[100 years ago this week, President Calvin Coolidge signed the Indian Citizenship Act. That landmark legislation was the product of work from a number of influential and inspiring individuals, so this week I’ll AmericanStudy a handful of them, leading up to a weekend tribute to 21st century figures continuing the fight!]
Brief
details from the amazing lives of five of the
many figures who helped lead a groundbreaking
and influential organization.
1)
Dr.
Charles Eastman (Ohiyesa): One of the first Native Americans to graduate
from an American medical school, receiving his MD from
Boston University in 1890, Eastman immediately went to work on the Pine
Ridge Reservation in South Dakota, where he tended
to the countless victims of the Wounded Knee Massacre in that same year. That
was just one of numerous ways Eastman advocated for Native Americans, from
medicine to writing
to political
roles, including his
early idea for the organization that would become the Society (and for
which he then served as its first president).
2)
Laura
Cornelius Kellogg (Wynnogene): If Kellogg had only achieved her countless
victories (won alongside her husband, the lawyer Orrin
J. Kellogg) on behalf of land
claims and rights for Six Nations people, she would be an impressive and influential
activist. But her efforts went far beyond that issue and those communities,
including her groundbreaking book Our
Democracy and the American Indian (1920) and her “Lolomi
Plan” to shift power away from the Bureau of Indian Affairs and to indigenous
communities. Kellogg brought all that and more to her role as a co-founder of the
Society.
3)
Dr. Carlos
Montezuma (Wassaja): When he was around five years old, the Yavapai Apache
boy named Wassaja was kidnapped by raiders and sold to an Italian American
photographer named Carlo
Gentile for thirty silver dollars (Gentile renamed him Carlos Montezuma); by
the end of his life half a century later, he had become the first Native
American student at
the University of Illinois and Northwestern University, the first Native
American man to receive
an MD, and the founder of his own magazine, Wassaja,
through which he critiqued the BIA and advocated for Native American rights. In
that stunning life arc, helping found the Society was perhaps just a minor moment,
but another reflection of Montezuma’s influence.
4)
Zitkala-Ŝa
(Gertrude Simmons Bonnin): I said a great deal of what I’d want to say about
one of my favorite Americans in that hyperlinked post, and in this one, and
many other places. But Simmons Bonnin (as I believe she was known outside of
her writing and artistic creations) was also the National
Secretary of the Society beginning in 1916, and a decade later founded
(along with her husband, the reformer and WWI veteran Raymond
Bonnin, the National Council of American
Indians (NCAI) to extend and amplify that ongoing work. No area of Native
American culture in the early 20th century went uninfluenced by
Simmons Bonnin, including these organizations.
5)
Ruth
Muskrat Bronson: Cherokee poet and educator Ruth Muskrat was only 25 when
she delivered
to President Calvin Coolidge a 1923 appeal on behalf of the “Committee of One Hundred,” a
gathering of influential Native American leaders; Coolidge was so moved that he
invited Muskrat to lunch with him and his wife Grace. Although Muskrat too
young to have been part of the fouding of the Society, this moment and
community explicitly extended its work, connected it more fully to the federal
government, and helped pave the way for the passage and signing of the Indian Citizenship
Act the following year.
Tribute
post this weekend,
Ben
PS. What
do you think?
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