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Charles Edwin Dagenett : ウィキペディア英語版 | Charles Edwin Dagenett
Charles Edwin Dagenett (September 17, 1873 - March 16, 1941) was the highest ranking American Indian in the Bureau of Indian Affairs for over 30 years, and from 1894 to 1927 served under six successive Commissioners of Indian Affairs. Dagenett was a founder and leader of the Society of American Indians (1911-1923), the first national American Indian rights organization run by and for American Indians. The Society pioneered twentieth-century Pan-Indianism, the philosophy and movement promoting unity among American Indians regardless of tribal affiliation. Dagenett is credited with creating the Office of Indian Employment at the Bureau of Indian Affairs and successfully employed thousands of American Indians in major labor-intensive projects and corporate industries. ==Early Years==
Dagenett was born into the Peoria tribe in Wea Township, Miami County, Kansas, son of Edward R. and Elizabeth Dagenett. His grandfather, Christmas Dagenett, was the agent of the Peoria Reservation in Miami, Oklahoma.〔Hazel W. Hertzberg, "The Search for an American Indian Identity: Modern Pan-Indian Movements" (hereinafter "Hertzberg"), Syracuse University Press, 1971, p.42-43.〕 In 1887, at the age of 15, Dagenett entered the Carlisle Indian School in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, to learn the printing trade, and served as editor of ''The Red Man'', the school magazine. After graduating as salutatorian in 1891, Dagenett attended Dickinson College and eventually graduated from Eastman College in Poughkeepsie, New York. On his return home to Kansas, he married Carlisle graduate Emerita Miller, a Miami, and together they started a weekly newspaper, ''The Miami Chief'', which they printed on a small hand-press.〔Hertzberg, p.42.〕 On April 15, 1916, Dagenett married Miss Cornelia Louise Skidmore.〔''The Washington Evening Star'', Monday, April 24, 1916.〕
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