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/Lyda Conley and the Fight to Preserve Huron Indian Cemetery: With Sources and Oral Histories
Lyda Conley and the Fight to Preserve Huron Indian Cemetery: With Sources and Oral Histories

Lyda Conley and the Fight to Preserve Huron Indian Cemetery: With Sources and Oral Histories - Paperback

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Language:EnglishPublisher:University Press of KansasISBN-13:9780700641215ISBN-10:700641211UPC:9780700641215Book Category:Social ScienceBook Subcategory:Activism & Social Justice, Indigenous Peoples of Turtle Island Studies, Women's StudiesSize:9.00 x 6.00 x 0.57 inchesWeight:0.7518Product ID:SCYH893NEX

The inspiring story of Lyda Conley, the first Indigenous woman to argue a case before the United States Supreme Court and a trailblazing lawyer and activist who defended the burials of her Wyandot family and ancestors in Kansas City's Huron Indian Cemetery. Driven by primary sources and oral histories, this biography and source reader is the definitive work on this remarkable woman.

For fifty years, Eliza ("Lyda") Conley and her two older sisters, Helena and Ida, protected the Huron Indian Cemetery in Kansas City, Kansas, now known as the Wyandot National Burying Ground. A member of the Wyandot Nation of Kansas, Lyda Conley is the first Indigenous woman to argue a case before the United States Supreme Court, where she established legal precedents used to protect Indigenous sovereignty today.

In conjunction with her legal fight, Conley and her sisters spent years physically defending their ancestors' burials by building a shack in the cemetery they called "Fort Conley." When a US Marshal tore down their fort in 1911, the sisters simply built another one. While they occupied the grounds, they also tended to cemetery upkeep, maintaining it in pristine condition between 1907 and 1922. Finally, under the leadership of Kansas senator--and future vice president under Herbert Hoover--Charles Curtis, a member of the Kaw Nation, Congress passed legislation to prevent sale or development of the cemetery's land in 1913.

Unfortunately, the cemetery needed defending decades later when the Wyandotte Nation (of Oklahoma) attempted to open a casino on the cemetery grounds in the 1990s. The Conley sisters' Wyandot Nation of Kansas relatives used similar strategies to protect the cemetery once again.

Using primary sources, including images, oral histories, and art, as well as scholarly analysis, Stephanie Bennett, Samantha Gill, and Tai S. Edwards tell the story of Lyda Conley, her sisters, and their perseverance. This book stands as a testament to the Conley sisters, who demonstrated the resilience and courage of Indigenous women who resisted colonialism and protected Indigenous sovereignty, blazing a trail for future generations.

Language:EnglishPublisher:University Press of KansasISBN-13:9780700641215ISBN-10:700641211UPC:9780700641215Book Category:Social ScienceBook Subcategory:Activism & Social Justice, Indigenous Peoples of Turtle Island Studies, Women's StudiesSize:9.00 x 6.00 x 0.57 inchesWeight:0.7518Product ID:SCYH893NEX
Edwards, Tai S.: - Tai S. Edwards is a professor of history and director of the Kansas Studies Institute at Johnson County Community College in Overland Park, Kansas. She is the author of Osage Women and Empire: Gender and Power, also from the University Press of Kansas.Gill, Samantha: -

Samantha Gill is the Adult Services Manager at Hays Public Library in Hays, Kansas, and earned a master's degree in history from Fort Hays State University in 2016, where she began her research on Lyda Conley's life and work.

Bennett, Stephanie: -

Stephanie Bennett is a citizen of the Wyandot Nation of Kansas and the niece of chief emeritus Janith English. She has been working with the Wyandot Nation of Kansas to preserve and raise awareness of the cemetery since the 1980s.

Publisher: University Press of Kansas

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