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Seminole “seh-minn-ole“

Seminole “seh-minn-ole“. History: Tribes of Georgia and Florida joined together for protection. These tribes merged and unified as the Seminole Nation

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Page 1: Seminole “seh-minn-ole“. History: Tribes of Georgia and Florida joined together for protection. These tribes merged and unified as the Seminole Nation

Seminole“seh-minn-ole“

Page 2: Seminole “seh-minn-ole“. History: Tribes of Georgia and Florida joined together for protection. These tribes merged and unified as the Seminole Nation
Page 3: Seminole “seh-minn-ole“. History: Tribes of Georgia and Florida joined together for protection. These tribes merged and unified as the Seminole Nation

History: Tribes of Georgia and Florida joined together for protection. These tribes merged and unified as the Seminole Nation

in the 1700’s.Located in northern Florida to being and

moved further south wen Americans attacked them. Eventually were in the

Everglades of Florida until they were forced to move to Oklahoma in the 1800’s with

other Eastern tribesNow the tribe is in Oklahoma, some in

Florida.Living on Reservations.

Page 4: Seminole “seh-minn-ole“. History: Tribes of Georgia and Florida joined together for protection. These tribes merged and unified as the Seminole Nation

What type of climate?

Page 5: Seminole “seh-minn-ole“. History: Tribes of Georgia and Florida joined together for protection. These tribes merged and unified as the Seminole Nation

Seminole, FL, gets 51 inches of rain per year. The US average is 37. Snowfall is 0 inches. The average US city gets 25 inches of snow per year. The number of days with any measurable precipitation is 104.

On average, there are 241 sunny days per year in Seminole, FL. The July high is around 90 degrees. The January low is 52. Our comfort index, which is based on humidity during the hot months, is a 28 out of 100, where higher is more comfortable. The US average on the comfort index is 44.

Page 6: Seminole “seh-minn-ole“. History: Tribes of Georgia and Florida joined together for protection. These tribes merged and unified as the Seminole Nation

What do they eat?

Page 7: Seminole “seh-minn-ole“. History: Tribes of Georgia and Florida joined together for protection. These tribes merged and unified as the Seminole Nation

What do they eat?Food: Seminole men were good hunters. Fish were speared from canoes. They caught otter, raccoon, bobcats, turtle, alligator, and birds. To catch deer, they would burn a patch of grass. When the new grass grew in, the deer came to feast, and the Seminole caught the deer.

They did not tend their crops. The land teemed with food like wild pineapples, mangos, guava, oranges, and mulberry trees.

Villagers planted crops behind their house and on nearby hammocks. They did not weed or fertilize or irrigate. Wild plants mingled with the ones they had planted. The Seminole planted pumpkins, pawpaws, and corn.

Corn was the main crop. They used corn to make corn flour, corn bread, corn pancakes, and even a corn soft drink called sofkee. Sofkee is still a popular soft drink among the Seminoles on reservations today.

Cane Sugar: These early people sweetened their food with sugar cane

Page 8: Seminole “seh-minn-ole“. History: Tribes of Georgia and Florida joined together for protection. These tribes merged and unified as the Seminole Nation

Where do they live?

Page 9: Seminole “seh-minn-ole“. History: Tribes of Georgia and Florida joined together for protection. These tribes merged and unified as the Seminole Nation

Homes were called Chickees. Made of wood and plaster. Roofs were palmetto. Homes were in large villages around a town square with central buildings.As they moved homes were built on wooden stilts 2 to 3 feet of the ground in the Everglades. Homes did not have outer walls; during rain they hung hide tarps.

Page 10: Seminole “seh-minn-ole“. History: Tribes of Georgia and Florida joined together for protection. These tribes merged and unified as the Seminole Nation

What do they wear?

Page 11: Seminole “seh-minn-ole“. History: Tribes of Georgia and Florida joined together for protection. These tribes merged and unified as the Seminole Nation

•Traditional Seminole clothing was fairly simple. Men generally wore breechcloths and women wore wraparound skirts made from palmetto.•Shirts were rarely worn by the tribe, but in cool weather poncho-style shirts were worn.•Both men and women wore moccasins on their feet.

Page 12: Seminole “seh-minn-ole“. History: Tribes of Georgia and Florida joined together for protection. These tribes merged and unified as the Seminole Nation
Page 13: Seminole “seh-minn-ole“. History: Tribes of Georgia and Florida joined together for protection. These tribes merged and unified as the Seminole Nation
Page 14: Seminole “seh-minn-ole“. History: Tribes of Georgia and Florida joined together for protection. These tribes merged and unified as the Seminole Nation
Page 15: Seminole “seh-minn-ole“. History: Tribes of Georgia and Florida joined together for protection. These tribes merged and unified as the Seminole Nation
Page 16: Seminole “seh-minn-ole“. History: Tribes of Georgia and Florida joined together for protection. These tribes merged and unified as the Seminole Nation
Page 17: Seminole “seh-minn-ole“. History: Tribes of Georgia and Florida joined together for protection. These tribes merged and unified as the Seminole Nation