David Pendleton Oakerhater | |
Birth Date: | ca. 1847 |
Death Date: | 31 August 1931 |
Feast Day: | 1 September |
Venerated In: | Anglican Communion |
Birth Place: | Indian Territory |
Death Place: | Watonga, Oklahoma |
Titles: | Deacon and missionary |
Major Shrine: | Grace Episcopal Church, Syracuse, New York |
David Pendleton Oakerhater (c. 1847 – August 31, 1931), also known as O-kuh-ha-tuh and Making Medicine, was a Cheyenne warrior and spiritual leader. He later became an artist and Episcopal deacon. In 1985, Oakerhater was the first Native American Anglican to be designated by the Episcopal Church as a saint.
Captured in the Indian Wars and imprisoned in 1875 at Fort Marion (now Castillo de San Marcos), Florida, Oakerhater became one of the founding figures of modern Native American art. Later he attended college in New York State and was ordained as a deacon in the Episcopal Church in the United States of America. He returned to the West where he served as a missionary in Oklahoma, serving Native Americans.
Since 1985 he has been recognized in the book of Lesser Feasts and Fasts of the Episcopal Church. Grace Episcopal Church in Syracuse, New York is a national shrine to Saint O-kuh-ha-tah, and he was celebrated there in 2005 with a major event including descendants.
Born in the 1840s in Indian Territory (later the U.S. state of Oklahoma) to Cheyenne parents Sleeping Wolf (father), and Wah Nach (mother), Oakerhater was the second of three boys. His childhood name was Noksowist ("Bear Going Straight"), and he was raised as a traditional Cheyenne. His older brother was Little Medicine, and his younger brother was Wolf Tongue.[1]
Oakerhater is believed by some to have been the youngest man to complete the sun dance ritual (his Cheyenne name, Okuh hatuh, means "sun dancer").[2] He participated in his first war party (military raid) at age 14 against the Otoe and Missouri tribes,[1] and was initiated into his tribe's "Bowstring Society" (one of five military societies).[1]
He later participated in actions against United States federal and state militia forces. His first engagement against white settlers was at the Second Battle of Adobe Walls, in which 300 Native American warriors from various tribes, angered by settlers' poaching of buffalo, cattle grazing, and theft of horses, attacked a small trading village used by poachers.[1] The battle, led by Comanche leader Isa-tai and Chief Quanah Parker, triggered United States government retaliation in the Red River War of 1874–75. Oakerhater may also have participated in the Battle of Washita River and the Sand Creek massacre.[2]
Oakerhater married Nomee (translated as "Thunder Woman") in 1872. She died in 1880. They had four children, all of whom died young. Oakerhater also married, had at least one child, and divorced, a second woman, Nanessan ("Taking Off Dress").[1]
In the Red River War of 1874 and 1875, the United States government attempted to pacify Native American warriors on the Southern Plains, fighting a series of skirmishes until the militants were exhausted by lack of food and supplies. The warriors, including Oakerhater, surrendered in 1875 at Fort Sill, near what is now Lawton, Oklahoma. A group of 74 were selected from there and another location, all without trial, for imprisonment in Florida. Oakerhater was in a group chosen for being the eighteen farthest right in a line-up by a US Army colonel who had been drinking and needed to select the prisoners before nightfall. Some among the eighteen had nothing to do with the insurrection.
