The Ledger and The Land: Slavery, Wealth, and the Black Cherokee Economy Before and After Removal

Author:   Ty 'Gwy' Wilson ,  Pe Church
Publisher:   Blk-Fthr Media
ISBN:  

9798988919841


Pages:   266
Publication Date:   15 March 2026
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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The Ledger and The Land: Slavery, Wealth, and the Black Cherokee Economy Before and After Removal


Overview

How do you measure a history that was written to leave you out? The Ledger and the Land answer with a simple tool. A ledger. In this groundbreaking work of history and narrative nonfiction, Ty ""GWY"" Wilson, a Cherokee historian, co-editor, and contributing author of Oklahoma Black Cherokees, and author of Cherokee Freedmen: We Are Cherokee, follows the money through three centuries of Cherokee and Black Cherokee life. The result is a powerful new account of how slavery, land, citizenship, and violence shaped who built wealth in the Cherokee Nation and who got to keep it. Wilson begins in the eastern homelands, where enslaved Black people cleared fields, built brick houses, and turned Cherokee farms into plantations whose wealth was measured in human beings. He then tracks forced removal as an economic event that destroyed fixed assets in the East and pushed both Cherokees and the people they enslaved into Indian Territory. From there, the book charts the rise of Cherokee Freedmen as citizens on paper, building farms, schools, and communities after the Treaty of 1866. Wilson shows how allotment converted communal land into paper titles that treated Black and Native citizens differently, and how those differences fed land loss and wealth transfers that still echo today. In vivid, accessible chapters, The Ledger and the Land introduces Black Cherokee ranchers, merchants, and teachers, including a detailed case study of Zachariah ""Zack"" Foreman Sr., a former slave who became one of the wealthiest Black men in Indian Territory. The story then widens to Tulsa's Greenwood District, revealing how Indian Territory networks and Freedmen economies helped lay the groundwork for what became known as Black Wall Street, and how the 1921 massacre operated as a deliberate act of economic erasure followed by insurance and policy denial. Using a four-column framework, value created, value recorded, value captured, value denied, Wilson turns abstract ideas like ""dispossession"" and ""inequality"" into concrete flows you can follow across time. The book concludes with a clear account of recent legal victories for descendants of Cherokee Freedmen, the Cherokee Nation's 2026 slavery impact report, and the unfinished work of repair. Combining the authority of legal and economic history with the voice of a community storyteller, The Ledger and the Land is essential reading.

Full Product Details

Author:   Ty 'Gwy' Wilson ,  Pe Church
Publisher:   Blk-Fthr Media
Imprint:   Blk-Fthr Media
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.358kg
ISBN:  

9798988919841


Pages:   266
Publication Date:   15 March 2026
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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