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Archie Sam

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Religion
  
Four Mothers Society

Name
  
Archie Sam


Died
  
May 23, 1986

Resting place
  
Fort Gibson

Archie Sam

Born
  
June 30, 1914 Greenleaf Mountain community (
1914-06-30
)

Spouse(s)
  
Maudie Louise Quinton Sam

Children
  
Roy Wayne Sam Adeline Naeher

Parents
  
Creek Sam and Aggie Cumsey

Known for
  
Traditionalist and cultural historian

Education
  
Connors State College, Bacone College

People also search for
  
Luman Wildcat, Cedo Screechowl, Jobie I. Fields, Robert Sumpka, Squirrel Wildcat, Eli Sam

Archie Sam (30 June 1914 – 23 May 1986) was a Natchez-Cherokee-Muscogee Creek traditionalist, stomp dance leader, scholar, enrolled member of the United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians, and the Sun Chief of the Natchez Nation.

Contents

Archie Sam Archie Sam 1914 1986 Find A Grave Memorial

Early life and military service

Archie Sam was born in the Greenleaf Mountain community near Braggs, Oklahoma on 30 June 1914. Archie was the youngest son of White Tobacco Sam, son of Creek Sam, and his mother was Aggie Cumsey, a fullblood Longhair clan Cherokee. Archie Sam was the grandnephew of Watt Sam, the last native speaker of the Natchez language.

Sam married Maudie Louise Quinton Sam (1914–2006), and the couple had two children, Roy Wayne Sam (1945–2011) and Adeline Naeher.

Sam attended Bacone College in Muskogee and graduated from Connors State College in Warner. He then enlisted in the 45th Infantry Division and in 1940 he served overseas in World War II, participating in special missions at Thule Air Base in northern Greenland where he met and hunted with the Inughuit. After the war he transferred to the United States Air Force where he remained in the Air Force for 21 years before working for the United States Postal Service.

Cultural work

In 1977 Sam worked with professor Charles Van Tuyl to recover sound recordings of Watt Sam that had been archived at the University of Chicago. These are the only known recordings of the Natchez language being spoken.

Upon retiring in 1971, he dedicated himself to the preservation of his indigenous heritage. He was a practitioner of native Natchez religion, and in 1969 he revived the Medicine Springs ceremonial ground, located near Gore, Oklahoma.

Death

Archie Sam died on 23 May 1986 and is buried in the Fort Gibson National Cemetery in Fort Gibson, Oklahoma.

References

Archie Sam Wikipedia