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  1. Elias Boudinot (Cherokee) - Wikipedia

    • Elias Boudinot (Cherokee: ᎦᎴᎩᎾ ᎤᏩᏘ, romanized: Gallegina Uwati; 1802 – June 22, 1839; also known as Buck Watie) was a writer, newspaper editor, and leader of the Cherokee Nation. He was a member of a prominent family, and was born and grew up in Cherokee territory, now part of present-day Georgia. Born to parents of mixed Cherokee and Europea… See more

    Born1802 · Oothcaloga, Cherokee Nation (present-day Calhoun, Georgia), U.S.
    DiedJune 22, 1839 (aged 36–37) · Park Hill, Cherokee Nation West (present-day Oklahoma), U.S.
    SpousesHarriet Boudinot · (m. 1823; died 1836) · Delight Boudinot (m. 1837)
    ChildrenE. C. Boudinot (son)
    Early life and education

    Gallegina was born in 1802 into a leading Cherokee family in their territory. (It is now present-day Georgia.) He was the eldest son of nine children of Uwati and Susanna Reese, who was of mixed Cherokee and European a… See more

    Marriage and family

    While studying in Connecticut, Boudinot met Harriet Ruggles Gold, the daughter of a prominent local family who supported the Foreign Mission School. Her family often invited Boudinot and other Native American students to … See more

     
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  2. Elias Boudinot - New Georgia Encyclopedia

    Sep 3, 2002 · As an educator, an advocate of Cherokee acculturation, and editor of the Phoenix, Boudinot played a crucial role in Cherokee history during the decades preceding the Nation’s forced removal, often referred to as the Trail …

     
  3. Cherokee Historic Profile: The murder of Elias Boudinot

  4. 193 years of Native American journalism - Cherokee …

    Feb 21, 2021 · Editor Elias Boudinot gave the paper the name Cherokee Phoenix after the phoenix bird of Egyptian mythology that consumes itself in fire every 500 years and is reborn from the ashes. Boudinot had learned about the phoenix …

  5. History of the Cherokee Phoenix | Archives

    Jan 13, 2015 · The first issue of the newspaper was printed on Feb. 21, 1828, in New Echota, Cherokee Nation (now Georgia), and edited by Elias Boudinot. It was printed in English and Cherokee, using the Cherokee syllabary created by …

  6. Elias Boudinot - Georgia Writer's Hall of Fame

  7. Elias Boudinot, a Cherokee writer you should know

    Nov 19, 2020 · This journey, made by the Cherokee, Muscogee, Seminole, Chickasaw, and Choctaw nations, as well as thousands of enslaved Black people, is known as the Trail of Tears. For his role in the New Echota Treaty, Boudinot …

  8. Cherokee Phoenix - New Georgia Encyclopedia

    Aug 28, 2002 · In August 1832 Boudinot was forced to resign, and Elijah Hicks, an anti-removal Cherokee, became the editor of the Phoenix. The Cherokee Phoenix and Indians’ Advocate was published weekly until May 1834, when …

  9. Cherokee Phoenix, and Indians' Advocate (New Echota [Ga.]) …

  10. Cherokee phoenix. (New Echota [Ga.]) 1828-1829 - USG

  11. Boudinot, Elias [Galagina], (c. 1803-1839) | History of Missiology

  12. An Address to the Whites | Teaching American History

  13. June 22, 1839: a bloody day in Cherokee Nation - Cherokee …

  14. Cherokee Editor : The Writings of Elias Boudinot - Google Books

  15. Elias boudinot and the Cherokee Phoenix: The sponsors of …

  16. Killings of Ridges, Boudinot sparked cycle of violence

  17. Elias Cornelius Boudinot - Wikipedia

  18. Elias Boudinot (Cherokee) — Wikipédia

  19. Elias Boudinot - Wikipedia, a enciclopedia libre

  20. Elias Boudinot - Wikipedia, den frie encyklopædi