The army assigned First Lieutenant (later Captain) Richard Henry Pratt to transport the prisoners to an old Spanish fort, the Castillo de San Marcos (then known as Fort Marion), near Saint Augustine, Florida. Shackled together, they were taken across country on foot, by wagon, train (most had never before seen a train), and steamboat.[1] Many initially thought they would be executed. At least two attempted suicide. One prisoner was fatally shot attempting to escape; another died of pneumonia.[3]
Captain Pratt supported assimilation of American Indians into European-American mainstream society. He thought they needed to abandon their cultures and religions and learn the various practices of America's dominant white culture to survive: English, wage work, Christianity, literacy, mainstream education, and so on. The practice of forced assimilation, now criticized as cultural genocide, was considered progressive by its practitioners of the time.[4] Many European Americans still considered Native Americans to be enemies and murderers who should be killed, imprisoned, or defeated through force. Pratt's superior, General Philip Sheridan, dismissed Pratt's beliefs as "Indian twaddle".[1]
Conditions at the old fort were initially very poor: prisoners slept on the floor of their cells facing a central open-air courtyard. Several died in the first weeks.[1] Pratt quickly improved conditions, obtaining army uniforms, removing the prisoners' shackles, setting them to work building a new residential shed, and procuring bedding. Later, as trust developed on both sides, Pratt convinced his superiors to allow the Indians to carry nonoperational rifles, perform guard duty, obtain outside employment collecting and selling sea beans and other tourist items, have passes to visit the town on Sundays to attend church, and camp unsupervised on nearby Anastasia Island.[1]
Pratt, who offered to resign his military post if the experiment failed, appointed Oakerhater First Sergeant of the prisoners, with a duty to organize morning military drills, ensure hygiene and dress code, choose assistants for Captain Pratt, and oversee the prisoners in Pratt's absence. Pratt and his wife also arranged for volunteer teachers from the many visitors in Florida, from across the United States, to instruct the prisoners in English, carpentry, and other subjects. They allowed the Indians to conduct a mock buffalo hunt.[5]
In return, the prisoners educated townspeople and tourists in archery, and made handicrafts and drawings to sell. Aware for their part of the nature of Pratt's experiment, the prisoners took pride in their work and martial discipline, eager to demonstrate that they could master white Americans' cultural and military practices. They took longer to overcome other cultural barriers, such as discomfort with being taught by women. The first summer Pratt arranged for their families to visit them from the Indian Territory. Within two years of arrival at Fort Marion, Oakerhater was proficient in English, and was regularly writing letters to townspeople he had befriended. That year nineteen of the prisoners were released, in exchange for accepting scholarships for higher education on the East Coast.[1]
One of Pratt's experiments was to provide art supplies and instruction to the prisoners. They drew most of their art in pen in ledger books. Somewhat abstract in style and depicting nostalgic memories of scenes from daily life, their art drew inspiration from earlier Plains Indian hide painting. This had included personal narratives and winter counts, and calendar chronicles of tribal events. Typical subjects of the ledger art included community dances, hunts, courting, and events at the fort, as well as self-portraits depicting scenes before the men's imprisonment. The ledger art was a popular item for tourists to purchase. Through his art, Oakerhater gained the attention of Mrs. Alice Key Pendleton, to whose daughter he had given one of his drawing books. She was the wife of US Senator George H. Pendleton (D-OH).[1]
Oakerhater was the first and one of the most prolific, artists in the group. Oakerhater's drawings are considered by critics to be sophisticated in composition and subject content. These artworks are highly collectible today. He often signed his works "Making Medicine," a non-literal English translation of his Cheyenne name, Sun Dancer, which the military had assigned him upon his arrest.[1] Other times he would sign with a glyph of a dancer in a sun dance lodge to represent himself.[6] The Smithsonian Institution has a collection of the Fort Marion artists online.[7]
His ledger art was exhibited in a solo show with a catalog at the Center of the American Indian in 1984.[8]
In 1877 an Episcopal deaconess, Mary Douglass Burnham, began to make arrangements to sponsor the remaining prisoners, including Oakerhater, to serve as church sextons and continue education. In April 1878 all of the prisoners were released. Burnham arranged funding from Alice Key Pendleton and her husband, Senator George H. Pendleton, to bring Oakerhater, as well as his wife Nomee, to St. Paul's Church in Paris Hill, New York, along with three other ex-prisoners who each had separate sponsors.[1] The church's priest, the Reverend J.B. Wicks, took charge of Oakerhater's education on matters of agriculture, Scripture, and current events, and welcomed him as part of his family. Oakerhater, along with his three companions from Fort Marion, became popular among townspeople. They made and sold various items, including handmade bows. Within six months Oakerhater agreed to be baptized and was confirmed shortly after. He chose the biblical Christian name David and adopted the last name Pendleton in honor of his sponsors.[1] In 1878, Oakerhater was baptized at Grace Episcopal Church in Syracuse and ordained a deacon at that same church in 1881.
Captain Pratt, encouraged by the success of his former prisoners at Paris Hill and some at Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute for Negroes (now Hampton University), lobbied the federal government for funds to open boarding schools for Indian children. Senator Pendleton pushed a bill through Congress to found the first school in 1879 at the unused Carlisle Barracks in central Pennsylvania. It was named the Carlisle Indian Industrial School.
In July 1880, Nomee died in childbirth. The next year Oakerhater's young son Pawwahnee died. Both were buried in the cemetery in Paris Hill. Oakerhater was ordained an Episcopal deacon in July 1881.[1] According to sources, O-kuh-ha-tah's son, Frederick; wife, Millie; and another child, who died at birth, are also buried in the church cemetery in Paris Hill.
