Tilton and Grace Entokah

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A01=Anthony Lookout
American History
Author_Anthony Lookout
Category=JBSL11
Category=JHMC
Category=NHK
Category=NHTB
Category=WQH
Cultural Anthropology
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eq_history
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Ethnic Studies
Ethnohistory
family history
forthcoming
Indigenous Studies
Kansas history
Native American anthropology
Native American assimilation
Native American Biography
Native American culture
Native American history
Native American interviews
Native American Literary Recovery
Native American Literature
Native American relocation
Oklahoma history
Oklahoma indian territory
oral history
oral traditions
Osage acculturation
Osage assimilation
Osage cultural traditions
Osage elders
Osage murders
Osage Nation
Osage Nation biography
Osage Nation book
Osage Nation history
Osage religious practices
Osage reservation
tribal government
tribal sovereignty
tribal stories

Product details

  • ISBN 9781496246554
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 May 2026
  • Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Tilton and Grace Entokah: An Osage Story offers an episodic history of the Osage Nation of Oklahoma as told through the life narratives of Anthony Lookout's great-grandparents Tilton and Grace Entokah. Anthony Lookout grew up hearing the stories of his relatives, including those of his great-grandfather Fred Lookout, who served as the principal chief of the Osage Nation in the early twentieth century. Anthony Lookout's father, Morris Lookout, methodically recorded the oral traditions and tribal stories of Osage elders and relatives on reel-to-reel tapes from 1965 to 1971. The recordings preserved generations of Osage history, religious practices, and cultural traditions reaching back to the mid-nineteenth century. To write this story of his family and Osage history, Anthony Lookout did additional research in archival collections, newspapers, and magazines and interviewed elders.

From the perspective of a participant rather than an observer, Lookout tells the tribal history of the Osage Nation's removal from their Kansas homelands in 1865 and relocation to Oklahoma's Indian Territory from 1872 to the early 1940s. The heart of the story revolves around Lookout's great-grandmother Grace Entokah, who grew up as a traditional Osage woman, and adapted through traumatic and uncertain times, staying true to her Osage culture. She went from riding horses to riding in automobiles, eventually meeting the president of the United States.

Lookout covers the family history of the Entokahs, the Allotment Act of 1906, Oklahoma statehood, the depredations of mining and oil companies on Osage lands, the establishment of tribal government and courts, Principal Chief Fred Lookout's journeys to Washington, DC, to meet top government leaders, as well as tribal stories of the infamous 1920s Osage murders and other key episodes in Osage history. Tilton and Grace Entokah is not only the story of the Entokahs but also an Osage history written from the collective memory of those on the Osage reservation.

Anthony Lookout is an Osage songwriter and musician from Tulsa, Oklahoma. His Osage name is Hunkathali, meaning "good eagle," from the Hunka clan. He has spent his life playing music as a multi-instrumentalist performing and recording songs and music videos and producing other local artists. Also an actor, he worked for two years with the Native American acting troupe Mahenwahdose.

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