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Chester Poe Cornelius : ウィキペディア英語版 | Chester Poe Cornelius
Chester Poe Cornelius ("Geyna") (September 7, 1869 – November 30, 1933) was an Oneida lawyer, scholar, activist and visionary. Cornelius, a descendent of distinguished Oneida leaders, collaborated with his sister Laura Cornelius Kellogg and her visionary "Lolomi Plan," a Progressive Era alternative to Bureau of Indian Affairs control, and presaged subsequent 20th-century movements to hold the federal government accountable to American Indians to preserve culture and communal lands in a protective sovereignty, to institute tribal self-government, and reclaim communal lands and promote economic development. Cornelius, a chief of the Oneida Tribe of Indians of Wisconsin, devoted much of his time to national Indian affairs and tribal organizations in the State of Oklahoma. ==Early life== Chester Poe Cornelius was born on the Oneida Indian Reservation at Oneida, Wisconsin, on September 7, 1869, the eldest son of five children of Adam Poe and Celicia Bread Cornelius. Kellogg came from a distinguished lineage of Indian tribal leaders. His paternal grandfather was John Cornelius, Oneida chief and brother of Jacob Cornelius, also a chief, and his great-grandfather was Chief Dagoawi. His maternal grandfather was Chief Daniel Bread, known as Dehowyadilou “Great Eagle” (1800–1873), who helped find land for his people after the Oneidas were forcibly removed from New York State to Wisconsin in the early nineteenth century and averting their removal west of the Mississippi. When Dagoawi died he was still fighting to obtain land claim monies for Oneidas.〔(Thomas Henry Ryan, ''History of Outagamie County, Wisconsin'' (hereinafter "Thomas Henry Ryan"), Part 15, 1911, p.1059-1061. )〕
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