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With "A Seminole Legend," Betty Mae Jumper joins the ranks of
Native American women who are coming forward to tell their life
experiences. This collaboration between Jumper and Patsy West, an
ethnohistorian who contributes general tribal history, is a rare
and authentic account of a pioneering Florida Seminole family. It
will take its place in Seminole literature, historical and
anthropological studies, Florida history, women's history, and
Native American studies.
Betty Mae Tiger was born in 1923 to a Seminole Indian mother and a
French trapper father, a fair-skinned half-breed who was nearly put
to death at age five by tribal medicine men. Her inspiring
autobiography is the story of the most decorated member of the
Seminole Tribe of Florida--a political activist, former nurse, and
alligator wrestler, who today has her own web site.
Jumper is also a beloved story-teller, renowned for passing along
tribal legends. In this book she describes her family's early
conversion to Christianity and discusses such topics as
miscegenation, war and atrocities, the impact of encroaching
settlement on traditional peoples, and the development of the
Dania/Hollywood Reservation. She became the first formally educated
Florida Seminole, attending a government boarding school in
Cherokee, North Carolina, where at age 14 she learned to speak
English.
Betty Mae Tiger Jumper, director of communications for the Seminole
Tribe of Florida and coauthor of "Legends of the Seminoles as Told
by Betty Mae Jumper," served from 1967 to 1971 as the Florida
Seminole tribal chair, the only Florida Seminole woman ever
elected. She has received numerous honors, including a Florida
Department of State Folklife Heritage Award and a Doctorate of
Humane Letters from Florida State University (both in 1994). In
1997 she received the first Lifetime Achievement Award ever
presented by the Native American Journalists Association and was
named Woman of the Year by the Florida Commission on the Status of
Women. She lives in Hollywood and Big Cypress, Florida.
Patsy West, director of the Seminole/Miccosukee Photographic
Archive in Ft. Lauderdale, is a noted ethnohistorian and an active
preservationist. She has won awards for her historical series
"Reflections," published in the "Seminole Tribune" since 1985, and
is the author of "The Enduring Seminoles: From Alligator Wrestling
to Ecotourism" (UPF, 1998), which received the Harry T. and Harriet
V. Moore Award for best social and ethnographic history from the
Florida Historical Society and a certificate of commendation from
the American Association of State and Local Historians. She lives
in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.
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