Native Black Ancestry

Our mission is to uncover and celebrate the profound truth that the majority of Black Americans have indigenous heritage. Through meticulous research, historical records, and compelling narratives, we aim to reveal the true origins and contributions of our ancestors. Join us on this enlightening journey as we bring to light the often-overlooked stories that connect Black Americans to their indigenous roots, challenging common misconceptions and honoring our shared legacy. Subscribe and be part of this important exploration of history that reshapes our understanding of who we are.


Native Black Ancestry

Just spent the last 5 hours creating a thesis on a...

Multidisciplinary metaphysical treatise exploring how empires, religions, and civilizations operate as entropic field systems — consciously or unconsciously managing the flow, polarity, and coherence of human energetic and spiritual potential through architecture, law, belief, and ritual.

The grind never ends. When I finally get around to making a video on this, it will BLOW YOUR MIND.

To get exclusive content and early access to my projects become a member of the website

www.nativeblackancestry.com/

2 months ago | [YT] | 17

Native Black Ancestry

📜✨ Why I Do What I Do ✨📜

As a proud citizen of the Muscogee Creek Nation, I love seeing events like this outreach program in Lawton. Our tribe invests in engaging citizens wherever they live, teaching them about our culture, language, and customs.

But here’s the question that drives me: what about those who were detribalized?

What about those who were reclassified on paper and erased from the rolls of their people?

What about those whose ancestors were victims of paper genocide?

For that demographic, there is no official outreach. That’s why I do what I do.

➡️ At www.nativeblackancestry.com/ I’ve launched a brand-new course where you can learn to trace your lineage and uncover the truth that was hidden.
➡️ You can also become a member and gain access to a digital archive of over 600 historical documents that cite our ancestors indigeneity.
➡️ And if you need more hands-on help, you can book a one-on-one genealogy consultation with me, where I’ll walk you through the three-step process my family used to trace our heritage and gain tribal citizenship with the Muscogee Creek Nation.

My mission is simple:
🔥 To empower you with the knowledge of your true history.
🔥 To help you reclaim your true ancestry.
🔥 To make sure you receive the benefits and recognition owed to you by your ancestors.

This is bigger than me—it’s about restoring what was taken.

✊🏾💡 Will you take that step?

3 months ago | [YT] | 14

Native Black Ancestry

Family, I’ve been working behind the scenes for the last 2 years to create something powerful for us. Today, I’m finally opening presale access to my Hidden Heritage Course.



This course is the step-by-step roadmap to uncovering your Indigenous roots, exposing how paper genocide reclassified our people, and reclaiming the legacy that belongs to us.



Click the link below to sign up and secure your spot in this historic journey. 👇


👉 www.nativeblackancestry.com/presalecourse



We’ve been hidden for too long. It’s time to reclaim our story. ✊🏾

3 months ago | [YT] | 36

Native Black Ancestry

📢 Big Update to the Archive!



Family, I just uploaded 27 new documents and 3 new books to the Indigenous Americans archive on my website. These include powerful resources like figurines, book excerpts, European statues of American Indians, and even works on Crispus Attucks and the Yamassee tribe.

Right now, members of my site have access to over 600 historical documents that prove our Indigenous heritage—evidence that’s been hidden, erased, or misclassified for far too long.

👉 If you’re not a member yet, now’s the time to join. Click the link below, become a member, and start digging into the evidence for yourself:



🔗 www.nativeblackancestry.com/historical-evidence



Let’s keep waking our people up. ✊🏽

3 months ago | [YT] | 40

Native Black Ancestry

📢 LIVE Tonight!

Are we really African or Indigenous Americans? The debate is heating up, and tonight we’re setting the record straight.

Recently, ⁨‪@AfricanDiasporaNews‬ put out a video pushing Pan-African propaganda, claiming the debate is “settled” and that we’re just African slaves who mixed with Natives. That’s misinformation meant to erase our Indigenous identity — and we’re not letting it slide.

🔥 I’ll be joined by special guests as we break down their claims, expose the false narratives, and bring the historical receipts showing that Native Black Americans are Indigenous to these lands.

