The lineage of Pawhuska continued with his son, White Hair II, but he apparently was an ineffective chief, and he was soon replaced by White Hair III, who moved most of the remaining members of the Osage tribe to the
Neosho River in Oklahoma in 1822. The Osage subsequently were forced by White and Indian encroachment on their lands to move back to a small reservation in Kansas. White Hair IV (George White Hair) became chief in 1832 and served until his death in 1852, aged 48. His cousin Iron Hawk became White Hair V until his death in 1861, also 48 years old. Little White Hair (White Hair VI) became the last hereditary White Hair Chief, serving until his death on December 24, 1869. White Hair VI had been one of the signers of the 1865 treaty that ceded most Osage lands in Kansas to the United States and set the stage for their removal to a reservation (contiguous with
Osage County) in
Oklahoma in 1871. In 1868, the U.S.
Indian Commissioner appointed
Joseph Pawnee-no-pashe, the chief of the Big Hill clan, Governor of the Great and Little Osage Nation of Indians. This was due to Little White Hair's refusal to renegotiate with the United States over Osage land in Kansas, the Diminished Reserve. The appointment of a governor did not remove White Hair from office as the principal chief, but after he died on December 24, 1869, it left Joseph the de facto supreme chief of the nation. That was the end of the hereditary principal chiefs of the Osage. Starting with "Governor Joe," whose tenure as governor lasted over ten years, the Osage Nation would elect their tribal leaders by a ballot. The Osage soon bought and occupied some Cherokee land near their former Kansas reservation, formed a government, and elected Joseph Pawnee-no-pashe the new Principal Chief of the Osage, vacant since 1869. By this time the powerful Osage of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries were a beleaguered people, but in one sense they had the last laugh. They had sold their old lands in Kansas for a good price in 1870, and then within a few decades, huge pockets of petroleum were found below their new reservation in Oklahoma. Today, descendants of Osage Nation citizens from 1906 are afforded a
headright, including the profits of the petroleum wells on the reservation. ==Notes==