Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
He was able to persuade John Looney to agree to his plans, having Looney, Guess and "Tobacco Will" depose John Brown and John Rogers as Chiefs of the Old Settlers. The Convention and new Constitution were completed on Sept. 6, 1839 and John Ross was immediately elected as Principal Chief with Joseph Vann as his assistant principal chief.
At that time, the council deposed Brown, replacing him with Looney. A sizable faction of the Old Settlers refused to recognize Looney and elected Rogers in his stead, but their efforts to maintain autonomy petered out the next year. The Bowl (1810–1813) Degadoga (1813–1817) Tahlonteeskee (1817–1819) John Jolly (1819–1838) John Looney ...
Rogers was the son of John Rogers and Elizabeth Due (née Emory) and a relative of previous Cherokee Nation West principal chiefs John Jolly. He was born in Burke County, Georgia, in 1779. He commanded a Cherokee unit during the Creek War under General Andrew Jackson, reaching the rank of captain. He married Elizabeth Coody.
John Looney may refer to: J. Thomas Looney (1870–1944), originator of the Oxfordian theory regarding the authorship of Shakespeare's plays John Patrick Looney (1865–1947), gangster in Rock Island, Illinois during the early 1900s
John Jolly (Cherokee: Ahuludegi; also known as Oolooteka) was a leader of the Cherokee in Tennessee, the Arkansaw district of the Missouri Territory, and Indian Territory (now Oklahoma). After a reorganization of the tribal government around 1818, he was made Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation–West. Jolly was a wealthy slave-owning ...
Bernard Looney, 53, took on the role in February 2020. A statement from the firm said its board reviewed allegations relating to Looney's conduct “in respect of personal relationships with ...
In his new role, Looney will also assist with tasks including work on the company's flagship $10 billion data center in Evanston, Wyoming, Prometheus Hyperscale said. "I'm wishing BP well, and
Named at birth Enola (also rendered Inali or Enoli), Black Fox was born about 1746. [1] [2] He was a brother-in-law of Chickamauga Cherokee leader, Dragging Canoe, and accompanied him on his migrations south to the Lower Towns during the Cherokee–American wars.