Virtual Library
If you are viewing this page from home, you will need your Orange County resident library card to access some of the resources.

Use the interactive map below to find a brief summary on a particular tribe.

Map of Native American Settlements in Florida Timucua Mayaimi Potano Ais Tocobaga Calusa Jeaga Tequesta Apalachee

 

History & Culture

 

Access Genealogy: Indian Tribal Records

A free online genealogy resource containing information about Florida tribes.

 

Florida Bureau on Archeological Research

Explore a Miami Circle and learn more about Florida's native peoples.

 

Public Indian Sites of Florida

A comprehensive guide to all of the public archaeological sites and museums devoted to preserving Native American heritage in Florida.

 

Seminole History from the Florida Department of State

Find out about Seminole history, the Seminole wars and Seminole leaders.

 

Taino Timucua Tribal Web Page

This page provides an overview of the Timucua of Florida and their Taino relations.

 

Native Americans in Florida Gallery

A collection of galleries produced by the Florida Center for Instructional Technology, College of Education, University of South Florida.

 

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Library Online Resources

 

Biography Resource Center

Find out more about Osceola and other famous Native Americans with Biography Resource Center.

 

HeritageQuest Online

Identify your Native American Ancestors with HeritageQuest online.

 

SIRS Researcher

View the special spotlight section dedicated to the contributions and accomplishments of Native Americans.

 

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Native Americans Today

 

National Museum of the American Indian
The Web site for the museum dedicated to the preservation, study, and exhibition of the life, languages, literature, history, and arts of Native Americans.

 

The Miccosukee Tribe of Florida

The official Web site of the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida.

 

The Seminole Tribe of Florida

The official Web site of the Seminole Tribe of Florida.

 

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Library Materials

 

Books

Read about the lives and histories of Native Americans in Florida:

Streaming Videos

Watch these educational Native American videos and get an overview of the lives and times of Native Americans.

 

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For Educators

 

Exploring Florida: Social Studies Resources for Students & Teachers

Links to Native American resources compiled by the Florida Center for Instructional Technology.

 

Native American Information for Educators

A compilation of resources including biographies, battles and cultural information.

 

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Kids & Teens

 

 

 

Library Online Resources
Biography Resource Center

Learn about the lives of Native Americans with this detailed resource.

 

Read the Books

Find books based on subject and grade level. Look up by the word 'Native Americans'.

 

World Book

For facts and information on Native American people, tribes, and territories.

 

Library Materials

 

Books

 

Arrow to the Sun: A Pueblo Indian Tale

Arrow to the Sun: A Pueblo Indian Tale
Adapted and illustrated by Gerald McDermott

 

An adaptation of the Pueblo Indian myth which explains how the spirit of the Lord of the Sun was brought to the world of men.

 

 

The Legend of the Indian Paintbrush

The Legend of the Indian Paintbrush
Retold and Illustrated by Tomie dePaola

 

Little Gopher follows his destiny, as revealed in a Dream-Vision, of becoming an artist for his people and eventually is able to bring the colors of the sunset down to the earth.

 

Web Sites

Native American Crafts for Kids

This site has activities Native and Colonial children might have used for their toys and crafts.

 

Scholastic Explorers: Native Americans

This site explores ancient and modern-day Native American cultures of New Mexico, Utah, and Washington.

 

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Tribes of Florida - Brief Descriptions

 


Ais

 

Circumstantial evidence, particularly resemblance in town names, leads to the conclusion that the Ais language was similar to that of the Calusa and the other south Florida tribes. It is believed that it was connected with the Muskhogean stock.

 

Fontaneda speaks of a Biscayan named Pedro who had been held prisoner in Ais, evidently during the sixteenth century, and spoke the Ais language fluently. Shortly after the Spaniards made their first establishments in the peninsula, a war broke out with the Ais, but peace was concluded in 1570. In 1597 Governor Mendez de Canço, who traveled along the entire east coast from the head of the Florida Keys to St. Augustine, reported that the Ais chief had more Indians under him than any other. A little later the Ais killed a Spaniard and two Indians sent to them by Canço for which summary revenge was exacted. Relations between the Floridian government and these Indians were afterward friendly but efforts to missionize them uniformly failed.

