- Leader for Cherokee Nation
- Child Participant in Trail of Tears
- Colonel of 2nd Regiment of Cherokee Mounted Volunteers, Confederate Army Cavalry, U.S. Civil War
- Namesake of Will Rogers
Biography
Col. William Penn Adair was born 15 April 1830 in New Echota, Gordon County, Georgia, United States to George Washington Adair (1806-1862) and Martha Hammock Martin (1815-1875) and died 21 October 1880 Washington, District of Columbia, United States of unspecified causes. He married Sarah Ann McNair Adair (1831-1865) 6 June 1857 . He married Susannah McIntosh Drew (1844-1939) 8 December 1868 in Cooweescoowee District, Cherokee Nation, Indian Territory.
William Penn Adair (1830–1880) was a leader of the Cherokee Nation, an attorney who served in political office both before and after the American Civil War, and as a justice of their court. He entered the Confederate States Army on the promise that the Confederacy would support an Indian state if it won the war, and achieved the rank of colonel.
He served as delegate from the Nation to Washington, DC during the 1860s and 1870s. Born in the traditional Cherokee territory in Georgia, he traveled as a child with his family on the Trail of Tears of Indian Removal from the Southeast to Indian Territory (now Oklahoma).
Childhood
William Penn Adair was born on April 15, 1830, in the old Cherokee Nation in New Echota, Georgia. His parents were George Washington Adair (1806-1862) and Martha (née Martin) Adair. The family was forced to remove to Indian Territory in 1838, a process which their people called the Trail of Tears, because of the loss of their lands and the high number of deaths along the way.
Trail of Tears
The Trail of Tears was a series of forced relocations of Native American peoples from their ancestral homelands in the Southeastern United States, to areas to the west (usually west of the Mississippi River) that had been designated as Indian Territory. The forced relocations were carried out by government authorities following the passage of the Indian Removal Act in 1830. The relocated peoples suffered from exposure, disease, and starvation while en route to their new designated reserve, and many died before reaching their destinations. The forced removals included members of the Cherokee, Muscogee (Creek), Seminole, Chickasaw, Choctaw, and Ponca nations. The phrase "Trail of Tears" originates from a description of the removal of many Native American tribes, including the infamous Cherokee Nation relocation in 1838.
Between 1830 and 1850, the Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek, Seminole, and Cherokee people (including mixed-race and black slaves who lived among them) were forcibly removed from their traditional lands in the Southeastern United States, and relocated farther west. Those Native Americans who were relocated were forced to march to their destinations by state and local militias. The Cherokee removal in 1838 (the last forced removal east of the Mississippi) was brought on by the discovery of gold near Dahlonega, Georgia in 1828, resulting in the Georgia Gold Rush. Approximately 2,000–8,000 of the 16,543 relocated Cherokee perished along the way.
Adair attended Cherokee schools in Indian Territory, and studied law. He became a Freemason,[1] belonging to the Vinita Lodge No. 5, which was chartered in 1875.[2] He was described as being "six foot and two inches in height, magnetic, logical and frankly agreeable, the ablest and most brilliant of all Cherokees."[3]
Civil War Military service
During the Civil War, Adair served in the Confederate States Army,[1] first in the First Regiment of Cherokee Mounted Volunteers, under General Stand Watie.[4] The Confederacy had promised the nations in Indian territory that it would support an Indian-controlled state if it won the war. Adair rose to the rank of colonel and organized the Second Cherokee Mounted Volunteers.[5]
Tribal leadership
Adair served the Cherokee Nation in many capacities. He was a senator, a justice of the Cherokee Supreme Court, delegate to Washington, DC, and assistant principal chief.[1] He served as the Senator from the Flint District from 1855-1860[6] and Senator from the Saline District from 1869-1874.[7] In 1879, he was elected as Assistant Chief.[3] Throughout the 1860s and 1870s, Adair served as a delegate from the Cherokee Nation to Washington.[8]
He was a vocal advocate for the rights of the Texas Cherokees. He served as Chairman of the Texas Cherokees and Affiliated (later Associate) Bands from 1871 until his death in 1880. During this period in 1873, he and Clement Neely Vann co-authored the book, History of the Claim of the Texas Cherokees, which they wrote on behalf of "the Texas Cherokees and Affiliated Bands."[9] The Texas Cherokees and Associate Bands was established by Adair and John Adair Bell in the early 1850's in the Mount Tabor Indian Community in Rusk County, Texas for the purposes of seeking redress over the violations of the 1836 Treaty of Bowles Village which later led to the Cherokee-Texas war in 1839 as well as later actions by Texas Cherokee leader Chicken Trotter until the Treaty of Birds Fort in 1843 that ended hostilities.
