Dennis Bushyhead
{{Short description|Cherokee leader (1826–1898)}}
File:Chief Dennis Bushyhead (page 395 crop).jpg
Dennis Wolf Bushyhead (March 18, 1826 – February 4, 1898{{cite book|author=Donald B. Ricky|title=Encyclopedia of Mississippi Indians: Tribes, Natives, Treaties of the Southeastern Woodlands Area|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Nca4e2mZzWgC|access-date=15 November 2012|year=2000|publisher=North American Book Dist LLC|isbn=978-0-403-09778-4|pages=50–52}}) was a leader in the Cherokee Nation after they had removed to Indian Territory. Born into the Wolf Clan, he was elected as Principal Chief, serving two terms, from 1879 to 1887.
Biography
Dennis Wolf Bushyhead was born on Mouse Creek near present-day Cleveland, Tennessee, in the eastern part of the state. He was the oldest son of Rev. Jesse Bushyhead, whose Cherokee name was Unaduti.[http://digital.library.okstate.edu/chronicles/v009/v009p043.html Foreman, Carolyn Ross. "Aunt Eliza of Tahlequah." Chronicles of Oklahoma. Vol. 9, No. 1 (March, 1931).] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121107120140/http://digital.library.okstate.edu/Chronicles/v009/v009p043.html |date=2012-11-07 }} Retrieved June 19, 2013. His mother, Eliza ({{nee}} Wilkinson; transcribed as Wilkerson by some of her descendants), of the Wolf Clan, was from Georgia. She was his father's second wife. Both parents were of mixed-race ancestry and identified as Cherokee. Dennis was one of nine children born to Jesse and Eliza Bushyhead. A younger sister was Eliza Bushyhead Alberty.
Also known as Unadena, meaning "woolly head" in Cherokee, the boy Jesse was reared in his parents' Cherokee culture. He started school in 1833 at Candy Creek Mission, Tennessee, under the charge of Rev. Holland. In 1835 he went to the Mission School at Valley River in North Carolina and remained there for one year, where he was taught by Evan Jones, a noted Baptist minister and close associate of his father. Bushyhead was a supporter of the Chief John Ross faction, when the tribe was divided by opinions about making a treaty to cede land and move west of the Mississippi River, as was being urged by the federal government.
In 1838, as part of Indian Removal, Rev. Jesse Bushyhead conducted a detachment of Cherokee, numbering nearly 1000 people from the old nation, to Beattie's Prairie in the Delaware District (Indian Territory) as part of Indian Removal from the Southeast. His son Dennis was among the party. In the following year, the boy attended Mission School at Park Hill, Cherokee Nation, overseen by Rev. Samuel A. Worcester. He studied there for one year. In 1841 his father sent Dennis to college (more similar to a seminary or prep school) at what is now known as the Lawrenceville School in Lawrenceville, New Jersey. In March 1841 Bushyead was invited to join Chief Ross' delegation to Washington, D.C. to attend the inauguration of General William Henry Harrison as President of The United States.
Bushyhead studied in New Jersey for three years, completing his education at Lawrenceville in July 1844. He was enrolled in the sophomore class at Princeton University when he learned that his father had died and he had to return to the Cherokee Nation.[http://digital.library.okstate.edu/chronicles/v014/v014p349.html Meserve, John Bartlett. "Chief Dennis Wolfe Bushyhead"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121102102454/http://digital.library.okstate.edu/chronicles/v014/v014p349.html |date=2012-11-02 }}, Chronicles of Oklahoma. Volume 14, Number 3. September, 1936]. Retrieved July 22, 2013.
In October 1844 Bushyhead started work as a clerk for Lewis Ross, brother of Chief John Ross, serving until the summer of 1847. He was elected as clerk for the Cherokee Senate in October 1847, serving for one year.
