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So what's your background (country of origin, ancestors, etc...)???

Well, I'm half German on my dad's side, and on my mother's there is a little bit of Cherokee and a few other things.

I have the distinction of having Field Marshall Rommell "The Desert Fox" as a great, great, uncle.

But actually what I love telling people is that my grandfather came to Huntsville as a member of the German team that worked with Dr. Werner Von Braun on the Space Program.

Unfortunately, I don't speak any German as my grandparents didn't speak it around my dad (it was not a good idea to use German in the US in the 40s).

My paternal Grandfather came to the US at 16 in 1917. He gave up speaking German as soon as he could get by on the little English he knew. My Dad said he only yelled at them in German. His saying was,It was hard for me to be an American, now I speak English. My Dad knows very little. My other Grandparents are all Irish with the exception of a great, great grandmother who was from Spain. My DH is a mutt. German, French, English, Slovak, and Irish.
Loretta
 
My family started from the Springers that once ruled Sweden.
I was born in Ohio, raised in Ohio and Florida now married and happy in Tennessee.
And I have always considered myself to be of the upmost royal hillbilly/redneck who's origin came from that beautiful, blonde headed country.:lmao:
 
German and Norwegian. (Typical Minnesotan, LOL)
 
I'm Italian. My family came from Sicily. My real name is Vincenza Giuseppe Vittorio Rizzotto Buscetta Corleone. They call me Vinny for short and you can see why. My favorite Italian restaurant is the Olive Garden and my favorite pizzacomes from Pizza Hut.:scared1:
 


I'm Italian. My family came from Sicily. My real name is Vincenza Giuseppe Vittorio Rizzotto Buscetta Corleone. They call me Vinny for short and you can see why. My favorite Italian restaurant is the Olive Garden and my favorite pizzacomes from Pizza Hut.:scared1:


Vinny,,yup, I can see that.
The only reason your favorite pizza ia Pizza Hut is cause you haven't had one of my homemade pizzas.:woohoo:
 
Steve is short for Vincenza in Wopland!! ;)
Im Spanish(not Mexican, not that theirs anything wrong with being Mexican), French and Irish.....I think the genes went the predominantly Irish route. My wifes all Dego, so my kids are muts.
 


Me mostly german with a bit of polish (born and raised in OH, transplant to FL now...still secretly root for the Buckeyes and Browns). DH has WV ties but being a USF Bulls fan (our oldest is there) we don't wish the 'neers well. :)
 
Well, I guess I'm 100% Native American since I was born in the United States.

My ancestry is German. They weren't famous or anything, just dirt farmers. I come from a line of warriors from the Civil War on up. I have many interesting anecdotes about the GreatGreat Grandfather in the Civil war and his brother, but long stories.

I grew up adjacent to the Seneca Nation Indian Reservation in WNY, and have done many humanitarian missions to Indian Reservations in the West. Interestingly enough, all of the Indians I met called themselves Indians or American Indians. I've only heard them referred to as Native Americans by the government and people who don't live on the reservation. I never saw a prosperous reservation, even those with casinos. The casinos I saw were managed by a Japanese organization, and outside of a few of the people from the reservation having jobs, the people saw very little of the wealth produced. I saw a lot of government officials showing up to open health clinics, after which they pat themselves on the back and go home, leaving the actual problems behind. Our government has created a tremendous problem with no real way out. Health issues like alcoholism and diabetes are rampant there, along with oral health issues and heart disease, and the government's answer is to build beautiful clinics and feed supplies to them, but not give them the means to staff them. I was at one reservation in Montana where the government funded a community college. The courses taught - Native American Studies. I talked with a number of the residents and the big complaint was - they couldn't get a job with a major in this. They wanted math and science, but the Bureaucrats thought this is what they needed. Those who travelled off the reservation for an education usually returned without one - they were unable to make the transition into the American society due to their isolation.

Just my observation.
 
Well, I guess I'm 100% Native American since I was born in the United States.

My ancestry is German. They weren't famous or anything, just dirt farmers. I come from a line of warriors from the Civil War on up. I have many interesting anecdotes about the GreatGreat Grandfather in the Civil war and his brother, but long stories.

