Lumbees.
Spicer, Edward H. “Lumbees.” Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups. Ed. Stephen Thornstrom. Cambridge: Belknap—Harvard UP, 1980. Pp. 70-71.
Spicer, Edward H. “Lumbees.” Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups. Ed. Stephen Thornstrom. Cambridge: Belknap—Harvard UP, 1980. Pp. 70-71.
Chavers, Dean. “The Lumbee Story, Part I—Origin of the Tribe.” Indian Voice [Santa Clara, CA: Native American Pub. Co.] 1.10 (1971-72): 11-12, 24.
Rights, Douglas L. The American Indian in North Carolina. 2nd ed. Winston-Salem: John F. Blair, 1957. Pp. 144-49.
"The Indians of Robeson County.” The State [Charlotte, NC] 18.47 (21 April 1951): 3, 22.
Johnson, Guy Benton. “An Institutional Sketch of the Robeson County Indian Community.” 1951? 22p. [Included in entry 468.]
Mooney, James. “Croatan Indians.” Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico. (Smithsonian Institution. Bureau of American Ethnology. Bulletin 30, part 1.) Washington: Government Printing Office, 1907. P. 365. Rpt. in McPherson (entry 49), Exhibit M, pp. 251-252.
Dial, Adolph L. The Lumbee. Indians of North America. New York : Chelsea House, 1993. 112 p. Key source
Huguenin, Charles A., and Robert M. Dell. “The Lumbee (or Lumber) Indians of South Carolina. Descendants of the Hatteras Indians of Croatan (Portsmouth Island) and the English of the 'Lost Colony' of Roanoke (Cedar Island). Part 2.” NEARA Newsletter (Milford, N.H.: New England Antiquities Research Association) 7.3 (1970): 53-55.
Pate, Albert F. The search for Johnny Chevin: being a poetic quest out of the most ancient records and oldest traditions for descendants of Sir Walter Raleigh's Lost Colony. Pikeville, NC: A. F. Pate, 1991.
Jordan, Larry E. From Virginia to Alabama and beyond: migrations of related familes from 1610 to today [Web site].