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Karenne
Wood
Monacan Poet
Karenne
Wood is an enrolled member of the Monacan Indian
Nation and serves on the Monacan Tribal Council.
She is Director of the Virginia Indian Heritage
Program at the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities
and is currently a PhD candidate in anthropology
at the University of Virginia, working to reclaim
indigenous languages and revitalize cultural practices.
She was previously the Repatriation Director for
the Association on American Indian Affairs, coordinating
the return of sacred objects to Native communities.
She has also worked at the National Museum of
the American Indian as a researcher, and she directed
a tribal history project with the Monacan Nation
for six years. Wood held a gubernatorial appointment
as Chair of the Virginia Council on Indians for
four years, and she has served on the National
Congress of American Indians’ Repatriation
Commission. |
Did
any Virginia Indians (individuals or tribes) play a
role in the Civil War?
- F. Hancock
Karenne
Wood answers: The response of Virginia
Indians to the American Civil War varied from
tribe to tribe. We know that several Pamunkey
men served the Union Army as gunboat pilots, not
fighting directly as soldiers. These men were
thrown off the rolls of the local Colosse Baptist
Church for aiding the "enemy." It's
likely that the Pamunkey people chose to aid the
North because they had had to repeatedly defend
their small remaining lands from encroachment
by Virginia and by local landholders over time.
One of these men, William Terrill Bradby, went
on to become a Union spy and eventually became
an informant for noted anthropologist James Mooney.
Other tribes responded differently. An 1896 article
in the Richmond newspaper reported that men belonging
to the Monacan community near Bear Mountain in
Amherst had been "taken" to Petersburg
during the recent war to work on fortifications
there, presumably for the South, perhaps against
their will. These varied responses are indicative
of the nation's Indian tribes as a whole, some
of whom fought valiantly for the South, while
others took the Northern side. Some tribes, such
as the Cherokee, were directly involved.
Statistics
show that just under 3,600 Native Americans served
in the Union Army during the war. Perhaps the
best known of their number was Colonel Ely Parker,
who served as an aide to General U. S. Grant and
was present at Robert E. Lee's surrender at Appomattox
Court House. Statistics for the Confederacy are
not reliably available, but most scholars of Native
American involvement in the actual fighting of
the war are well acquainted with the major Southern
figure among them: Brigadier General Chief Stand
Watie, a three-quarter blood Cherokee who was
born in December 1806 near what would become Rome,
Georgia. Stand Watie had been one of the signers
of a treaty that agreed to the removal of the
Cherokee from their home in Georgia to what was
then the Oklahoma territory; this split the tribe
into two factions and culminated in 1838 in the
infamous removal known today as the "Trail
of Tears."
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Selected
publications by this author:
Virginia
Indian Heritage Trail
Order through UVA
Bookstores
(2008)
For
Additional Information:
Library
of Virginia
Return to Questions
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