<p>Well on my commonapp I said I was not enrolled/registered. Besides I am already black It’s not like I’m using this for AA. Besides being enrolled there really isn’t any proof in order to confirm I am NA. Yeah it is a screw up, but i do not think it is a huge deal. If I was part anything else we wouldn’t be having the conversation.</p>
<p>if you were part anything else, and the same small part of that as your are NA… and you were unsure of your actual background, then yes we would…</p>
<p>but i hope everything works out for you see ya</p>
<p>Yeah like it wasnt to well thought through, I think it’ll be ok though…Hopefully. I am kind of upset that this whole thread diverged from my original post and ended up on this tangent however.</p>
<p>Have you been able to find your great-grandfather’s birth certificate on ancestry.com? If it states his birthplace, it is likely (given that Native Americans 100 years ago were oftentimes born in their ancestral homelands) that you may be able to pinpoint which tribe of which he was a part. But if he was born in Oklahoma then that probably won’t work.</p>
<p>Even if you don’t want to dwell on this, it might be good to know the tribe at some point in the future.</p>
<p>Very true. Unfortunately I have not had any luck. I’m going to keep looking. I’m trying to find a relative who might have more information on him.</p>
<p>You should stop posting in this thread and hope it does a slow death to the bottom of page 40. I’m going to PM you.</p>