 

Excerpt from: Access Genealogy - Florida Indian Tribes

 

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Apalachee

 

From at least A.D. 1000, a group of farming Indians was living in northwest Florida. They were called the Apalachees. Other Florida Indians regarded them as being wealthy and fierce. Some think the Apalachee language was related to Hitchiti of the Muskhogean language family. The Apalachees' territory extended from the Aucilla River in the east to the Ochlockonee River in the west.

 

Excerpt from: Florida Center for Instructional Technology -The Apalachees of Northwest Florida

 

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Calusa

 

The Calusa Indians were originally called the "Calos" which means "Fierce People." They were descendants of Paleo-Indians who inhabited Southwest Florida approximately 12,000 years ago. During the Calusa's reign the Florida coastline extended roughly 60 miles further into the Gulf of Mexico. Hardwood forests covered the land and the climate was much colder than it is today. The Calusa inhabited a region abundant with bears, woolly mammoths, sloth, tortoises, and saber-toothed tigers. Hunting these animals and gathering roots and fruit that grew on trees was a mainstay until they discovered the waters contained a wealth of fish. This new food source required significantly less time than hunting and gathering their food, and allowed the Calusa time to establish their own system of government. It was quite a complex structure involving nobility, commoners, and slaves. Following this formation of a centralized government were the construction of a canal system, the beginnings of organized religion, and the creating of many art forms.

 

Excerpt from: Absolutely Florida Web Source - The Shell People

 

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Jeaga

 

The Jeaga (YAY.gah) inhabited present-day Palm Beach County. Jonathan Dickson, who survived a shipwreck on the coast near Jeaga land in 1698, described them as "fierce and bloody." The Jeaga depended on the sea for food.

 

Excerpt from: Florida Online - Social Studies - Early Florida

 

In the eighteenth century, this tribe was probably merged with the Ais, Tequesta, and other tribes of this coast, and removed with them to Cuba.

 

Excerpt from: HiddenHistory.com- The Indian Tribes of North America

 

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Mayaimi

 

Along the lower Atlantic Coast was the home of many small tribes: the Tequestas of Biscayne Bay, the Ais and the Jeagas up the coast, the Keys Indians, and the Mayaimi who built large mounded villages near Lake Okeechobee. Like the Calusa, these tribes were fishermen and hunters rather than farmers.

 

Excerpt from: Florida History- Florida of the Indians

 

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Potano

 

The Potano tribe was anciently celebrated as, with one or two possible exceptions, the most powerful of all the Timucua peoples. Located in the, territory of the present Alachua County.

 

Excerpt from: Access Genealogy

 

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Tequesta

 

The Tequesta were a small, peaceful, Native American tribe. They were one of the first tribes in South Florida and they settled near Biscayne Bay in the present-day Miami area. They built many villages at the mouth of the Miami River and along the coastal islands. The chief lived in the main village at the mouth of the Miami River.

 

Like the other tribes in South Florida, the Tequesta were hunters and gatherers. They relied mainly on fish, shellfish, nuts, and berries for food. The men caught sharks, sailfish, sea cows, and porpoises in the waters of Biscayne Bay and the Miami River, while the women and children collected clams, conchs, oysters, and turtle eggs in the shallow waters. The sea cow (manatee) was considered a delicacy and served mainly to the chiefs and other prominent leaders.

 

Excerpt from: Florida Center for Instructional Technology- The Tequesta of Biscayne Bay

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Timucua

 

The Timucua lived in large circular houses with palm-thatched roofs. Frequently, they built a wall of tall wooden poles around their villages for protection against attack.

Like most Native Americans, the Timucua had no written language.

 

Excerpt from: Florida Online - Social Studies- Early Florida

 

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Tocobaga

 

The Tocobaga Indians were a group of prehistoric and historic Native Americans living near Tampa Bay, Florida up until roughly 1760.

The Tocobaga were not part of the Timucua culture which usually only extended as far south as modern day Ocala. However, at times some of the Tampa Bay groups may have been ruled by a Timucua chief named Urriparacox who temporarily extended his range of influence.

All of the Tampa Bay inhabitants relied heavily on water animals and plants for food, but also hunted and gathered on land. Of all these groups, only the Tocobaga planted corn.

 

Excerpt from: Pelotes Island Nature Reserve - Who Were the Tocobago Indians?

 

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OCLS - Orlando, Florida