Monday, August 02, 2010

My Ancestor Cornplanter


Story About Chief Cornplanter
Related by Emily Tallchief
His great, great granddaughter

“Now these stories are true and came to Solomon Obail from Cornplanter, and Solomon, my father, told me.”
“The Cornplanter reservation Senecas often traveled by canoes down the Allegany river to Pittsburgh. On a certain occasion Cornplanter went with a party of canoeists down the Allegany to Pittsburgh. While on his journey one of the paddlers sang Woine’owi as he paddled. Now as he sang the party was startled by a voice that called from the cliff above, ‘Halt ye!’ The paddlers grounded the canoe and Cornplanter went ashore, where, ascending the cliff, he found a number of Indians gathered about a tree to which a white man was bound. ’So now, Cornplanter,’ said the chief of the band, ’I have called you to kill this man. You may now do as you please with him and we will be satisfied.’ Cornplanter drew forth his long hunting knife and feeling of its sharp edge said, ’So I may do as I wish. Truly then I shall do so.’ So saying he rushed toward the man with upraised knife and brought it down with a flourish. The man was not injured but instead stepped out from the tree free, for Cornplanter’s knife had severed the thongs. ’now,’ said Cornplanter, after some conversation with the man, ’I will hire a guide to take this man back to his home in Philadelphia.’ A warrior accepted the commission and guided the prisoner safely back to his home where he found him to be a man of prominence, a chief among his people.”
“So I say this,” added Mrs. Tallchief, “to show that my grandfather was a good man, just and kind. Because of these qualities he became influential.”
Exerpt from 'The Code of Handsome Lake, The Seneca Prophet.' by A.C. Parker

Take only memories, leave nothing but footprints.

 
"Take only memories, leave nothing but footprints." - Chief Seattle

At the turn of the century, half of all Indians in the US were
considered "full-bloods." By 1990 estimates are that only 20% percent are "full-blood". A third of all recognized Indians in the US are the quarter-blood cut off point. Cherokee demographer Russell Thorton estimates that, given continued imposition of purely racial definitions, Native Americans, as a whole, will have disappered by the year 2080.
Blood quantum can lead in only one general direction and that is
down. Once a lineage goes below 100 percent, no matter how many times offspring remarry with "full-blood" spouses, it can't ever be restored back to 100 percent. With blood quantum requirement of 50% mathematically, Native Americans are all just two generations away from extinction.