The Jamul Indian Village, a Kumeyaay band in San Diego County, has operated under federal recognition since 1975 but controls one of the smallest tribal land bases in the United States — roughly six acres. The Susquehannock were a separate Iroquoian-speaking people of the mid-Atlantic, entirely unrelated to the Kumeyaay, which makes this pairing geographically and culturally arbitrary in a way characteristic of the broader private-label tribal bullion market, where issuing authority and subject matter rarely share any historical connection.
The Jamul Indian Village, a Kumeyaay band in San Diego County, has operated under federal recognition since 1975 but controls one of the smallest tribal land bases in the United States — roughly six acres. The Susquehannock were a separate Iroquoian-speaking people of the mid-Atlantic, entirely unrelated to the Kumeyaay, which makes this pairing geographically and culturally arbitrary in a way characteristic of the broader private-label tribal bullion market, where issuing authority and subject matter rarely share any historical connection.