I grew up adjacent to the Seneca Nation Indian Reservation in WNY, and have done many humanitarian missions to Indian Reservations in the West. Interestingly enough, all of the Indians I met called themselves Indians or American Indians. I've only heard them referred to as Native Americans by the government and people who don't live on the reservation. I never saw a prosperous reservation, even those with casinos. The casinos I saw were managed by a Japanese organization, and outside of a few of the people from the reservation having jobs, the people saw very little of the wealth produced. I saw a lot of government officials showing up to open health clinics, after which they pat themselves on the back and go home, leaving the actual problems behind. Our government has created a tremendous problem with no real way out. Health issues like alcoholism and diabetes are rampant there, along with oral health issues and heart disease, and the government's answer is to build beautiful clinics and feed supplies to them, but not give them the means to staff them. I was at one reservation in Montana where the government funded a community college. The courses taught - Native American Studies. I talked with a number of the residents and the big complaint was - they couldn't get a job with a major in this. They wanted math and science, but the Bureaucrats thought this is what they needed. Those who travelled off the reservation for an education usually returned without one - they were unable to make the transition into the American society due to their isolation.

Just my observation.

good post......

100+ years later and we still are trying to eradicate them.....:sad2:
 
Well, I guess I'm 100% Native American since I was born in the United States.

My ancestry is German. They weren't famous or anything, just dirt farmers. I come from a line of warriors from the Civil War on up. I have many interesting anecdotes about the GreatGreat Grandfather in the Civil war and his brother, but long stories.

I grew up adjacent to the Seneca Nation Indian Reservation in WNY, and have done many humanitarian missions to Indian Reservations in the West. Interestingly enough, all of the Indians I met called themselves Indians or American Indians. I've only heard them referred to as Native Americans by the government and people who don't live on the reservation. I never saw a prosperous reservation, even those with casinos. The casinos I saw were managed by a Japanese organization, and outside of a few of the people from the reservation having jobs, the people saw very little of the wealth produced. I saw a lot of government officials showing up to open health clinics, after which they pat themselves on the back and go home, leaving the actual problems behind. Our government has created a tremendous problem with no real way out. Health issues like alcoholism and diabetes are rampant there, along with oral health issues and heart disease, and the government's answer is to build beautiful clinics and feed supplies to them, but not give them the means to staff them. I was at one reservation in Montana where the government funded a community college. The courses taught - Native American Studies. I talked with a number of the residents and the big complaint was - they couldn't get a job with a major in this. They wanted math and science, but the Bureaucrats thought this is what they needed. Those who travelled off the reservation for an education usually returned without one - they were unable to make the transition into the American society due to their isolation.

Just my observation.

You should come down here and see the reservation Casinos in South Florida. Every tribe member on the reservation that has a Casino (mainly the Seminoles) gets at least $100,000 a year from the tribe as a payoff from the casino. I understand most tribes aren't that way, but down here in South Florida, they have made out quite well. Then again, these aren't your normal small Indian casinos, the Hard Rock Casino down here is HUUUUGGGEEEE. Plus they just got Blackjack and Baccarat. I'm telling you, in 10 years, Florida is going to become Little Vegas, the Casinos they have here are great. It will never be Vegas, but it will overtake second place for sure.

That being said, when I was growing up, way before the casinos, the reservation was dirt poor. I used to do dances on the reservation, I was a hoop dancer, and I always thought that it was one of the poorest areas around, it was sad.
 
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Here is a video....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qZ6QQWo4cw4&feature=related
 
Chris...now that would be some good entertainment for a FW GG! ;) j/k :p
 
I was invited to go to a sweat lodge one night. I don't know, sitting around half naked with a bunch of other guys in a dark, hot hut didn't sound too exciting to me. They did have food, though, and brought me some the next day. It was elk and buffalo and really good.
 
Yea, all they are really are saunas, and since I'm not that into saunas, I'm not that into sweat lodges. I definitely agree that sitting around half naked with a bunch of other guys in the dark isn't my cup of tea.
 

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