In November 1871, Bushyhead was elected as treasurer of the Cherokee nation and held the position for a full term of four years. He was reelected to the post in 1875. In 1879, Bushyhead was elected as the Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation. He served from 1879 to 1887. During this period, in 1883 he vetoed a bill by the Cherokee Senate to exclude Cherokee Freedmen from sharing in the proceeds of additional compensation by the federal government for payment of the Cherokee Outlet. He reminded them of the terms of the 1866 treaty with the United States after the Civil War, by which Freedmen who remained in the Nation were to have full citizenship rights forever. The US authorized an additional $300,000 that year. The Cherokee National Council overrode Bushyhead's veto, setting up discrimination against the Freedmen that has haunted relations among tribal members into the 21st century.[https://www.leagle.com/decision/infdco20170831a95 CHEROKEE NATION v. NASH], Civil Action No. 13-01313 (TFH), 267 F.Supp.3d 86 (2017); accessed 16 October 2018 He also dealt with issues of railroad rights-of-way, land allotment under the Dawes Act, education, white intruders, tribal citizenship, and grazing rights.[http://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=BU015 Corie Delashaw, "BUSHYHEAD, DENNIS WOLFE (1826–1898.)"], The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture; accessed 16 October 2018
Family life
On September 6, 1869, Bushyhead married a widow, Elizabeth Alabama Adair (née Schrimsher), from Fort Gibson. They had four children together: Jesse Crary (1870–1942), Mary Elizabeth (1873–1930), Sarah Catherine (1876–1908), and Dennis Bushyhead, Jr. (1880–1961). Elizabeth Bushyhead died on October 30, 1882.
On October 31, 1883, Bushyhead married Eloise Perry Butler (1859–1940), a niece of a U.S. Senator. She helped raise the four young children from his first wife, and the couple had two children of their own: James Butler (1884–1965) and Frances Taylor Bushyhead (1887–1929).[http://www.accessgenealogy.com/scripts/data/database.cgi?file=Data&report=SingleArticle&ArticleID=0013997 Access Genealogy: Bushyhead, Dennis W.] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120812235121/http://www.accessgenealogy.com/scripts/data/database.cgi?file=Data&report=SingleArticle&ArticleID=0013997 |date=2012-08-12 }} Retrieved July 22, 2013.
Death
Dennis Bushyhead died February 4, 1898, in Tahlequah, the capital of the Cherokee Nation, and was buried in the Tahlequah City Cemetery.[http://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=BU015 Corie Delashaw, "Bushyhead, Dennis Wolfe (1826–1898)." Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture. Accessed March 5, 2015.]
Legacy and honors
- Bushyhead, Oklahoma, was named after the principal chief. It is a small rural community in Rogers County, Oklahoma.
Sources
{{Reflist}}
Further reading
- Harold Keith, "Problems of a Cherokee Principal Chief," The Chronicles of Oklahoma 17 (September 1939).
- John Bartlett Meserve, "Chief Dennis Wolfe Bushyhead," The Chronicles of Oklahoma 14 (September 1936).
- H. Craig Miner, "Dennis Bushyhead," in American Indian Leaders: Studies in Diversity, ed. R. David Edmunds (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1980).
- [http://www.nanations.com/indian_territory_biographies.htm "The Indian Territory, Its Chiefs, Legislators and Leading Men"], Native American Nations website
- J.S. Murrow, [https://www.createspace.com/5333254 The Rev. Jesse Bushyhead: Cherokee Indian and Missionary], 2015, {{ISBN|978-1508595113}}.
External links
- [http://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=BU015 Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture - Bushyhead, Dennis]
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{{succession box| before=Charles Thompson| title=Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation| after=Joel B. Mayes| years=1879–1887}}
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{{Cherokee}}
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Category:Native American tribal government officials in Indian Territory
Category:Lawrenceville School alumni
Category:Native American Christians
Category:People from Bradley County, Tennessee
Category:Principal Chiefs of the Cherokee Nation (1794–1907)
Category:19th-century Native American politicians