Charles Alexander Eastmam "Ohiyesa" was born on February 19, 1858, near Redwood Falls, Minnesota. His mother, Wakantankawin (Sacred Woman) or Mary Nancy Eastman, daughter of well-known painter Seth Eastman, only survived her son's birth by a few months, so he was called Hakadah (the Pitiful Last). His paternal grandmother, Uncheedah, raised him, first in Minnesota and then, after the US–Dakota War of 1862, in Canada where his family had fled to safety.
See Elaine Goodale Eastman PBS Special Raised in a sheltered, puritanical household in New England, Elaine Goodale Eastman (1863–1953) daughter of Dora Hill Read and Henry Sterling Goodale followed her conscience and calling in 1885 when she traveled west and opened a school on the Great Sioux Reservation in South Dakota. Over the next six years she witnessed many of the monumental events that affected the Lakotas, including the inception of the Ghost Dance religion and the fallout from the Wounded Knee massacre in December 1890. She also fell in love with and married Charles Eastman, a Dakota doctor with whom she had six children, and went on to help edit his many popular books on Sioux life and culture.
This
biography draws on a newly discovered cache of more than one hundred
letters from Elaine that were collected by one of her sisters, Rose
Goodale Dayton, as well as newly discovered family correspondence and
photographs. Previous books about Elaine—including her own
autobiography—emphasize her work on the Sioux reservation and
association with her famous husband. Access to her personal papers,
however, enabled Theodore D. Sargent to shed new light on the dynamics
of her thirty-year marriage to Charles and its ultimate demise, the
importance of her own literary contributions during this period, and the
challenges and successes of her life following their separation. The
result is a long overdue multidimensional portrait of the relationships
and aspirations that impelled and troubled this fascinating woman and
her extraordinary life. From Review on The Life of Elaine Goodale Eastman By Theodore D. Sargent
Charles A. Eastman (Ohiyesa) and Elaine Goodale Eastman: A Cross-Cultural CollaborationSources: Sister to the Sioux: The Memoirs of Elaine Goodale Eastman, 1885-1891
By Elaine Goodale Eastman
Indigenous Modernity and the Making of Americans, 1890--1935 By Kathleen Grace Washburn
Wigwam Evenings
Charles and Elaine had six children:
- Dora Winona Eastman, d. August 22, 1964, Northampton, MA (married)
- Irene Eastman, d. October 23, 1918, Keene, NH
- Virginia Eastman, d. April 2, 1991, Amherst, MA (married Mr. Whitbeck)
- Eleanor Eastman, d. May 2, 1999, Pittsford, NY (married Mr. Mensel)
- Florence Eastman, d. December 30, 1930, Holyoke, MA (married Mr. Prentiss)
- Charles Eastman Jr. (Ohiyesa), d. January 15, 1940, Detroit, MI
Photo of Charles Eastman (Ohiyesa) and his daughter Dora in 1892 |
Dora Winona Eastman |
Florence Bascom Eastman Prentiss |
Irene Taluta Eastman |
Virginia Eastman Whitbeck |
Virginia Eastman Whitbeck |
Charles Alexander "Ohiyesa" Eastman, Jr |
Eleanor Eastman Mensel |
[Dr. Charles; Alexander; Eastman; New York; Thursday; Miss Elaine; Goodale]Wednesday, June 24, 1891 New Hampshire Sentinel (Keene, NH)
Charles Alexander Eastman (Ohiyesa) at the estate of Mr. Ward Burton, Lake Minnetonka, 1927. Photographer: Edward Augustus Bromley.
Mary Nancy Wakantankawin Eastman (1830-1858) - daughter of Brigadier General Seth M Eastman & Wakan inajin win Stands Sacred - wife of Jacob Many Lightnings Eastman - mother to Charles Ohiyesa Eastman Photo from Eastman Family
Brigadier General Seth M Eastman (1808 – 1875) |
1 comment:
There's that grain of truth that Native American blood is in the family and we are are related to the Eastman's tradition. A very distant cousin. My line is from Isaac, son of Robert, her line is Robert's son, Zachariah. A single grain of truth ignites a telling of a family story. It just isn't the truth you thought it would be.
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