Chauncey Yellow Robe

Chief Chauncey Yellow Robe (born Canowikacte lit.'kill in woods' Yellow Robe, c. 1867) was a Sičhą́ǧú (Rosebud Sioux) educator, lecturer, actor, and Native American activist. His given name, Canowicakte, means "kill in woods,"[1] and he was nicknamed "Timber" growing up.[2]

Chief

Chauncey Yellow Robe
Chauncey Yellow Robe, photographed circa 1895 during his enrollment at the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania.
Born
Chauncey Yellow Robe (Killed in the Timber)
NationalitySioux, American
Other namesChief Yellow Robe
FamilyTasinagi (father); Tahcawin (mother); Lillian Belle Springer (wife); Rosebud, Chauncina and Evelyn (daughters)

Early life and education

Chauncey was born in Sičháŋǧu Oyáte territory, known today as the Rosebud Indian Reservation, in southern South Dakota. He was the firstborn child of his father Tasinagi, a hunter, known later as Yellow Robe for war deeds, who was the son of a hereditary chief; and his mother Tahcawin (lit.'female deer'), a skilled artist, purportedly a niece of Sitting Bull. He described his childhood to have primarily involved hunting, fishing, and chasing buffaloes across the plains of South and North Dakota, Nebraska, Wyoming, and Montana.[1]

In 1916, Yellow Robe wrote an account of his childhood published in Volume 4 of The American Indian Magazine.[1]

Career

In 1930, he starred as Chief Chetoga in historical drama The Silent Enemy and delivered its sound-on-film speech introduction.[3]

References

  1. Yellow Robe, Chauncey (1916). "My Boyhood Days". The American Indian Magazine. 4: 50–53 via Google Books.
  2. Sprague, Donovin Arleigh (2005). Rosebud Sioux. Arcadia Publishing. p. 79. ISBN 978-0-7385-3447-3.
  3. actor., Carver, H.P., film director. Cheeka, actor. Akawanush, Chief, actor. Buffalo Child Long Lance, Chief, actor. Yellow Robe, Chief, actor. Spotted Elk, Molly, The Silent Enemy., OCLC 1150887021, retrieved 2021-09-03
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