👉 Don’t miss this discussion. Tune in live, bring your questions, and let’s have the debate they don’t want us to have!

#NativeBlackAmericans #BlackIndians #PaperGenocide #IndigenousTruth

4 months ago | [YT] | 5

Native Black Ancestry

I just painted my office walls with dry erase paint so I can map out history in real time for the community. This diagram shows how different factions played a role in the racial reclassification of Native Black Americans and the destabilization of our Indigenous nations.

🔴 At the top, the Crypto-Jews & Vatican issued bulls and decrees that gave Europeans “legal” cover to steal land and people.
🔴 The Franciscans & Ursuline Order used missions and schools to erase culture and identity.
🔴 The Conquistadors & European Crowns — Spanish, French, British — carried out conquest on the ground.
🔴 Behind the scenes, Banking Houses, Trade Companies, and Universities financed, legitimized, and codified these systems.
🔴 And at the bottom, you see the outcomes: Paper Genocide, Slave Codes, Racial Laws, Removal & Erasure.

This wall is where I’ll keep connecting the dots so our people can see the full picture — how it was built, and how we can undo the damage.

👉🏽 If you’re ready to uncover the truth about your own family’s story and trace your Indigenous lineage, go to www.nativeblackancestry.com/ and book a consultation today.

4 months ago | [YT] | 26

Native Black Ancestry

🎙️ The Hidden Truth They Don’t Want You to Know…

Did you know Native Black Americans—our reclassified Black Indians of the Southeast—didn’t just survive centuries of erasure... we created culture that shaped the entire world?

After being stripped of our tribal names, misclassified as "Negro" or "African American," and forced off our lands… we didn’t fold. We turned our pain into power.

🎶 The Blues—born from dispossession, spiritual resistance, and raw truth—became the foundation of American music. That rhythm birthed jazz, soul, R&B, rock ‘n’ roll, funk, hip-hop, and more.

🛠️ And don’t let them tell you we didn’t build anything. Native Black Americans are behind thousands of globally used inventions, including:

🛑 The traffic light – Garrett Morgan

💨 Gas mask – Garrett Morgan (again!)

🧼 Automatic elevator doors – Alexander Miles

🖨️ Color IBM PC monitor and graphics adapter – Mark Dean

🏀 The modern-day basketball hoop design – Fredrick Jones

💉 Blood bank system – Dr. Charles Drew

🚽 Improved toilet systems for trains – Lewis Latimer

🧊 Refrigerated trucks – Fredrick McKinley Jones

We didn’t just make it through—we led revolutions in music, innovation, and spirit.

📚 Want the real history? Tired of watered-down textbooks?

💥 Visit www.NativeBlackAncestry.com for exclusive historical resources, hidden truths, and tools to uncover your true heritage.

Let’s reclaim our names. Reclaim our story.
✊🏽 We are the original architects of American excellence.

#NativeBlackAncestry #PaperGenocide #BlackIndianHistory #Reclassified #IndigenousRoots #HiddenHistory #BlackExcellence #AmericanMusic #Inventors

8 months ago | [YT] | 25

Native Black Ancestry

📢 Public Service Announcement: Paper Genocide & Reclassification of Native Black Americans

Did you know that many of us who identify as Black in America are actually Indigenous—Native Black Americans—whose heritage was systematically stripped away through a process called paper genocide?

📜 Paper genocide refers to the deliberate reclassification of Native people—especially those with dark skin—as “Negro,” “Black,” or “African” in official documents like census records, birth certificates, and legal documents. This was not a mistake. This was strategic erasure. And it still affects us to this day.

Let’s talk about a few real-life examples where history was twisted:

⚔️ Crispus Attucks — the first martyr of the Boston Massacre. Many don’t know this, but Crispus was a Black Indian—of the Wampanoag tribe. But instead of honoring his Indigenous lineage, he’s almost always referred to solely as Black or African American in mainstream history books. Why? To erase his tribal identity.

👩🏽‍⚖️ Mildred Jeter Loving — yes, from Loving v. Virginia, the case that struck down interracial marriage bans. She was a full-blooded Virginia Indian. But look her up online and you’ll constantly see: “Indian and African.” This tactic of dual-labeling is designed to disconnect people from their tribal roots.

