- town in
McIntosh County, Oklahoma,
United States. It was
named for
Samuel Checote, the
first chief of the Cr****
Nation elected after the
Civil War. Its po****tion...
-
Samuel Checote (1819–1884) (Muscogee) was a
political leader,
military veteran, and a
Methodist preacher in the Cr**** Nation,
Indian Territory. He served...
- Prin****l
Chief to
replace Checote.
Checote supporters controlled the Cr****
legislature and
impeached Harjo,
replacing him with a
Checote supporter.
Porter was...
-
Isparhecher revolted against the
leadership of Prin****l
Chief Samuel Checote.
Checote responded by
ordering the Cr**** Lighthor**** to put down the rebellion...
- in 1938
under the name of "Yaqui". In 1957
Yaqui Lodge merged with the
Checote Lodge (#154) due to the
merger of the
Tulsa Area
Council and the Cr****...
-
Nebraska Press. pp. 6–12. Meserve, John
Bartlette (December 1938). "Samuel
Checote with
Sketches of
Chiefs Locher Hart and Ward Coachman".
Chronicles of Oklahoma...
-
afterward as a result. They p****ed a new
constitution and
elected Samuel Checote as
their first prin****l
chief after the war. In 1869, a post
office (originally...
-
traditional ways and was
opposed to the ****imilation
encouraged by
Chief Samuel Checote and others. Born in
Alabama in 1829 to full-blood Cr**** parents, Isparhecher...
- Hiaw****ee .
James Cantey,
Confederate States Army
brigadier general Samuel Checote,
Muskogee Cr****, who was the
first prin****l
chief of the tribe, then located...
-
acted as
executive secretary for
three notable prin****l chiefs,
Samuel Checote,
Roley McIntosh, and Isparhecher.
Callahan worked as
editor of the Muskogee...