{{Short description|Navajo leader (1860–1947)}} {{Infobox officeholder | image = Henry Chee Dodge, 1946 (cropped).jpg | image_size = | caption = Dodge in 1946 | name = Chee Dodge<br />({{spell-nv|Hastiin Adiitsʼaʼii}}) | order = Last Head Chief of the | office = Navajo Tribe | term_start = 1884 | term_end = 1910 | predecessor = Manuelito | successor = position abolished | order1 = 1st Chairman of the | office1 = Navajo Business Council | term_start1 = 1922 | term_end1 = 1928<br />(no vice-chairman appointed) | successor1 = Deshna Chischillige | order2 = 6th Chairman of the | office2 = Navajo Tribal Council | term_start2 = 1942 | term_end2 = 1946<br />Vice-Chairman: Sam Ahkeah | predecessor2 = Jacob C. Morgan | successor2 = Sam Ahkeah | order3 = 6th Vice Chairman-elect of the<br />Navajo Tribal Council<br><small>(died before taking office; Zhealy Tso appointed)</small> | birth_date = ~1860 | death_date = January 7, 1947 | birth_place = Fort Defiance, New Mexico Territory | death_place = Ganado, Arizona | death_cause = pneumonia | resting_place = Fort Defiance Veterans Cemetery, Fort Defiance, Arizona | spouse = K'eehabah, Nanabah | children = 6, Tom, Ben, Antoinette, Annie, Veronica and Josephine | blank1 = Clans | data1 = {{spell-nv|Mąʼii Deeshgiizhnii}}<br />{{spell-nv|Naakaii Dineʼé}} | occupation = Interpreter for the U.S. military, Rancher }} '''Henry Chee Dodge''' (c. 1860–1947), also known in Navajo by his nicknames '''{{spell-nv|Hastiin Adiitsʼaʼii}}''' ("Mister Interpreter") and '''{{spell-nv|Kiiłchííʼ}}''' ("Red Boy"), was the last official Head Chief of the Navajo Tribe from 1884 until 1910, the first Tribal Chairman of the Navajo Business Council from 1922 until 1928, and chairman of the then Navajo Tribal Council from 1942 until 1946.<ref name="navgov">''Navajo Nation Government. Fourth Edition.'' Office of Navajo Nation Development. {{spell-nv|Tségháhoodzání}}/Window Rock, AZ: 1998. p. 13.</ref> He was the father of Thomas Dodge,<ref name="navajo">Lock, Raymond F. ''The Book of the Navajo. 6th Edition.'' Mankind Publishing. Los Angeles: 2001.</ref> who served as Tribal Council chairman from 1932 until 1936,<ref name="navgov"/> and activist Annie Dodge Wauneka.
==Biography== Dodge was born around 1860 near {{spell-nv|Tsíhootsooí}} (Fort Defiance) into the {{spell-nv|Mąʼii Deeshgiizhnii}} clan; his father was {{spell-nv|Naakaii Dineʼé}} (Juan Anaya) of Mexican ancestry, Juan Anaya had been captured by the Navajos on one of their many raids and had been raised by them.<ref name="baahane">''{{spell-nv|Chee Dodge yę́ę baa haneʼ.}}'' (obituary), ''Ádahooníłígíí.'' February 1, 1947. Vol. 2 No. 4.</ref> There was speculation that he was born three years earlier and was the son of the US Indian Agent Henry L. Dodge at the Navajo Agency. The senior Dodge was known in Navajo as {{spell-nv|Biʼééʼ Łichííʼ}}.<ref name="navajo"/> This question was finally settled by historian David M. Brugge, in an essay titled "Henry Chee Dodge: From the Long Walk to Self Determination," who reported that, in 1875, Augustus C. Dodge, who was Henry L. Dodge's brother, revealed that he had an eighteen-year-old nephew, the son of a Navajo woman and his brother, who lived at Fort Defiance.
During the Long Walk of 1864, Dodge got separated from his mother, and was taken in as an orphan by a family who found him wandering around.<ref name="navajo"/> He was raised by his aunt.<ref name="baahane"/> As his step-uncle was Anglo-American, the young Chee quickly became fluent in English. Chee Dodge eventually replaced Jesus Arviso as the official Navajo interpreter to the U.S. military.<ref name="navajo"/>
In 1883, Dodge was hired as head of the Navajo Tribal Police. A year later, he was appointed "Head Chief of the Navajo" by the Bureau of Indian Affairs<ref name="wilkins">Wilkins, David E. ''The Navajo Political Experience.'' Diné College Press. {{spell-nv|Tséhílį́}}/Tsaile, AZ: 1999.</ref> – a position and title that had no basis in traditional Navajo concepts of governance. He was presented to the people as "{{spell-nv|Tʼáá Diné Binaatʼáanii}}".
Appointed as the first chairman of the Navajo Business Council in 1922, Dodge managed to secure over one million dollars in royalties for the Navajo Nation related to mineral rights on their lands. He gave in to demands to give oil-drilling rights to Anglo-companies. Most Navajo were unaware of the council's functions. Critics said that it was simply to rubber-stamp the decisions of the local Indian commissioner of the Bureau of Indian Affairs.<ref name="navajo"/>
Under the Indian Citizenship Act of 1924, Dodge and many other members of federally recognized tribes were granted United States citizenship. Prior to that, members of tribes on sovereign reservations were not considered citizens.
In 1942, Dodge was elected as chairman of the Navajo Tribal Council and served until 1946. During his tenure, he lobbied for improved education opportunities for Navajo children, and traveled to Washington to convince the Federal Government to secure more funding.<ref>Iverson, Peter. ''"For our Navajo people": Diné letters, speeches & petitions, 1900–1960.'' University of New Mexico Press. Albuquerque, NM: 2002.</ref>
In the subsequent election of 1946, Dodge was chosen as vice-chairman. He died in January 1947 at the age of 86<ref name="baahane"/> or 87<ref name="wilkins"/> before the sixth Tribal Council convened and he could take office. Zhealy Tso was appointed Vice-Chairman in his stead.<ref name="navgov"/>
Chee Dodge died in his sleep from complications due to pneumonia on January 7, 1947, in Ganado, Arizona. On January 9 A Requiem Mass was held at the St. Michael's Mission<ref>''{{spell-nv|Hastiin Adiitsʼaʼii Sání yę́ę Lókʼaahnteeldi ájídingo Tséhootsoógi łeeh hoʼdooltį́.}}'' Ádahooníłígíí. February 1, 1947. Vol. 2 No. 4.</ref> with Father Berard Haile conducting the funeral mass for Dodge.
==Legacy== * Chee Dodge Elementary School in Yatahey, New Mexico, and Chee Dodge Boulevard near Gallup are named in Dodge's honor.
== References == {{reflist|30em}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dodge, Chee}} Category:1860s births Category:1947 deaths Category:Chairpersons of the Navajo Tribe Category:People from Fort Defiance, Arizona Category:20th-century Native American politicians Category:American people of Mexican descent