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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Choctaw

Choctaws \Choc"taws\, n. pl.; sing. Choctaw. (Ethnol.) A tribe of North American Indians (Southern Appalachian), in early times noted for their pursuit of agriculture, and for living at peace with the white settlers. They are now one of the civilized tribes of the Indian Territory.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Choctaw

1722, from Choctaw Chahta, of uncertain meaning, but also said to be from Spanish chato "flattened," for the tribe's custom of flattening the heads of male infants. As a figure skating step, first recorded 1892. Sometimes used in 19c. American English as typical of a difficult or incomprehensible language (compare Greek in this sense from c.1600).

Gazetteer
Choctaw, OK -- U.S. city in Oklahoma
Population (2000): 9377
Housing Units (2000): 3617
Land area (2000): 27.071509 sq. miles (70.114884 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.020135 sq. miles (0.052149 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 27.091644 sq. miles (70.167033 sq. km)
FIPS code: 14200
Located within: Oklahoma (OK), FIPS 40
Location: 35.482383 N, 97.267330 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 73020
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Choctaw, OK
Choctaw
Choctaw -- U.S. County in Alabama
Population (2000): 15922
Housing Units (2000): 7839
Land area (2000): 913.513922 sq. miles (2365.990097 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 7.335575 sq. miles (18.999051 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 920.849497 sq. miles (2384.989148 sq. km)
Located within: Alabama (AL), FIPS 01
Location: 32.027681 N, 88.257855 W
Headwords:
Choctaw
Choctaw, AL
Choctaw County
Choctaw County, AL
Choctaw -- U.S. County in Mississippi
Population (2000): 9758
Housing Units (2000): 4249
Land area (2000): 419.100339 sq. miles (1085.464850 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.711569 sq. miles (1.842954 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 419.811908 sq. miles (1087.307804 sq. km)
Located within: Mississippi (MS), FIPS 28
Location: 33.343519 N, 89.257179 W
Headwords:
Choctaw
Choctaw, MS
Choctaw County
Choctaw County, MS
Choctaw -- U.S. County in Oklahoma
Population (2000): 15342
Housing Units (2000): 7539
Land area (2000): 773.933177 sq. miles (2004.477642 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 26.750107 sq. miles (69.282455 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 800.683284 sq. miles (2073.760097 sq. km)
Located within: Oklahoma (OK), FIPS 40
Location: 34.019987 N, 95.512802 W
Headwords:
Choctaw
Choctaw, OK
Choctaw County
Choctaw County, OK
Wikipedia
Choctaw

The Choctaw (In the Choctaw language, Chahta) are Native American people originally from the Southeastern United States (modern-day Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, and Louisiana). The Choctaw language belongs to the Muskogean language family group. The Choctaw are descendants of the peoples of the Hopewell and Mississippian cultures, who lived throughout the east of the Mississippi River valley and its tributaries. About 1,700 years ago, the Hopewell people built Nanih Waiya, a great earthwork mound, which is still considered sacred by the Choctaw. The early Spanish explorers of the mid-16th century encountered Mississippian-culture villages and chiefs. The anthropologist John Swanton suggested that the Choctaw derived their name from an early leader. Henry Halbert, a historian, suggests that their name is derived from the Choctaw phrase Hacha hatak (river people).

The Choctaw coalesced as a people in the 17th century, and developed three distinct political and geographical divisions: eastern, western and southern, which sometimes created differing alliances with nearby European powers. These included the French, based on the Gulf Coast and in Louisiana, the English of the Southeast, and the Spanish of Florida and Louisiana during the colonial era. During the American Revolution, most Choctaw supported the Thirteen Colonies' bid for independence from the British Crown. They never went to war against the United States prior to Indian Removal.

In the 19th century, the Choctaw became known as one of the " Five Civilized Tribes" because they adopted numerous practices of their United States neighbors. The Choctaw and the United States (US) agreed to nine treaties and, by the last three, the US gained vast land cessions and deracinated most Choctaw west of the Mississippi River to Indian Territory. They were the first Native Americans forced under the Indian Removal Act. The Choctaw were exiled because the U.S. wanted to expand territory available for settlement by European Americans, to save the tribe from extinction, and to acquire their natural resources. The Choctaw negotiated the largest area and most desirable lands in Indian Territory. Their early government had three districts, each with its own chief, who together with the town chiefs sat on the National Council. They appointed a Choctaw Delegate to represent them with the US government in Washington, DC.

