Ваша фамилия Crow?

Connect to 5 000+ Crow profiles on Geni

Поделитесь своим генеалогическим древом и фотографиями с людьми, которых вы знаете и любите

  • Стройте своё генеалогическое древо онлайн
  • Обменивайтесь фотографиями и видео
  • Технология Smart Matching™
  • Бесплатно!

Chief John Crow

Дата рождения:
Место рождения: Indian Territory (Oklahoma), United States (США)
Смерть: 17 мая 1931 (71-75)
Ottawa County, Oklahoma, United States (США) (Appendicitis)
Место погребения: Ottawa County, Oklahoma, United States
Ближайшие родственники:

Сын Jerry Soh-Wah-Soh-Ses

Менеджер: Частный профиль
Последнее обновление:
показать все

Ближайшие родственники

About Chief John Crow

Cayuga
Last Chief of the Cayuga in Oklahoma


"At the start of the American Revolution, a large part of the Cayuga tribe left New York and moved to Canada, where many of their descendants are now living. Other bands of the tribe remained in this country scattered among their neighbors of the Iroquoian Confederacy. Soon after the close of the Revolutionary War, the Cayuga sold their lands to New York, some of the tribal bands moving to Ohio where they joined the remnants of other Iroquoian tribes (Erie, Conestoga, Oneida, Onondaga, and Mohawk) that became known as the Seneca of Sandusky. These people, including the band of Cayuga, moved to the Indian Territory in 1832, soon after concluding a treaty with United States commissioners at Washington (see Seneca). In the records of United States Indian affairs, these remnant Iroquoian tribes that formerly lived in New York are referred to as “New York Indians,” among whom the Cayuga are generally listed.
It was with the idea of joining their tribal kin among the Seneca in the Indian Territory than a band of Cayuga from Canada and a few from New York, something over 100 persons, came to the Quapaw Agency in 1881. Some of these people were adopted by the Seneca, but the late arrivals were finally forced to return to Canada after suffering many hardships. A part of them set out to return on foot from the Indian Territory, a report later stating that 13 of them died on the way. While the Cayuga are not listed as a separate tribe in the Quapaw Agency record, these people were locally well known and have had a part in the history of the Seneca (q.v.) in the Indian Territory. Their name is incorporated in that of the “Seneca-Cayuga Tribe of Oklahoma,” which received a corporate charter in 1937 under the Oklahoma Indian Welfare Act of 1936." https://sctribe.com/history/07-02-2015/guide-indian-tribes-ok-cayuga



Obituaries (see them under Media tab)

  • Miami News-Record, Miami, Oklahoma 18 May 1931, Mon • Page 1
  • Daily_Free_Lance_Mon__May_18__1931_John Crow
  • United States Census, 1930," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XC4M-W16 : accessed 19 March 2023), John Crow, Council House, Ottawa, Oklahoma, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) ED 10, sheet 2B, line 76, family 39, NARA microfilm publication T626 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 2002), roll 1923; FHL microfilm 2,341,657.
показать все

Хронология Chief John Crow

1856
1856
Indian Territory (Oklahoma), United States (США)
1931
17 мая 1931
Возраст 75
Ottawa County, Oklahoma, United States (США)
????
Crow Gravesite, Ottawa County, Oklahoma, United States (США)