Ojibway Indians of Missouri
How, you may be asking, did the ojibway indians of missouri get there? When the wars were occurring back in the Ohio region the Anishinabek were very much a part of those wars which include, the French and Indian War; Pontiac's War; the American Revolutionary War; the 1782-1794 Northwest Indian War; and the War of 1812. As a result of the continuous fighting the Chippewa's and other Ohio tribes, gradually started to flee towards the west, including into Missouri, which then led them down into Arkansas, and even more southward. That probably occurred in the 1770s. Anyway, though the whites will not accept a Ojibway Indians of Missouri as being true, it is most definitely. Below is a list of the Anishinabek of Missouri who are the Cherokee and Saponi of course. The Chippewa's have been forced by the whites to lose their tribal identity in many locations.
Chickamauga Cherokee Nation
Northern Cherokee Nation of the Old Louisiana Territory
Amonsoquath Tribe of Cherokee
Cherokee Nation West of Missouri & Arkansas
Chickamauga Cherokee Nation
Chickamauga Cherokee Nation MO/AR White River Band
Dogwood Band of Free Cherokees
Lost Cherokee of Arkansas & Missouri
Northern Cherokee Nation of the Old Louisiana Territory
Northern Cherokee Tribe of Indians of Missouri and Arkansas
Ozark Mountain Cherokee Tribe of Arkansas and Missouri
Sac River and White River Bands of the Chickamauga-Cherokee Nation of Arkansas and Missouri
Saponi Nation of Missouri
Southern Cherokee Indian Tribe
Western Cherokee
Western Cherokee of Arkansas/Louisiana Territories
Western Cherokee Nation of Arkansas and Missouri
The Wilderness Tribe of Missouri