🧬 And this hits home for me personally. In my own family, I have ancestors listed as full-blooded Indians on the Dawes Roll — like Thomas Jefferson Adams, Dawes Roll #2145. Yet in a 2005 book titled “White, Black, Indian: Race and the Unmaking of an American Family”, a professor still described him as “Indian and African.” No DNA. No records to support that. Just pure assumption based on skin color. That’s how deep this reclassification runs.

This is not just history. It’s our identity—redefined without our consent. But you don’t have to stay in the dark.

🧬✨ Your ancestors didn’t disappear—they were reclassified. It’s time to reclaim your heritage.

👉🏽 Book a 1-on-1 genealogy consultation today and discover the truth about your roots:
www.nativeblackancestry.com/book-consultation

Let’s undo the erasure. Let’s reclaim who we really are.
#NativeBlackAmerican #PaperGenocide #Reclassified #BlackIndian #Genealogy #TruthRevealed #IndigenousRoots #KnowYourHeritage

8 months ago | [YT] | 27

Native Black Ancestry

The REAL World War I Began in 1492 – And It Never Ended.
Let’s talk about the war no history book ever told you about.

The real World War I didn’t begin in 1914. It began in 1492, when Christopher Columbus kicked off a global assault on the Indigenous tribes of the Americas.

This wasn’t just colonization. This was a coordinated, long-term world war—a 500-year campaign involving biological warfare, slavery, forced religion, and the erasure of entire nations. And just like the so-called "world wars" of the 1900s, it involved multiple empires working together—not competing, but cooperating. Spain. Britain. France. Portugal. Russia. Even the Dutch. And here’s the wild part: many of these nations were ruled by blood relatives—intermarried monarchies carving up the Americas like a family inheritance.

Here’s how it went down:

1492: Columbus lands in the Caribbean. He writes in 1503:
“In the province of Veragua I found people with great customs and Negro features… I believe they are native.”
Black Indians. Copper-skinned, wool-haired, broad-nosed Indigenous people.
Already here. Already thriving.

1513: Vasco Núñez de Balboa sees dark-skinned tribes in Panama.

1532: Pizarro records similar features among Peru’s Indigenous.

1542: Bartolomé de las Casas documents mass murder and cruelty by the Spanish—burnings, beheadings, hunting people with dogs.

1553: Pedro de Cieza de León describes dark-featured Native peoples.

1540s: Hernando de Soto’s men describe Chief Tuscaloosa as “dark as soot,” a giant warrior wearing a turban like a Moor.

They SAW us. They DOCUMENTED us. But over time, we were reclassified… erased.

By the 1600s, the war spread like wildfire:

Spain took the Caribbean, Mexico, Central & South America.

France claimed the Mississippi, Louisiana, and Canada.

Britain grabbed the East Coast and the South.

Russia came in through Alaska.

The Netherlands seized Suriname and the Northeast.

Portugal claimed Brazil.

They called it colonization. It was occupation.
They called it exploration. It was invasion.
They called us “Negroes.” But we were Native—Black Indians—reclassified, renamed, and enslaved right on our own land.

And the warfare didn’t stop with swords and muskets.

It evolved.

They used smallpox as a weapon. General Amherst suggested infecting blankets.

They built boarding schools to strip Native children of their identity.

They replaced sacred ceremonies with forced Christianity—burning those who resisted.

They introduced blood quantum and the Dawes Act (1887) to divide tribal land and reclassify us by color.

In 1871, Congress declared that tribes were no longer sovereign.
In 1887, the Dawes Act forced Natives onto individual plots, labeled some “Freedmen,” and destroyed communal land ownership.
By 1900, dark-skinned Natives were being counted as “colored,” “Negro,” or “mulatto” in the census—erased on paper and in memory.

This is called paper genocide. And it’s one of the biggest cover-ups in American history.

We didn’t all get removed to Oklahoma.

Some stayed and fought. Some hid in plain sight.
Many were forced onto plantations in the Southeast and enslaved on their own land.

Plantations weren’t just for “Africans.”
They were concentration camps for reclassified Indigenous people.
Black Seminoles. Yamasee. Creek. Guale. Catawba. All renamed. All erased.

