The 'Meherrin' Tribe is one of eight state-recognized tribes of
Native Americans in
North Carolina and received formal state recognition in 1986. The Meherrin currently have an enrollment of 557 people.
The Meherrin are
Iroquoian-descent
Native Americans who reside in rural northeastern
North Carolina, and are proximate to the river of the same name on the
Virginia-
North Carolina border. The Meherrin tribal seat is
Winton, North Carolina and the tribe is principally located in and around the "Little California/Pleasant Plains" of
Hertford County, North Carolina.
History
"Meherrin" means, "people of the muddy water." In the Meherrin language, the Tribe is known as "Ah-kah-weh-cha-kah" derived from the Meherrin words of water and muddy. The Meherrin are an amalgam of the Meherrin, Conestoga, or
Susquehannock of upper
Maryland, and were closely related to the Nottoway and Tuscarora. In 1650, Edward Bland led an expedition into the interior of Virginia colony. Accompanied by an Appamatuck guide, Bland wandered into a Meherrin village located west of present-day
Emporia, Virginia, within thirty miles of where the Meherrin presently reside.
In the
1669 Virginia census, the Meherrin are listed as the "Menheyricks." It is possible that the influx of refugee
Susquehannock who had been dispersed by the
Haudenosaunee a few years earlier may have so overwhelmed the Meherrin as to give rise to the impression that subsequently they were for the most part comprised of
Susquehannock. However, one should well consider that in 1720, the Meherrin concluded a treaty of peace with a number of tribal peoples in present-day
Pennsylvania. The Conestoga, or
Susquehannock were among those mentioned in the negotiations.
By the late seventeenth century, the Meherrin had fallen under the jurisdiction of
Virginia, although Carolina colony also lay claim to their territory. The Meherrin and Virginia colony had signed a treaty in 1677. However, incursions by Virginia colony into what remained of Meherrin territory effectively nullified the treaty and the Meherrin were forced to flee southward into
North Carolina.
By 1729, the Meherrin were consigned to a reservation tract by the
North Carolina General Assembly in
Bertie County, now a part of
Hertford County. At the time, the six-mile tract was called, "Meherrin Neck." Later, the name was changed to "Maney's Neck," and today it is called "Parker's Ferry." There was also a six mile square tract of reservation land in the Union/Beechwood Country Club area, many records of this were destroyed.
North Carolina colonials began to trespass on Meherrin land as had Virginia's colonials in the previous century. Already depleted in number due to warfare and disease, the Meherrin receded into the neighboring swamps and less desirable areas of
Hertford County. In order to protect what lands they had managed to salvage, the Meherrin parcelled out their tribal holdings into individually-owned lots. In so doing, and throughout the nineteenth century, the Meherrin managed to stave off as best they could, continuous incursions into their ancestral homeland.
External link:
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The website of the Meherrin tribe.
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Many stories about Meherrin and Chowanoke descendants are found at Marvin T. Jones' local web journal roanoke-chowan.com