I just made another amazing discovery.
Was building my family tree tonight, and noticed:
My great grandmother Chief was documented as living by the Black River in North Carolina.

When I saw that something told me it was also Indian related. (Stereotypical, I know LOL)
So I researched it in the official Lumbee records, regarding their origins, and sure enough it came up:
QuoteHatteras Indians
The strongest one was Lumbee descent from Hatteras Indians. Thomas says that what was known of them at the time of his research was that they lived at Cape Hatteras and were a very small tribe (only a dozen families in the early 1700's). They were still at Cape Hatteras in 1754, but an account from a missionary in 1761-63 placed then near Lake Mattamuskeet in Hyde County, N.C., living with the Mattamuskeet Indians. There are no references to them after that. By tracing family names Thomas believes one can follow Lumbee families from Lake Mattamuskeet to the Neuse River to the Black River to the Cape Fear River to Robeson County. He points to the Lumbee tradition, up until World War II, of going to the coast every summer and camping for two or three weeks to fish.
http://lumbee.library.appstate.edu/bibliography/thom001I'm surprised my great grandmother didn't talk more about her heritage with my grandmother. I mean the culture was clearly was recent, she was named Chief by her parents, she still lived on the areas known to harbor these Indians....but I guess with 13 kids, she didn't have time to sit around and give history lessons.
She told my grandmother what she was and kept it moving.