SEMINOLE INDIAN SCOUTS CEMETERY ASSOCIATION
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1/30/2024

february 2024

1 Comment

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happy febraury

Hello! Happy New Year! And Happy Black History Month! We hope your 2024 has gotten off to a happy, healthy, and prosperous start! We are looking forward to a year that is filled with a lot of important events. Keep reading to find out what we have been up to and what we are looking forward to.

2023 Holiday dinner

On Saturday, December 9, 2023, several of SISCA's officers and board members and their loved ones gathered at the Carver School for a holiday dinner. We have traditionally gathered during the holidays for several years. During COVID, we weren't able to get together for the past few years. 

Along with amazing food, one of our other traditions is something we adopted from the late Mary Griner Nofi and her husband Dr. Al Nofi. Each year, they would invite friends and family to their home to help decorate their Christmas tree. Each person puts, at least, one ornament on the tree. We did the same thing during our holiday gathering, thinking about Ms. Mary all the while.

186th Seminole Maroon Family Reunion -
January 13-14, 2024
​Jupiter, Florida

Florida Black Historical Research Project Inc.’s
186th Seminole Maroon Family Reunion – January 13-14, 2024
By Windy Goodloe, secretary, Seminole Indian Scouts Cemetery Association
 
(This article appears in the January 2024 editon of Indian Voices.)

At the end of last year’s Seminole Maroon Family Reunion, we (Corina Torralba, treasurer of SISCA and I) began making plans to attend this year’s event. Why? Because the space that the Tinnies of Florida Black Historical Research Project Inc. (FBHRP) have fostered is one of warmth, inclusivity, openness, and love. It is familial and familiar. This truly has become a family reunion that I look forward to attending each year.

This year, the focus was on those who stayed in Florida, such as Sam Jones (Abiaka) and Cha-Chi, and the Saltwater Underground Railroad (aka the Bahamas). On Saturday, January 13 at 10:00 AM, we gathered at Sunset Park, located in West Palm Beach, Florida, for the Cha-Chi’s Village Memorial Ceremony, which included a plaque dedication. The event, which was moderated by Professor Michelle T. Riley, included an invocation by Reverend Gerald Kisner. After the invocation, short speeches were given by the Honorable Cathleen Ward, who is the commissioner for the City of West Palm Beach, District 1, Mrs. Annie Ruth Harrison, with the African American Research Library and Cultural Center of Palm Beach County, Brother Victor D. Norfus with the Heart of Boynton Unity Project, and Professor Derek Hankerson.

Dr. Wallis H. Tinnie, president of FBHRP, gave the occasion. She spoke beautifully and passionately about the all the work that had gone into preparing for the day and how the ancestors had helped and approved every step of the process. Dr. Anthony Dixon gave a brief history about the Florida Maroon Community that inhabited the area. Mr. Dinizulu Gene Tinnie, who designed the plaque, spoke eloquently about his work.
The plaque reads: “Seminole Maroon Remembrance Site: Indigenous Land Acknowledgment: Cha-Chi’s Village: A prominent Seminole settlement, with a probable connection to Cha-Chi’s Landing, a historical site once identified in what is now Downtown West Palm Beach, was located in this general area before and during the Second Seminole War, 1835-1842. The site, with its wealth of verdant and thriving crop fields, was destroyed by U.S. military forces in 1841, following the capture of Cha-Chi and his wife Polly, among other captures, deaths, and forced deportation on the Trail of Tears to Oklahoma Territory under the Indian Removal Act of 1830.”

It goes on to say: “This memorial is placed by the City of West Palm Beach in cooperation with Florida Black Historical Research Project Inc. and the African American Research Library and Cultural Center of P.B. County. It was made possible by grants from ArtLife WPB, the National Trust for Historic Preservation, and the National Endowment for the Humanities.”

Brian Forbing and his Capital Battery Line closed out the program with their rhythmic cadences and impressive showmanship.

After the plaque dedication, we toured Boynton Beach and stopped at special sites along the way, including Brother Victor Norfus’s 92-year-old mom’s house. We ended the day with a panel discussion about the Saltwater Underground Railroad, featuring Professor Stefan Moss, Dr. Grace Turner, and Dr. Anthony Dixon. They discussed Google maps exploration of the Saltwater Underground Railroad, Angola, and Andros, respectively. The Boynton Bahamian Dancers entertained the crowd with their lively dance moves and even got everyone up on their feet a few times.

On Sunday, January 14 at 10:00 AM, we gathered at the Loxahatchee Battlefield Park for the 186th Anniversary of the Annual Seminole Maroon Spiritual Remembrance of the Two Battles of the Loxahatchee River. This event, in my humble opinion, is deeply healing and cathartic. We gathered in front of Isa’s Tree, which was dedicated on May 20, 2023, on Florida’s Emancipation Day. Dr. Wallis Tinnie and Mr. Dinizulu Gene Tinnie welcomed everyone. Afterward, a group of Buffalo Soldier reenactors, dressed in period uniforms, performed “Taps” and presented the colors.

The guest speaker was Professor Magdalena LaMarre. Her presentation was entitled “Sourcing Florida’s Maroon Communities.” Even though her speech was brief, she gave a thorough history of the Black Seminoles and even mentioned Brackettville and El Nacimiento. After her speech, a panel featuring Prof. Stefan Moss, Mr. Thomas Mitchell, Dr. Grace Turner, and Prof. Derek Hankerson discussed the Seminole Maroons of the Saltwater Underground Railroad. The panel was moderated by Dr. Anthony Dixon. And just like the day before, the program concluded with Brian Forbing’s excellent Capital Battery Line.