By the 1831 Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek, those Choctaw who chose to stay in the newly formed state of Mississippi were one of the first major non-European ethnic groups to become U.S. citizens. (Article 8 in the 1817 treaty with the Cherokee stated Cherokees may wish to become citizens of the United States.) During the American Civil War, the Choctaw in both Oklahoma and Mississippi mostly sided with the Confederate States of America. The Confederacy suggested it would support a state under Indian control if it won the war. In a new treaty after the war, the US required them to emancipate their slaves and offer them full citizenship; they have become known as Choctaw Freedmen. After the Civil War, the Mississippi Choctaw fell into obscurity for some time.

The Choctaw in Oklahoma struggled to build a nation, transferring the Choctaw Academy there and opening one for girls in the 1840s. In the aftermath of the Dawes Act, the US dissolved tribal governments and appointed chiefs. During World War I, Choctaw soldiers served in the U.S. military as the first Native American codetalkers, using the Choctaw language. After the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934, the Choctaw reconstituted their government, and the Choctaw Nation had kept their culture alive despite years of pressure for assimilation. The third largest federally recognized tribe, since the mid-twentieth century, they have created new institutions, such as a tribal college, housing authority, and justice system. Today the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma, the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians, and the Jena Band of Choctaw Indians are the three federally recognized Choctaw tribes; Mississippi recognizes another band and smaller Choctaw groups are located in Louisiana and Texas.

Choctaw (disambiguation)

The Choctaw are a Native American people.

Choctaw may also refer to:

  • Choctaw language
  • Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma
  • Jena Band of Choctaw Indians
  • Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians

Usage examples of "choctaw".

Again, the division of the year into four seasons--a division as devoid of foundation in nature as that of the ancient Aryans into three, and unknown among many tribes, yet obtained in very early times among Algonkins, Cherokees, Choctaws, Creeks, Aztecs, Muyscas, Peruvians, and Araucanians.

Indian Relocation Act exiled them from their land-all the Choctaw and Chickamauga and Cherokee and Chickasaw-and U.

Joel knew the Muskhogean language of the Chickasaw and Choctaw people, he still had difficulty when it was spoken rapidly, as Etta was doing now.

People would perch from time to time on our old territory, but them Choctaws or whatever the hell they called theirselves, they was about the only ones that never left.

The Creeks and Choctaws remained on their individual plots, but great numbers of them were defrauded by land companies.

Choctaw princess who got wooed out of her doeskins by an English gentleman, a gun dealer, back in Oklahoma.

One time me and Henry was visiting the Hamiltons, and Old Man Richard was carrying on about Injun ancestry, and how Henry Short looked like a Choctaw, too.

She sat at the edge of the bed to brush them out, then rebraided her hair in a single loose plait, the tradition among Choctaw married women.

I met a first chop Colchester gag this summer a-goin' to the races to Halifax, and he knowed as much about racin', I do suppose, as a Choctaw Ingian does of a railroad.

Just had another clash between some Choctaws and Caddos two months ago, I heard.

For altho he writes particularly of the Southern Indians only, the Catawbas, Creeks, Cherokees, Chickasaws and Choctaws, with whom alone he was personally acquainted, yet he generalises whatever he found among them, and brings himself to believe that the hundred languages of America, differing fundamentally every one from every other, as much as Greek from Gothic, have yet all one common prototype.

Whatever clashes the Creeks—or the Cherokees, Choctaws, and Chickasaws, for that matter—had in the future with the United States, they'd have to fight them without access to guns and ammunition from the European powers.

Sooner or later, he'd drive all the southern tribes across the Mississippi—the Cherokees and Choctaws and Chickasaws who'd fought alongside him just as surely as the Creeks and Seminoles who'd fought against him.

These, in contrast to the Cherokees, Choctaws, Chickasaws, Creeks, and Seminoles, were wild Indians, giving to raiding, horse-thieving, and scalp-hunting.

The Indians of the eastern Territory were mostly of the Five Civilized Tribes—the Cherokees, Choctaws, Chickasaws, Creeks, and Seminoles.