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Although my direct ancestry leads to Elizabeth Ross, Sister to Chief John Ross of the Cherokee nation, there is another member my family tee and of the Nation that I was named after and that is William Ross. His work, that lead to reuniting the Tribe as one nation after the Civil War is an inspiration to me in my drive to bring the various elements of energy, water and air into harmony with each other, that we may have prosperity and sustainability for future generations.
My father was a great grandson of Elizabeth Ross and spent much of his teen life with Alaskan and Canadian tribes, where he earned the money for his college tuition through trapping furs in the early 1920s in the area now known as the Northwest Territories. He raised me with an understanding of the natural world as well as the problem solving skills of an early electrical engineer. I was born late in his life and was exposed to the values of earlier generations, which has always been a core value to me.
I was named after a distant cousin who my father was inspired by. This value system is an indelible part of who I am and what I stand for.
That cousin was William P. Ross. He was the Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation During two separate terms. On October 19, 1866, he was chosen by the National Council to fill the unexpired term of Chief Ross. His job was to ratify the new constitutional amendments made necessary by the newly signed treaty with the Federal government.
From 1872 through 1875, after being elected by the National Council to fill the unexpired second term of Lewis Downing, there were still conflicts resulting from the Civil War, in which he had served as a Colonel on the Union side. |
William P. Ross - Cherokee writer, orator and statesman.
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Because of this, he faced pressures and opposition from three distinct groups: full bloods, mixed bloods and negro freedmen. There was a crime wave as a result, and in 1875, 40 armed members |
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of the Downing Party. threatened his life if any more Downing Party people were killed. He sought to unite the Nation, lessen expense and promote education. |
By the efforts of he and D.W. Bushyhead, Treasurer, expenses reached an acceptable level. During his administration, the population was vastly factionalized as new and various political groups were formed to demand reforms in almost all areas, as well as opposition to the U.S. attempts to establish a territorial government.
Under his leadership, reconstruction in the Cherokee Nation was accomplished. Many changes were made in the legislative system, freedmen were declared citizens, a census was provided for every ten years, the judicial system was modified, procedures for electing civil officials and terms of office were changed, and much more.

Fort Gibson National Cemetery |
He was born in 1820 and died in 1891, and was married to Mary Jane Ross (1827-1908), the daughter of Lewis Ross and Francis Holt.
He was a graduate of Princeton, and an editor of the Cherokee Advocate as well as the Vinita Daily Chieftain.
He is buried in the Cherokee National Cemetery, now known as Fort Gibson City Cemetery. |
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