In addressing the question of how long the Lumbee have conceived of themselves as Indian, Thomas notes that there is simply no documentation to verify this belief among the refugee Indians on the Edgecomb and Granville County frontier in 1750. Some of these people who migrated into Tennessee (including Maynors and Thompsons) were enrolled on the Cherokee rolls of the 1840s and 1850s. Some of these same families, who moved to Newman's Ridge on the Virginia-Tennessee border and then to the Letcher County, Kentucky area, had Indian first names (such as Black Fox and Tecumseh). Thus, there were clues of Indian identity among the descendants of the 1750 frontier settlers. Thomas considered it direct evidence of belief in Indian identity that the families who migrated to Newman's Ridge were, in 1890, referring to themselves as Melungeons (a mixture of Portuguese and Indian).
As some point, Thomas believes, many of these people left the Edgecomb/Granville County frontier, moved to the Robeson County area, and intermarried with Hatteras and Cheraw people, making their identity more strongly Indian than nixed race.
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