
Cherokee Freedmen: We Are Cherokee - Paperback
Cherokee Freedmen: We Are Cherokee - Paperback
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by Ty 'Gwy' Wilson (Author)
Cherokee Freedmen: We Are Cherokee is a work of nonfiction that examines the historical, cultural, and legal foundations of Cherokee Freedmen identity and citizenship within the Cherokee Nation.
Written by Cherokee citizen, historian, and community leader Ty "GWY" Wilson, the book traces Cherokee identity from pre-United States kinship systems-where belonging was grounded in family, community responsibility, and cultural practice-through slavery in Indian Country, emancipation, and the Treaty of 1866, which promised citizenship to Freedmen and their descendants. It follows this history through the Dawes Rolls, Oklahoma statehood, Jim Crow segregation, and the modern court cases that forced long-suppressed questions of belonging into the public sphere.
Raised in Tahlequah, Oklahoma, during the 1970s and 1980s, Wilson brings lived experience into the historical record. He writes from a time when the Cherokee Nation had limited resources, and identity was not tied to benefits or paperwork. Elders in his community did not speak in roll categories or blood fractions; they said simply that they were Cherokee. That grounding shapes the book's perspective and voice.
Combining treaty analysis, tribal and federal court records, public history, oral testimony, and community memory, Cherokee Freedmen: We Are Cherokee challenges the idea that federal classifications define Native identity. It restores the voices of individuals whose lives were reduced to administrative labels and legal shorthand, and it situates Freedmen history as an inseparable part of Cherokee history.
Clear, accessible, and deeply human, this book affirms a central truth: recognizing Cherokee Freedmen descendants does not dilute Cherokee identity-it strengthens it. Being Cherokee is not about fear of dilution, but about honoring commitments, kinship, culture, history, and truth.



