This year’s event also acknowledged the passing of two luminaries — Dr. Rosalyn Howard and Richard Procyk. Dr. Howard’s research on the Black Seminoles of the Bahamas is seminal. She is deeply missed. Richard Procyk was a champion of the Loxahatchee River Battlefield Park. Several of his dear friends spoke lovingly about him. Like Dr. Howard, his loss is immeasurable.
​
On a personal note, I had the pleasure of meeting the most extraordinary seven-year-old. As she and her mom and a few of her friends were walking toward where the event was taking place, I saw that she was carrying a small bouquet of freshly picked flowers. I asked her what she was going to do with the flowers, and she said that she wanted to place them at Isa’s tree. She asked me to accompany her, and I happily obliged. Before she placed the flowers at the base of the tree, she said a prayer, and the words she spoke left me in awe. She understood why we had gathered there, and she wanted to do her part to bring peace, love, and unity. In her tiny hands, our future is safe. I can’t wait to return next year to see her and everyone else who I have come to consider family. 
Indian Voices - January 2024

LT. Col. (retired) Richard Best & Wife
donate picnic tables to sisca

From Lt. Col. (retired) Richard Best (dated January 21, 2024):
"A promise made nearly 20 years ago from childhood into adulthood was kept by me, Lieutenenat Colonel (retired) Richard Best and his wife. As a young adult who entered military service in the US Army in 1990, I kept my promise to never forget my roots. So recently this last year, I set out on a personal misson or project to support the Seminole Indian Scouts Cemetery Association of Brackettville, TX, with park material to hlep make it rather more modern in the year 2024. On behalf of myself (LTC) (retired) Richard Best/Mrs. Pamela Best and family, we donated on January 20, 204, ten (10) ready custom-made picnic tables to the (SISCA) Association of Brackettville, TX. It was a personal promise which was kept to the association members, IN REMEMBRANCE OF CPL ISAAC PAYNE, USS ARMY, TRUMPETER, METAL OF HONOR RECIPIENT 1875. I hope this small gesture encourages other Semiole descendants to support/help with funds to keep our great heritage alive going forward into the future."

Dear Lt. Col. Best, thank you so much for your generosity. A lot of time and work went into crafting these beatiful tables. They will be a source of pride for many, many years to come.
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February Fundraiser -
​BBQ Chicken Plate Sale

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Seminole indian scouts cemetery plaque project
deadline coming soon

Following the completion of the renovation of the fence at the Seminole Indian Scouts Cemetery, we reached out to members and friends to help pay for the debt that occurred as a result. For those who wish to donate $100, their name or the name of their family or a loved will be placed on a plaque that memorializes their support.

This has been an ongoing project that we hope to complete soon. The deadline to pay the $100 and have your name added to the plaque is March 2, 2024. If you have any questions, please contact us. 

​If you'd like to donate, please click the link below.
DONATE

FORT CLARK DAYS 2024

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We look forward to Fort Clark Days every year. This is Brackett/Fort Clark's largest event. It brings together living historians from all over Texas and beyond, and it is a chance to step back and time and hear the stories and (sometimes) actually feel the artifacts that were used a century (if not longer) ago.

For more information, click the button below:
Fort Clark Days

February's Monthly zoom presentation speaker is
rhonda grayson
thursday, february 29, 2024 at 7:00Pm ct/8:00PM ET

membership

​​​​Is it time to renew your membership? Our website makes it easy. Just click the button below to become a new member or to renew your membership. Or you can send us your check or money order by mail, if you prefer. Your membership is very important to us. There truly is strength in numbers. Become a member of the Seminole Indian Scouts Cemetery Association today. Thank you.
MEMBERSHIP

THANK YOU!

Thank you to everyone who supports SISCA.
​None of this would be possible without your support.

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1 Comment
Richard Best, LTC (Retired)
2/15/2024 06:46:59 pm

Great job. Keep up the impeccable job. Your articles were well written and presented a great road map back in time and to our future. I hope your newspaper encourages others.

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    Augusta Pines

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Seminole Indian Scouts Cemetery Association
PO Box 1797
Brackettville, TX
​78832

  • About Us
    • Officers and Board Members
    • Membership
    • Newsletter
    • Bylaws
  • Cemetery
    • Cemetery/Carver School Cleanups
    • Virtual Tour
    • Medal of Honor Recipients
    • Our Deceased >
      • 2019
      • 2015
      • 2013
      • 2010
      • 2008
      • 2006
      • 2005
      • 2002
      • 1997
      • 1926
  • Museum
    • Grand Opening
    • Virtual Museum
  • History
    • Black Seminoles: A Historical Overview
    • Seminole Negro Indian Scouts
    • Carver School
    • Books about the Seminoles
    • 1870 to 1914: 150 Years of the Seminole Negro Indian Scouts
  • Events
    • Juneteenth >
      • Juneteenth 2018
      • Juneteenth2017
      • Juneteenth 2015
      • Juneteenth 1987
    • Seminole Days >
      • Seminole Days 2022 >
        • Gallery
        • Seminole Days 2022 Flyer
        • Trip to Seminole Canyon
        • Afro-Seminole Creole
        • Meet & Greet/Lecture Series
        • Breakfast with the Fort Clark Historical Society
        • Annual Parade
        • Parade Entry Form
        • Annual Program
        • BBQ Plate Sale
        • Johnny Montgomery
        • Annual Meeting & Election Results
        • Pasta Dinner
        • Sunday Service
        • Places to Stay
      • Seminole Days 2019
      • Seminole Days 2017
      • Seminole Days 2016
      • Seminole Days 2015
      • Seminole Days 2014
      • Seminole Days 2013
  • Forum
  • Contact