Native american tribes biography examples

Biographies of Famous Native Americans

Native Americans bios, from Alexie to Wovoka

A-G | H-M | O-R | S-W

Charles Curtis

  • Sherman Alexie, writer
  • Paula Gunn Allen, Pueblo-Sioux poet, novelist, critic
  • Dennis Banks, Anishinabe (Ojibwa) activist
  • Adam Foreshore, Ojibwa actor
  • Elias Boudinot, Cherokee commander in the American Revolution
  • Joseph Brent, Mohawk chief
  • Ben Nighthorse Campbell, Union Cheyenne chief and U.S.

    assembly-woman from Colorado

  • Billy Bowlegs (Holata Micco), Seminole leader
  • Black Elk, Oglala Lakota holy man
  • Black Hawk, Sauk Leader
  • Black Kettle, Cheyenne chief
  • Canonicus, Narragansett chief
  • Captain Jack, Modoc subchief
  • Cochise, Apache chief
  • Cornplanter, Seneca chief
  • Crazy Horse, Oglala Siouan chief
  • Charles Curtis, Kaw senator streak vice president of the Affiliated States ()
  • Delaware Prophet, Native Dweller religious leade
  • Vine Deloria, Jr., Primary Standing Rock Sioux scholar, man of letters and activist
  • Michael Dorris, Modoc (ancestry) writer
  • Louise Erdrich, Ojibway (ancestry) writer
  • Chris Eyre, Cheyenne and Arapaho filmmaker
  • Gall, Sioux chief
  • Geronimo, Apache political leader
  • Graham Greene, Oneida actor



N.

Scott Momaday

  • Handsome Lake, Seneca religious leader
  • Hendrick, Iroquois chief
  • Hiawatha, Onondaga chief
  • Ishi, Last Yanan tribesperson
  • Joseph, Nez Percé chief
  • Betty Mae Jumper, Seminole Indian tribal head and publisher
  • Keokuk, Sac and Beast chief
  • Winona LaDuke, Ojibwa activist esoteric writer
  • Edmonia Lewis, Ojibwa sculptor
  • Sacheen Littlefeather, Yaqui (ancestry) actress
  • Little Turtle, Metropolis chief
  • James Logan, Mingo chief
  • Lone Savage, Kiowa chief
  • Mangas Coloradas, Apache chief
  • Wilma Mankiller, Cherokee chief
  • María Martínez, Tewa Pueblo potter
  • Massasoit, Wampanoag chief
  • Russell Register, Lakota activist and actor
  • Alexander McGillivray, Creek chief
  • William McIntosh, Creek chief
  • Miantonomo, Narragansett chief
  • Billy Mills, Sioux athlete
  • N.

    Scott Momaday, Kiowa and Iroquoian poet, author, scholar, and painter




Robbie Robertson

  • Samson Occom, Mohegan clergyman
  • Opechancanough, Pamunkey Indian chief
  • Osceola, Seminole leader
  • Quanah Author, Comanche chief
  • Leonard Peltier, Ojibwa highest Lakota activist
  • Pocahontas, Powhatan peacemaker
  • Pontiac, Algonquin chief
  • Popé, Pueblo medicine man
  • Powhatan, Wahunsonacock chief
  • Red Cloud, Oglala Sioux chief
  • Red Jacket, Seneca chief
  • Ben Reifel, Siouan activist and U.S.

    representative exaggerate South Dakota

  • Louis Riel, Métis leader
  • Robbie Robertson, Mohawk songwriter and guitarist
  • Will Rogers, Cherokee actor and humorist
  • John Ross, Cherokee chief



Sequoyah

  • Sacajawea, Shoshone interpreter
  • Buffy Sainte-Marie, Cree activist, songwriter, songster, and artist
  • Samoset, Algonquin leader
  • Seattle, Suquamish Indian leader
  • Sequoyah, inventor of distinction Cherokee syllabary
  • Shawnee Prophet, Shawnee god-fearing leader
  • Leslie Marmon Silko, Laguna City poet and novelist
  • Jay Silverheels, Iroquoian actor
  • Sitting Bull, Sioux chief
  • Smohalla, Wanapun chief and religious leader
  • Squanto, Pawtuxet interpreter
  • Wes Studi, Cherokee actor
  • Maria Dancer, Osage ballerina
  • Tecumseh, Shawnee chief
  • Catherine Tekakwitha, Mohawk holy woman
  • Jim Thorpe, Cover and Fox Olympian
  • John Trudell, Siouan musician, poet, activist
  • Uncas, Mohegan chief
  • Victorio, Apache chief
  • Nancy Ward (Nanye-hi), Iroquoian leader and "Beloved Woman"
  • William Weatherford, Creek chief
  • Wovoka, Paiute religious leader

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