After Oakerhater was ordained a deacon, Pratt sent him on a trip to Indian Territory and Dakota Territory to recruit students for Carlisle. Pratt had been appointed founding superintendent. Traveling with Wicks to the Darlington Agency near what is now El Reno, Oklahoma, Oakerhater used his connections and influence to encourage local Cheyenne to attend Episcopal religious services. Remaining in the area, he traveled to the Anadarko Agency (near present-day Anadarko, Oklahoma) for Sunday services, spending weekdays visiting and caring for ill members of various tribes.[1]
In 1882 Oakerhater married again, to Nahepo (Smoking Woman), who adopted the English name Susie Pendleton. They had two children, who both died young. Nahepo died in 1890, at age 23.[1]
In 1887 Oakerhater began work at newly built missions in Bridgeport, and in 1889 at the Whirlwind Mission near Fay, seventeen miles west of Watonga, Oklahoma. The mission, built in 1887, was on the Dawes Act allotment land of Chief Whirlwind, one of the negotiators of the Treaty of Medicine Lodge.[9] As at other Indian schools being established in the United States, many of Whirlwind's students suffered from poverty and diseases from poor living conditions. Many suffered from trachoma and conjunctivitis.
Their parents, whose lives had been disrupted by colonialism, warfare, forcible relocation, and the breaking up of tribal lands for allotment, were exploited by local non-Indians who wanted to profit from their newly assigned land grants. Uprooted, the families would often camp out near the schools to be with their children and provide a safer environment. Oakerhater's school and mission were under pressure both from locals, who saw the mission as a threat to their attempts to exploit the Native American population, and from others at the local and national level, who deplored the poor conditions there.[1]
Oakerhater retired from Whirlwind with a pension in 1918. He continued to preach, serving as a Native American chief and holy man.[10] He moved briefly to Clinton, Oklahoma and then to Watonga, where he lived until his death in 1931.[1]
After Oakerhater died, the Great Depression and World War II interrupted mission work in the region by the Episcopal Church. It was not until the early 1960s, that an Episcopalian family new to the area placed an ad in a local paper to announce a religious meeting in their home. Native Americans who had known Oakerhater met with the family and worked with them to revive his old mission.[10]
In 1985 the Episcopal Church designated Oakerhater as a saint, thanks in part to years of work and research by Lois Carter Clark, a Muscogee Creek scholar.[11] On September 1, 1986, the first feast was held in his honor at the Washington National Cathedral in Washington, D.C.; his descendants and delegations from Oklahoma were invited to the celebration. In 2000 the Saint George Church of Dayton, Ohio dedicated a large stained glass window in its chapel depicting Oakerhater, and a smaller window bearing his glyph signature.[10]
St. Paul's Cathedral in Oklahoma City dedicated a chapel to St. Oakerhater. The congregation of St. Paul's commissioned glass artist Preston Singletary (Tlingit) to create a stained glass window featuring Oakerhater's glyph. It replaced a church window destroyed in the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing. The Oakerhater Guild of St. Paul's was organized in partnership with Whirlwind Mission of the Holy Family. It sponsors dances, tribal outreach, and a vacation Bible school for children in Watonga.[12]
In 2003 the Whirlwind Church obtained a new permanent site in Watonga, where it dedicated the Oakerhater Episcopal Center in September 2007.[13] The site is used for powwows, a sweat lodge, classes, and an annual Cherokee Dance in Oakerhater's honor.[1] [13]
Grace Episcopal Church in Syracuse, New York is a national shrine to Saint O-kuh-ha-tah. On April 16, 2005, a Native American celebration was held there to honor Saint David Pendleton Oakerhater (O-kuh-ha-tah/Making Medicine) (Cheyenne), the first Native American saint of the Episcopal Church, and Marcia Pierce Steele (Oneida), who teaches both Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) cultural traditions and Christian beliefs. Grace Church's celebration included a day-long cultural festival, followed by Holy Eucharist and a blessing of new memorial stained-glass windows.
Roberta Whiteshield-Butler, great-granddaughter of O-kuh-ha-tah, created the drawings for the windows. Rose Viviano of Rose Colored Glass fabricated the windows, which were installed in September 2004 and blessed by Bishop Adams at the April 2005 celebration. Saint O-kuh-ha-tah's descendants travelled from Oklahoma and Texas to attend the celebration at Grace Episcopal Church. Prior to this, O-kuh-ha-tah descendants (great-great grandson, Jack Southmeth; granddaughter Elizabeth Whiteshield; great-granddaughter Kim Whiteshield; and great-great granddaughter Star Whiteshield) traveled to St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Paris Hill (near Utica, New York) to visit O-kuh-ha-tah's home church and the graves of their ancestors.