, enrolled UKB member, accepts an award for her artwork,
Cherokee Heritage Center,
Park Hill, Oklahoma, 2007. Under the
Curtis Act of 1898, the government of the
Cherokee Nation was intended to be dissolved in 1906, in spite of the resistance of many of its members. However, the Five Tribes Act of 1906 provided "the tribal existence and present tribal governments of [the Five Tribes] are hereby continued in full force and effect for all purposes authorized by law," leaving behind a weakened government. The only remnant left was the office of the Principal Chief, held by
William Charles Rogers. He had been deposed in 1905 by the National Council for cooperating in the tribe's dissolution. He was replaced with Frank J. Boudinot (who was also the leader of the
Keetoowah Nighthawk Society). The next year, the US government re-appointed Rogers and directed him to manage land sales. He held office until 1914. After that the US government did not appoint a chief and the position was dormant. Prior to World War II, the administration of President
Franklin D. Roosevelt worked to strengthen Native American tribes by encouraging them to reconstitute their governments and adopt an electoral process. Congress passed the
Indian Reorganization Act (1934). The state legislature passed the
Oklahoma Indian Welfare Act (OIWA, 1936); both were considered part of the
Indian New Deal to support tribes' reorganizing their governments. Cherokees began to organize on their own terms. In the meantime, the
President of the United States officially appointed Principal Chiefs for the Cherokees; these appointments were made through the Department of Interior's
Bureau of Indian Affairs. The UKB ratified their constitution and by-laws on October 3, 1950. The tribe was federally recognized in 1950 under the Oklahoma Indian Welfare Act. Early elected leaders of the UKB were Levi Gritts, followed by John Hitcher, and the Reverend Jim Pickup, who served in the
post-World War II era. == Government ==