Ojibway Indians of the Bahamas
How, you may be asking, did the Ojibway indians of the bahamas get to those islands? After stopping the advance of the Iroquois League in the 1660s, the Anishinabe of the upper peninsula of Michigan, sent a large group of perhaps 10,000 to 20,000 of their citizens to invade what is now the southern United States. They eventually settled down in Kentucky, Tennessee, northern Alabama, northern Georgia, Virginia, and western North Carolina and western South Carolina. These southern Anishinabek are also known as the Cherokee, Creek, the Seminole and the Shawnee, but that's because the whites have deliberately forced them to lose their tribal identity. After the War of 1812 ended many of the southern Anishinabe commenced to start to flee to Florida. It didn't take the whites of the United States long to follow them. The Chippewa's then fled to southern Florida, then they fled to the Bahamas. The whites have deliberately recorded that the Seminole who fled to the Bahamas were black. However, they made a mistake by calling the black Seminole the Mascocos. That is too similar to Maskegon and Mashkode. Those two words are Anishinabe words, which refer to specific groups of Anishinabek. Anyway, the Ojibway Indians of the Bahamas descendents are still living on the largest of the Bahamas islands, which is Andros. They are very mixed in race with the blacks there.