Start My Family Tree Welcome to Geni, home of the world's largest family tree.
Join Geni to explore your genealogy and family history in the World's Largest Family Tree.

Greyhorse Indian Village Cemetery, Gray Horse, Osage County, Oklahoma

Top Surnames

view all

Profiles

  • Joseph Yellow Horse Bates, Sr. (1886 - 1921)
    Osage Joe's Band Son of Kah-wah-e Yellow Horse and Ke Ah Som Pah Married Mo-she-che-he Elizabeth June Kenny in 1905 n Osage County, Oklahoma Their children: Edward, Joseph, Allyne, Quarles, C...
  • Elizabeth June Bates (1887 - 1931)
    Osage Joe's Band AKA: Lizzie AKA: Wild Iron Married Joseph Yellow Horse Bates Sr. in 1905 in Osage County, Oklahoma Their children: Edward, Joseph, Allyne, Quarles, Cora, Ida and Rosa Bates ...
  • John 'Moh-shon' Kenny (1883 - 1933)
    Osage Ne-Kah-Wah-She-Tun-Kah Band Son of Che-Sho-Hun-Kah (Richard Frank Kenny) and Lo-tah-sah Savage Married Anna Kyle Married Necia Ruel in September 1909 in Winfiled, Kansas Their daught...
  • Anna Kyle Brown (1886 - 1921)
    Osage Ne-Kah-Wah-She-Tun-Kah Band Married 1st: Wah-tsa-tun-kah or Bigheart Married 2nd: John 'Moh-shon' Kenny of the Ne-Kah-Wah-She-Tun-Kah Band Married 3rd: Otis 'Oda' Brown Partner: James...
  • Lizzie Cue (1848 - 1921)
    Osage Big Hill Band Biography Married James 'Ne Kah Es Sey' 1874 in Gray Horse, Osage, Oklahoma Their children: Anna 'Wah-Hrah-Lum-Pah', Mollie 'Wah-Kon-Tah-He-Um-Pah', Minnie 'Me-se-moie' and Re...

Greyhorse Indian Village Cemetery resides in Gray Horse, Osage County, Oklahoma. Also known as Gray Horse Cemetery, the cemetery sits on 3.02 acres of Osage Nation Reservation land, donated around the time of 1906 by Wilson Kirk, an Osage original allottee from the Grayhorse District.The earliest stones date from 1895. This burying ground is still active.

A new fence and gate for the Grayhorse Cemetery is now complete. The cemetery will stay open during the day for those individuals paying their respects to their loved ones interred in the cemetery, but the new gate will be locked at sundown and tourists are not welcome. The new gate was a proactive move to protect the cemetery from fans of the upcoming Martin Scorsese-directed film, "Killers of the Flower Moon." https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/98543/greyhorse-indian-village-...



GRAY HORSE

The Osage Indian ceremonial town of Gray Horse (Grayhorse, Greyhorse) is situated in Osage County (the former Osage Indian Reservation), eight miles south and fourteen miles west of Pawhuska on County Road E0320. The settlement's first trade store was constructed in 1884 and was used as a U.S. government subagency and for Osage tribal meetings.

The Big Hill band of Osage, who rarely traveled to Pawhuska, asked that a trading post be established near them. John Florer, a Pawhuska trader, sent his brother-in-law, Ed Finney, to select an appropriate site for the post. Finney chose a location near present Gray Horse Creek and was welcomed by the Big Hills. The land belonged to Ka-wa-ko-dsa (Gray Horse) and was given to Finney so that he could build the trading post. The place was named in honor of Ka-wa-ko-dsa.

In the mid-1880s the Osage at Gray Horse received the i'n-lon-schka dance, traditions, and drum from the Ponca Indians. In 1908 the Osage built a round house in which they could hold their ceremonial dances, and they later constructed a Native American Church building. In February 1963 a prairie fire destroyed both structures. In spring 1964 a pavilion was built to replace the round house. Small arbors were erected for the clans and for visiting Indians who took part in the yearly celebrations.

There are presently few homes at Gray Horse. Some houses or camps are used only during special events, as when the i'n-lon-schka dance is held each June. Many noted Osage leaders are buried in the Gray Horse cemetery. Gray Horse had a U.S. Post Office from 1890 to 1932, several businesses, and a public school (with a Works Progress Administration–built schoolhouse) through 1963.
https://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=GR028