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Choptank people
Native American people From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Choptank (or Ababco[2]) were an Algonquian-speaking Native American people that historically lived on the Eastern Shore of Maryland on the Delmarva Peninsula. They occupied an area along the lower Choptank River basin,[3] which included parts of present-day Talbot, Dorchester and Caroline counties.[4] They spoke Nanticoke, an Eastern Algonquian language closely related to Delaware.[5][6] The Choptank were the only Indians on the Eastern Shore to be granted a reservation in fee simple by the English colonial government.[7] The Choptank were a subdivision of the Nanticoke.[8]
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History
The name Choptank is thought to be from the Nanticoke word tshapetank: a stream that separates,[9] or place of big current.[10]
The Algonquian-speaking Choptank were independent, but they were related in culture and language to the Nanticoke, the larger paramount chiefdom immediately to their south, which was dominant on the Eastern Shore.[11]
The only Indian reservation which the English established in fee simple on the Eastern Shore was the Choptank Indian Reservation in 1669.[12] The territory included what later became the city of Cambridge,[13] the county seat of Dorchester County. The last town in Dorchester County occupied by the Choptank was Locust Neck Indian Town, which they left about 1790.[14]
The U.S. Navy tugboat Choptank was named after the tribe. It served from 1918 until 1946.[15] The towns of Choptank, Maryland, and Choptank Mills, Delaware,[16] are named after the river. Fictional members of the tribe are characters in the early chapters of James Michener's 1978 novel, Chesapeake.
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See also
References
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