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Title Deskaheh : Iroquois statesman and patriot.

Imprint Rooseveltown, N.Y. : Akwasasne notes, [197?] (Ithaca, N.Y. : Glad Day Press)

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Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe Special Collections Eucalyptus  973.04975 D459Bd 1970    ---  Lib Use Only
Description 20 pages ; 22 cm.
text txt rdacontent
unmediated n rdamedia
volume nc rdacarrier
Series Six Nations Indian Museum series
Note This edition is a reprint of the original, with occasional adaptations.
Summary "Deskaheh was a descendent of Mary Jimerson. He was born in Grand River Land in 1872 which is now Canada. After Deskaheh finished grammar school he crossed the border into the U.S.A. to become a lumberjack in the Allegheny Mountains. He had an accident and returned to Grand River to become a farmer. He married the daughter of a Cayuga mother and white father and together they had four daughters and five sons. In 1914, because of his honesty, sincerity, and his ability as an orator in Cayuga language he was appointed as head speaker when the Canadian Government decided on the grounds of expediency to disregard the old treaties and assimilate the Indians, by force, if necessary. Deskaheh was the leader of the delegation that patiently explained in Ottawa that the Canadian Government had no jurisdiction over the little Iroquois nation.
The Iroquois won this argument. However, after the end of the war the Canadian Government wanted again to assimilate the Iroquois. In 1921, Deskaheh was appointed "Speaker of the Six Nations Council". He was authorized a passport by his nation to cross the Atlantic to seek British aid. The British authorities refused his request. Deskaheh, along with George P. Decker, traveled to Geneva to bring the case before the League of Nations. He arrived in 1923 and began to work toward presenting to the Council of the League the petition of the Iroquois. He fought, but it was not successful. He spent a generous amount of time. Deskaheh then started to travel home. He arrived at the border, but the Canadian Government stopped him. He then was forced to go to a friend's house on the Tuscarora Reservation. Deskaheh became physically ill, but the colony refused him a doctor. Deskaheh died on June 25, 1925 in the Tuscarora Reservation. His last words were, 'fight for the line.'"--from www.mnsu.edu.
Subject Deskaheh, 1873-1925.
Deskaheh, 1873-1925 (OCoLC)fst00435840
Deskaheh, 1873-1925.
Indians of North America -- Government relations.
Indians of North America -- Government relations. (OCoLC)fst00969761
ISBN 0914838091
9780914838098

 
    
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