The Texas Cherokee continued to seek compensation from the state of Texas for lands taken from them in 1839. Adair along with other Confederate Cherokees went to Washington in order to petition Congress to allow him to sue the state to return lands in Texas once belonging to Texas Cherokee people. Initially this was to allow Southern Cherokees to relocate back on treaty lands due to the hostilities of Cherokee factions after the war. Some of these issues went back to the Ross-Ridge party feuds stemming from the Trail of Tears that had been played out during the Civil War. The main point for the suit was that in 1839, while the Republic of Texas was independent, President Mirabeau Lamar had forcibly driven most of the Texas Cherokee into Indian Territory and seized their lands in East Texas. The Texas Cherokees and Associate Bands sought the return of 1,500,000 acres (6,100 km2) in East Texas.[10] In the 1850's the state had offered lands in the Texas Panhandle in exchange, but Adair refused to accept that offer.[11] No such offer was made to settle after that. However the Texas Cherokees and Associate Bands continued to pursue litigation as late as 1963 some eighty-three years after Adair's death.
Death and legacy
While in Washington, DC, Adair died on October 23, 1880.[3] He was initially buried in Arlington National Cemetery in Washington, D.C., but his body was soon thereafter transferred to the Tahlequah City Cemetery in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. This move was paid for by the Cherokee Nation.
He lived on land along the Grand River in what is now Adair, Oklahoma. It was named for him.[1]
Several Cherokee boys were named after him in the late 19th century, including the celebrated Cherokee humorist William Penn Adair Rogers (better known as Will Rogers).[12] Adair, Oklahoma was named for William Penn Adair and his brother, Dr. Walter Thompson Adair.[4] [lower-alpha 1]
Marriage and Family
1st Marriage: Sarah Adair
Adair married first his cousin: Sarah Ann McNair Adair (1831-1865).
2nd Marriage: Sue Drew
After her death, he married again, to Susannah "Sue" McIntosh Drew.[13]
Children
Name | Birth | Death | Joined with |
Martha Carolina Adair (1858-1875) | |||
Margaret Elizabeth Adair (1860-) |
Name | Birth | Death | Joined with |
Mamie Elizabeth Adair (1864-1902) | |||
Dora Scott Adair (1876-) |
Siblings
Ancestry
- James Adair (1714-1796), his great-great grandfather was a Scotch-Irish immigrant who traded with the Indians for 40 years and wrote the book, History of the American Indians, publ in 1775.
References
- ^ a b c d Littlefield and Parins, 165
- ^ Starr, 185
- ^ a b c Starr, 264
- ^ a b c Betty Lou Harper Thomas, "Adair." Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture, Accessed 24 March 2010
- ^ Starr, 148
- ^ Starr, 272
- ^ Starr, 267
- ^ Starr, 296
- ^ Adair and Vann, 1
- ^ Chief Bowles and the Texas Cherokees by Mary Whatley Clarke, pages 121-125
- ^ "Cherokee Indians", Handbook of Texas Online. (retrieved 24 March 2010)
- ^ Rogers et al, 83
- ^ Starr, 328
Sources
- wikipedia:en:William Penn Adair - Wikipedia
- Adair, William Penn and C. N. Vann. History of the Claim of the Texas Cherokees. New York: Morgan, Comes, and Lawrence, 1873.
- Littlefield, Daniel F., Jr. and James W. Parins. A Biobibliography of Native American Writers, 1772-1924: A Supplement. 1985. ISBN 0-8108-1802-7.
- Rogers, Will, Arthur Frank Wertheim, and Barbara Bair. The Papers of Will Rogers: From Vaudeville to Broadway: September 1908–August 1915. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2001. ISBN 978-0-8061-3315-7.
- Starr, Emmett. History of the Cherokee Indians and Their Legends and Folklore, Oklahoma City: Warden Company, 1921.
- Template:Cite Appletons
- Lua error in Module:Internet_Archive at line 532: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
- Cherrie Adair Moore, "William Penn Adair", Chronicles of Oklahoma, Spring 1951.
- Handbook of Texas Online: Mount Tabor Indian Community
See Also
- William Adair
- Adair in Gordon County, Georgia
- wikipedia:en:William Penn Adair
- John Adair Bell - Cherokee 1838 Tripod.
- Cherokee Families of Rusk County- Cherokee 1838 Tripod.
- Mt Tabor Community Ancestral Roll -
- William Penn Adair in a Sentence -
Footnotes (including sources)
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