Native Americans

Native American is a term used to denote the Amerindian peoples that populated North and South America before its "discovery" by Europeans. European contact generally resulted in profound suffering for these peoples.

Native Americans in Southern Victory
European colonization began a process of outright land theft and disenfranchisement of the native peoples that continued into American history. Tribes such as the Cherokee and the Creek were forced off their ancestral lands in Georgia under President Andrew Jackson and forcibly relocated to Indian Territory. After the War of Secession, Indian Territory was admitted to the Confederacy as the state of Sequoyah. However, the United States acquired the territory after the Great War, and refused to admit it as a state. White settlement was encouraged, and this new influx of people reduced the percentage of Native Americans that wished to return to the Confederacy. Native Americans such as the Apache warrior Geronimo harassed American and Confederate forces in the late nineteenth century.

Native Americans in Atlantis
Basque fishermen first began the enslavement of the copperskin natives of North Terranova. By the eighteenth century, furious and enslaved copperskins actively plotted rebellion with African slaves.