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Difference between revisions of "Lone Wolf II and Adoption"

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In 1901 he tried unsuccessfully to prevent the exile of his people to the [[Oklahoma]] Territory, and when he died the lands of the Kiowa, once covering [[Oklahoma]], [[Kansas]], [[Texas]] and part of [[Mexico]], had been reduced to 160 acres per person.  
 
In 1901 he tried unsuccessfully to prevent the exile of his people to the [[Oklahoma]] Territory, and when he died the lands of the Kiowa, once covering [[Oklahoma]], [[Kansas]], [[Texas]] and part of [[Mexico]], had been reduced to 160 acres per person.  
  
He was the adoptive father of Delos Knowles Lonewolf.
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He was the adoptive father of [[Delos Knowles Lonewolf]].
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
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[[Category: Adoption Celebrities]]
 
[[Category: Adoption Celebrities]]
 
[[Category: Adopted Persons]]
 
[[Category: Adopted Persons]]
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[[Category: Adoptive Parents]]
 
[[Category: Native American and Alaskan Native, Inuit]]
 
[[Category: Native American and Alaskan Native, Inuit]]
 
[[Category: USA]]
 
[[Category: USA]]

Revision as of 21:11, 9 June 2014

Portrait of Mamay-day-te by De Lancey W. Gill in 1902
Source: Wikipedia.org.

Biography

ca. 1843-1923

Kiowa Chief

Chief Lone Wolf II was named Momaday when he was born. He grew up as the best friend of Tau ah kia, the son of the hereditary chief of the Kiowa, Lone Wolf I.

In late 1873 Tau ah kia was killed by US Cavalry soldiers in a battle, and his body was retrieved and buried by Momaday, who announced the death to the chief. Early the next year there was a revenge party, at which he was adopted by Lone Wolf I to replace Tau ah kia and given the name Lone Wolf. In 1879 he succeeded to the chieftainship.

In 1901 he tried unsuccessfully to prevent the exile of his people to the Oklahoma Territory, and when he died the lands of the Kiowa, once covering Oklahoma, Kansas, Texas and part of Mexico, had been reduced to 160 acres per person.

He was the adoptive father of Delos Knowles Lonewolf.

References

Clark, Blue. Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock: Treaty Rights and Indian Law at the End of the Nineteenth Century. (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1994) "Kiowa: Lone Wolf II." [Includes portrait]. Available at: [1]