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Redbird Smith

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Succeeded by
  
Levi Gritts

Spouse(s)
  
Lucy Fields Smith


Name
  
Redbird Smith

Redbird Smith httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Relations
  
Great-grandson, Chad "Corntassel" Smith

Children
  
Sam Smith; eight sons, two daughters

Parents
  
Pig Redbird Smith, Lizzie Hildebrand Smith

Known for
  
Cherokee traditionalist and political activist, who helped found the Nighthawk Keetoowah Society and revitalized traditional spirituality; opposed the Dawes Allotment Act

Died
  
November 8, 1918, Fort Smith, Arkansas, United States

Resting place
  

Redbird smith health remodel


Redbird Smith (1850–1918) was a Cherokee traditionalist and political activist. He helped found the Nighthawk Keetoowah Society, who revitalized traditional spirituality among Cherokees from the mid-19th century to the early 20th century.

Contents

Redbird Smith Chief Red Bird Smith 1850 1918 Find A Grave Memorial

Cherokee nation opens redbird smith annex


Early life

Redbird Smith Chief Red Bird Smith 1850 1918 Find A Grave Memorial

Redbird Smith was born on July 19, 1850 near the current city of Fort Smith, Arkansas. His father was Pig Redbird Smith, whose surname "Smith" was given to him by European-Americans since he worked as a blacksmith. Redbird Smith's mother was Lizzie Hildebrand Smith. His parents were removed from Georgia to Indian Territory. Both his parents were ardent traditionalists, and at the age of ten, Redbird Smith's "father dedicated him to the services and cause of the Cherokee people in accordance with ancient customs and usages."

Political activism

Redbird Smith Red Bird Smith

The late 19th century the Dawes Commission sought to break up collective tribal land holdings into individual allotments and open up the "surplus" tribal lands to settlement by non-natives. Redbird Smith led a political resistance movement to the Dawes Allotment Act and sought to return to traditional Cherokee religion and values.

Redbird Smith The Apalachicola River Community of Indians ARCITO Redbird Smith

In 1887 and 1889, Redbird Smith served as a tribal councilor from the Illinois District of the Cherokee Nation.

Redbird Smith KEETOWAH

Redbird Smith stated in the early 1900s:

Redbird Smith Red Bird Smith

Redbird Smith repatriated wampum belts belonging to his tribe. In 1910 he was selected as chief of the Nighthawk Keetoowahs. Previously he had served as their chairman. Also in 1910, Smith and fellow Nighthawks traveled to Mexico with an 1820 document supporting Cherokee lands claims but the Mexican government did not support their claims. In 1914, he petitioned President Woodrow Wilson to create a Keetoowah reservation but this was seen as a backward step in the US federal government's assimilation policy. In 1921, a hundred Cherokees from 35 families moved together to the southeastern corner of Cherokee County, Oklahoma, to create a traditional community — "the brainchild of Redbird Smith."

Family

Redbird Smith married Lucy Fields Smith, born in Braggs, Indian Territory in 1852. She was the daughter Richard Fields and Eliza Brewer Fields. Together the Smiths had ten children who survived into adulthood, including eight sons and two daughters.

Redbird Smith is the great-grandfather of former Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation Chad Smith.

Death and legacy

After falling ill for 48 hours, Redbird Smith died on November 8, 1918. He is buried in the Redbird Smith Cemetery in Sequoyah County, Oklahoma.

He served as chief of the Nighthawk Keetoowahs until his death and was succeeded by Levi Gritts. His son Sam Smith became chief of the Nighthawk Keetowahs on April 7, 1919.

The Redbirth Smith ground is an active ceremonial ground in Redbird Smith, Oklahoma, Sequoyah county, near Vian, where Smith's July 19 birthday is celebrated annually.

References

Redbird Smith Wikipedia