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  1. Lyncoya Jackson, born in 1812, [2] also known as Lincoyer, was a Creek Indian child adopted and raised by U.S. President Andrew Jackson and his wife, Rachel Jackson. Born to Creek ( Muscogee / Red Stick) parents, he was orphaned during the Creek War after the Battle of Tallushatchee. Lyncoya was brought to Jackson after the surviving women in ...

  2. Significance: Adopted child of Andrew Jackson. Date of Birth: c. 1813. Date of Death: 1828. Lyncoya, a Creek Indian orphan, was raised at the Hermitage, the household of Andrew and Rachel Jackson.

  3. 29 de abr. de 2016 · Jackson named this “son” Lyncoya (sometimes spelled “Lincoyer”). A monument to his short life, near the site of the lopsided 1813 battle that claimed the lives of most of the people in his...

    • Rebecca Onion
  4. 26 de ene. de 2023 · Lyncoya: The Tragic Story Of Andrew Jackson's Adopted Creek Son. National Archives/Getty Images. By Mina Elwell / Updated: Jan. 26, 2023 9:14 am EST. In 1813, future U.S. president General Andrew Jackson took into his care a Native American child, recently orphaned in an attack that Jackson himself had ordered.

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  5. 16 de jun. de 2019 · Andrew Jackson and Lyncoya, his adopted Indian son: A Father's Day story - The Washington Post. Advertisement. This article was published more than 4 years ago. Retropolis. Andrew Jackson...

  6. Lyncoya, a Native American Child. In 1813, Andrew Jackson sent home to Tennessee a Native American child who was found by Jacksons translator on a Creek War battlefield with his dead mother. Named Lyncoya, he may have originally been intended as merely a companion for Andrew Jr., but Jackson soon took a strong interest in him.

  7. 29 de abr. de 2016 · In bringing Lyncoya into his family, Jackson joined other Southern slaveholders, Indian agents, and Northern Quakers in a short-lived, but politically potent, tradition of assimilative adoption.