Archie Sam was born in the Greenleaf Mountain community near Braggs, Oklahoma, on June 30, 1914. Archie was the youngest son of White Tobacco Sam,[2] son of Creek Sam, and his mother was Aggie Cumsey, a fullblood Longhair clan Cherokee.[2] Archie Sam was the grandnephew of Watt Sam, the last native speaker of the Natchez language.[3]
Sam married Maudie Louise Quinton Sam, and the couple had two children.[2]
In 1977 Sam worked with professor Charles Van Tuyl to recover sound recordings of Watt Sam that had been archived at the University of Chicago. These are the only known recordings of the Natchez language being spoken.[5]
Upon retiring in 1971, he dedicated himself to the preservation of his indigenous heritage.[3][4] He was a practitioner of native Natchez religion (Four Mothers Society),[2] and in 1969 he revived the Medicine Springs ceremonial ground,[6] located near Gore, Oklahoma.[3]
^Barnett, James F. Jr. (2007). The Natchez Indians: A History to 1735. Jackson, Mississippi: University Press of Mississippi. p. 134. ISBN9781578069880. OCLC86038006.
References
Mails, Thomas. Cherokee People: The Cherokee People: The Story of the Cherokees from Earliest Origins to Contemporary Times. Council Oak Books, 1996. ISBN978-0933031456.