In the late 19th century the
Dawes Commission was established under the Dawes Act. It was ordered to carry out registration of members of Indian tribes, in order to identify heads of households for the allotments of communal lands to individual families. This was to be a means to convert Native Americans to the European-American model of subsistence farming. Any lands remaining after such allotment were to be declared "surplus", and the United States government would put them up for sale, including to non-natives. Redbird Smith led a political resistance movement to the
Dawes Allotment Act and sought to return to traditional Cherokee religious nationalism and values. In 1887 and 1889, Smith served as a
tribal councilor from the Illinois District of the
Cherokee Nation. Smith said in the early 1900s: Smith repatriated
wampum belts belonging to his tribe. Previously he had served as their chairman. Also in 1910, Smith and fellow Nighthawks traveled to
Mexico with an 1820 document supporting Cherokee lands claims from when bands had lived there, but the Mexican government did not support their claims. In 1914, he petitioned President
Woodrow Wilson to create a Keetoowah reservation, but the US government rejected the idea, believing that reservations hindered its
assimilation policy for Native Americans. In 1921, one hundred Cherokee from 35 families moved together to the southeastern corner of
Cherokee County, Oklahoma, to create a traditional community. This was "the brainchild of Redbird Smith." ==Family==