalities and communities ofWashington County, Alabama,United States
Towns
Map of Alabama highlighting Washington County
CDPs
Unincorporated
communities
Ghost towns
Indian reservation
Footnotes
‡This populated place also has portions in an adjacent county or counties
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