Our American Indian Heritage

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LaRue Medlin

In Memoriam 1955-2017
Joined
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Sumter, SC
Rose and I were talking about her Ute Indian heritage and I ran across this on you tube. It's a theme from "Last of the Mohicans" but the sentiment is the same....



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A great book to read is called "The Frontiersman" by Allen Eckhert. It is about Simon Kenton and the great Shawnee chief...Tecumseh!
 
Sometimes, I get heart sick over what this country. Did to the native Americans.

Not to take away the bad of slavery. But we continualy pushed native American out of every treaty. Until they had no good lands to live on, and thrive as free people.
 
LaRue,,,



My great Grand Father was Oghema Niagara (aka) Chief Thunderwater. He is buried very near me. Right across from the Indians Stadium in ERIE ST. CEMETERY. He and Chief JOC-O-SOT are buried there. As a result, it is sovereign ground and protected.



My Aunt Mo was the last full blooded Cherokee Princess.



I have been wanting to do some research on this,,,, you have poked my fire a bit to do so.



It is strange to drive through the big city of Cleveland and come across this one-block plot of land that has grass and grave markers.



Here is a little blub about him..

I visit him whenever I go to an Indians game...



CHIEF THUNDERWATER (10 Sept. 1865-10 June 1950), whose Indian name was Oghema Niagara, was a native American Indian chief who worked to preserve his people's rights and culture, and improve their welfare and image among white Americans. Born on the Tuscarora Indian reservation near Lewistown, N.Y. to Au-Paw-CheeKaw-Paw-qua (Woman-Whose-Name-Shall-Never-Die), an Osaukee, and Jee-wan-gah, a Seneca, little is known about him between 1875-1910 when he apparently appeared in Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West shows for about 9 years. He began working for AMERICAN INDIANS after 1883. In the early 1900s Niagara settled in Cleveland; becoming president of the Preservative Cleaner Co., manufacturers of polish; and selling his own Thunderwater's Mohawk Oil, for rheumatism and arthritis, and Jee-wan-ga tea.



On 10 Mar. 1917, Niagara helped incorporate the Supreme Council of the Tribes, a revival of the League of the Confederacy of Iroquois Nations, formed to assist Indians, promote their welfare and legally protect their right, and teach of temperance and education. As chief of the Supreme Council, Niagara operated "the Council Sanctuary" in his home at his own expense, housing, feeding, clothing, and providing medical attention for hundreds of destitute and sick Indians and persons of all races.



Niagara's efforts to educate white Americans included being an active in the EARLY SETTLERS ASSN. OF THE WESTERN RESERVE, appearing at public ceremonies in full headdress, and holding an annual ceremony at the grave of JOC-O-SOT in the ERIE ST. CEMETERY. Niagara remained active until ca. 1942, when illness forced him to give up many public appearances.



Niagara was married once; his wife's name is not known. He had one son, Louis Keokuk. Niagara died in Cleveland and was buried in the ERIE ST. CEMETERY.
 
CoastieJoe,

Thanks for that very informative info about the Erie St. Cemetary and the Indian heritage.



I was born and raised in the Cleveland, OH area and spent a lot of time going to the old Municipal Lakefront Stadium to watch the Indians and the Browns...The last time was in 1972 when I attended one of the NFL Playoff games between the Browns and the old Baltimore Colt with Johnny Unitas as quarterback. Cleveland had their a$$ handed to them by the Colts..:cry:



Anyway, I was never aware of the Erie St. Cemetary even existed, much less that it was the first cemetary in Cleveland. That prompted me to do some web searching on the cemetary and Clevenland in general... I had a wonderful flashback as a kid riding the old street cars and trollies downtown and stopping at Morrow's Nut House on Euclid Ave at the Public Square. Later as a teenager, I used to like to go downtown on on Saturdays, and on my way home I'd buy a box of Cashews just before I got on the Rapid Transit train to head back home to Lakewood. I would open the box of warm freshly roasted Cashews on the train, and people would start to look around hungrily to see where that wonderful odor was coming from..:bwahaha:



I have not been back to Cleveland since 1992. My daughter lives in the Zanesville area, and I may head up there this summer. If I do, I think I may take a day trip up to Cleveland and see what all has changed over the past 20 years.



...Rich
 
I thought the same thing. Maybe check the ancestry on that one, or maybe just definitions.



 
I was thinking that maybe it was the Native American equivalent of a Jewish Princess.



:bwahaha:



Just kidding, Coastie! :haveabeer:
 

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