Fast forward to Emancipation?
We still weren’t free.
Many of us were never meant to be included in the “freedmen” laws. We were Native—but reclassified as freed slaves so the government could deny us land and tribal benefits.

Then came Jim Crow.
Civil Rights.
But by that time, the lie was so deep, most of us didn’t know we were descendants of the very people who first met Columbus.

And let’s be real… the war never ended. It just changed tactics.

Now they use tribal enrollment rules to gatekeep Black descendants from citizenship.

They use ICE and the border patrol to target Indigenous migrants from Mesoamerica.

They ignore the epidemic of missing and murdered Indigenous women.

They deny us our language, history, land, and rights.

And they keep checking the wrong damn box on the census.

But here’s what they never expected…
That we’d REMEMBER.

That we’d piece it back together.
That we’d dig into records, oral history, and tribal memory.
That we’d reclaim our names. Our bloodlines. Our nations.

And that’s exactly what I’m here to help you do.

If you’re ready to find out the truth about your roots…

If you’ve always known deep down that you were more than just a check box…

If you’ve been lied to, misclassified, or told your whole life that you “have Indian in your family” but didn’t know where to start…

Book a genealogy consultation with me.
Let’s uncover your bloodline.
Let’s put your ancestors back on the map.
Let’s fight back—with the truth.

Book now at www.nativeblackancestry.com/

Because this war ain’t over. But neither is the fight in us.

8 months ago (edited) | [YT] | 24

Native Black Ancestry

They said my ancestor wasn’t really Native… just because of his skin color.

But the records — the truth — say otherwise.

Thomas Jefferson Adams Harjo was a full-blood Muscogee Creek Indian, enrolled on the Dawes Roll as such (Roll #2145). He wasn’t a Freedman. He wasn’t African American. He was a rancher, lawyer, and politician who helped lead the Creek Nation during one of the most critical periods in our history.

He served as Chief Justice under Isparhecher, was elected to the House of Warriors, and helped build up a thriving community between Beggs and Okmulgee alongside his wife, Mahala Grayson. They worked a large stretch of land, and his massive gravestone still stands in the Adams family cemetery as a testament to his legacy.

But despite this, a modern author — in a book claiming to trace “mixed race” identities — casually implies that Thomas Jefferson Adams had African heritage based solely on the color of his skin.

No documentation. No evidence. Just an assumption rooted in colorism and colonial pseudoscience.

This is what we call paper genocide.

When they couldn’t physically remove all the Indigenous people from the Southeast, they turned to the next best weapon — the pen. They rewrote identities, reassigned races, and reduced full-blood Native leaders to "freedmen" or "African descendants" based only on appearance.

And this didn’t just happen to Thomas.

It happened to thousands — maybe millions — of Native Black Americans across the South. Many weren’t relocated to Indian Territory. They were classified as “Negro” or “colored,” enslaved on their own land, and written out of tribal records. Their names appear on census lists, church registers, and plantation records — not because they weren’t Native, but because they were reclassified to fit the colonial system.

Thomas Jefferson Adams Harjo was also one of the first to discover oil in Red Fork. He founded the Nuyuka Mission Indian School, and his sons, Washington and Lewis, traveled to Washington D.C. to fight for tribal rights on the eve of the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934.

That is the legacy they tried to erase.

But I won’t let them.

This is why I do what I do. I help people reconnect with the legacy that was stolen through these reclassification tactics. I trace the paper trails, dig into the real documents, and uncover the Indigenous roots hidden beneath 100 years of false labels and forced narratives.

If you believe your family may have been reclassified…

If your ancestors were from the Southeast and labeled “colored” on censuses but never came from Africa…

If you want access to rare records, tribal rolls, Indian school records, census documents, maps, and expert research…

👉🏾 Become a member of my digital archive today at www.nativeblackancestry.com/historical-evidence

We’re not just reclaiming history — we’re correcting the record.

#NativeBlackAmerican #PaperGenocide #MuscogeeCreek #BlackIndianHistory #Reclassification #Genealogy

8 months ago | [YT] | 29