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Encyclopedia > Choctaws

The Choctaws are a Native American group who, in times past, lived in the land occupied by the southeast United States, using the trail that is now known as the Natchez Trace as a trade route to the north.


Some Choctaws escaped the Indian Removal of the 1830s and formed the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians. Others organized the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma.


In World War I, a group of Choctaws serving in the American Army used their native language as a code. This was the forerunner of the much larger group of Native Americans from various tribes who were used as radio operators, or code talkers, during World War II.


James Meredith, the first person of African American heritage to attend the University of Mississippi, and Roy Rogers the singing cowboy and Western film actor were of Choctaw heritage.


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  Results from FactBites:
 
Choctaw Religion (791 words)
One of the distinctive practices of the Choctaw was head flattening.
The seal of the Choctaw nation of Oklahoma consists of a circle within which is a set of bow and arrows.
The seal of the Choctaw of Mississipi consists of a circle within which is a drum.
Choctaw language - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (589 words)
The Choctaw language, traditionally spoken by the Native American Choctaw people of the southeastern United States, is a member of the Muskogean family.
The Choctaw language was well known as a lingua franca of the frontiersmen of the early 19th Century, including eventual American Presidents Andrew Jackson and William Henry Harrison.
The Choctaw syllabary was adapted from Sequoyah's Cherokee syllabary.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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