Delaware Statutes

§ 106 — Lenape Indian Tribe of Delaware; recognition

Delaware § 106
JurisdictionDelaware
Title29
PartGeneral Provisions
Ch. 1JURISDICTION AND SOVEREIGNTY

This text of Delaware § 106 (Lenape Indian Tribe of Delaware; recognition) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Del. Code tit. 29, § 106 (2026).

Text

(a)Legislative findings. —The General Assembly finds all of the following:
(1)The Lenape Indian Tribe of Delaware, referred to as “the Tribe” in this section, has an unbroken history of hundreds of years of settlement and continued residency in the vicinity of the Town of Cheswold in Kent County.
(2)Members of the Tribe preserved, displayed, and manifested close cultural ties with one another by conducting themselves in such a social and economic manner so as to identify themselves as being culturally and ethnically distinct.
(3)The Tribe can date their ancestral ties as far back as the early 1700s.
(4)The Tribe was formerly known as “the Moors” and, for many decades of the twentieth century, state documents such as driver’s licenses designated the Tribe’s race with an “M”.
(5)Th

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Bluebook (online)
Delaware § 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/statute/de/29/106.