From This Corner - Chief Glen Brock: A Shawnee Thinker (2024)

From This Corner - Chief Glen Brock: A Shawnee Thinker (1)

Born on leap year day, the 29th of February, the ninth child in a family of nine children and the ninth Chief of the Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma in modern elected times, Glen Brock did as the now famous quotation implores, “Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.” After attending Business Committee meetings for several years, Brock became interested in tribal government and decided to run for the position of Second Chief, to which he was elected unopposed in 1996. When Chief Nelis Captain resigned, Glen Brock advanced to Chief in October 1997 to fill the vacancy as the constitution dictates. It was a position he neither asked for nor particularly wanted, but he served his tribe willingly and ably until the term ended in September, 1998, just shy of
one year in office. He chose not to run for reelection.

The son of Lawrence D. Brock and Ruthie May Tucker Brock, Glen was born February 29, 1956. His mother was the daughter of Silas Tucker and Mary Punch Tucker. Mary Punch was full blood Shawnee and Silas Tucker was full blood Shawnee/Peoria. Thus Glen’s mother was classified four fourths (4/4) Native American, meaning one hundred percent Native American, just not 100% of one tribe, the technical definition of full blood. When Ruthie died at the age of 95 in 2013, she was the last person in the Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma to be four fourths (4/4). An era had ended. Silas and Mary Punch Tucker were from White Oak, Oklahoma. Glen’s mother, Ruthie May, was Shawnee/Peoria but Glen proudly states that she always considered herself Eastern Shawnee and all nine of the children are Eastern Shawnee which includes four daughters: Virginia Clark, Florence Routh, Geraldine Loftin, Linda Shores and five sons Lawrence Duke, Johnny, Darrell, Gary and Glen Brock.

From This Corner - Chief Glen Brock: A Shawnee Thinker (2)

(Larry Lippitt, Linda Shores, and Glen Brock)

From This Corner - Chief Glen Brock: A Shawnee Thinker (3)

Glen was raised in the Oak Grove School District, near Peoria, Oklahoma. He went to grade school at Oak Grove, and then graduated from Quapaw High School. After receiving his high school diploma, he attended NEO A&M College at Miami, OK, receiving a certificate in marketing and management. He then changed majors and graduated with an Associate of Arts (AA) degree in nursing. Next he passed state boards, becoming a Registered Nurse (RN). He didn’t stop there but continued his education at Southwest Missouri State University (SMSU) in Springfield, MO, graduating with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) in 1986. He continues to work in his chosen field of nursing today (Dec. 2013).

Even though his education and his career kept him busy, Chief Glen Brock always found time or more appropriately made time to serve his tribe/our tribe. He first began attending Business Committee meetings when he was a teenager. At that time the Tribe did not have any buildings, so the meetings took place in the Ottawa Tribal Building across from NEO A&M College in Miami, OK. He has attended every Eastern Shawnee Annual Pow Wow since its inception, serving on the original pow wow committee, then being Chairman of the Pow Wow Committee for several years. Those cultural traditions lead him to become interested in tribal government.

During his tenure as Chief, he and the Business Committee were involved in several endeavors. The first was the acquisition of additional shares in People’s Bank of Seneca. Chief Brock indicates he was also in negotiations with the city of Ft. Scott, Kansas and the state of Kansas to place a gaming facility on property near our motel in Fort Scott, Kansas. Other projects included planning for a convenience/truck plaza on the property of Highway 10C and discussion of expanding the sewer treatment plant at Seneca to accommodate continued growth at our tribal complex. A grant of more than one million dollars for our Housing Authority was obtained and plans were begun for the current housing development. Chief Brock indicated that during his time as Chief, he enjoyed interacting with tribal members and other Indian people. He states he learned the meaning of being a sovereign nation.

In a statement prepared for this article, Chief Brock wrote, “Our tribe has come a long way from a time when the Business Committee met in the Ottawa Tribal Building across from NEO A&M College when I was a teenager and first attended these meetings. I believe our success has been due to very strong, intelligent, forward thinking individuals. Our tribal heritage comes from a historically independent and wise people. I think for all Shawnee to continue to exist as a sovereign people we will have to work together, to maintain tradition and culture maximize our effort to learn our Shawnee language, which is an integral part of our being, as Shawnee people.”

Glen Brock lived up to the challenge of doing what he could for his tribe, our tribe. He continues to work in the nursing field, continues to be one of the “seven in seven”, a term his mother Ruthie May laughingly referred to as seven of her nine children living within seven miles of each other, and continues to “think Shawnee”, a phrase he used to end every article he wrote for the Shooting Star.

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From This Corner - Chief Glen Brock: A Shawnee Thinker (2024)

FAQs

Who was the Shawnee chief who tried to negotiate with his white enemies? ›

In 1811, the Shawnee Chief Tecumseh tried to negotiate with the American government to stop western expansion into native lands. He formed a confederacy of native tribes and represented the interests of many natives.

Who is the chief of the Shawnee tribe? ›

Chief Ben Barnes (@ChiefBarnes) / X. Chief of the Shawnee Tribe, a federally-recognized tribe of American Indians.

Who was the famous Shawnee Indian chief? ›

Tecumseh began life in the Shawnee village of Piqua, Ohio on March 9, 1768 as a great meteor flashed and burned its way across the heavens. This event accounts for his name: The Shooting Star, or Celestial Panther Lying in Wait. Tecumseh grew to be a famous warrior and dynamic orator.

Are there any Shawnee left in Ohio? ›

Most American Indians, including the Shawnee Tribe that lived throughout much of southern Ohio, were forced to leave Ohio during the Indian removals of the 1800s. Many landed in Oklahoma, where the Eastern Shawnee are now headquartered. Today there are no federally recognized Native American tribes in Ohio.

What God did the Shawnee Tribe worship? ›

However, the Shawnee tribe's original religion is broadly referred to now as a "traditional tribal religion." Specifically, the Shawnee's tribal religion maintained mythologies detailing the creation and sustenance of the world: the Shawnee believed the creator was named Kokumthena (translated as "Our Grandmother"), a ...

Do the Shawnee still exist? ›

Today, the Absentee Shawnee people remain very traditional. Their cultural heritage continues to thrive through their ceremonies and dances, tribal rites, and continuous rejuvenation of the Shawnee language. The Absentee Shawnee tribal government is composed of a legislative/executive branch and a judicial branch.

Who defeated the Shawnee Tribe? ›

The organized resistance prompted Governor William Henry Harrison to lead roughly 1,000 soldiers and militiamen to destroy the Shawnee village “Prophetstown,” named for Tecumseh's brother Tenskwatawa, “the Prophet,” and designed by Tecumseh to be the heart of the new Native American confederacy.

Which Shawnee chief opposed white settlers? ›

Tecumseh was a Shawnee warrior chief who organized a Native American confederacy in an effort to create an autonomous Indian state and stop white settlement in the Northwest Territory (modern-day Great Lakes region).

What chief of the Shawnee led attacks against white settlers in Ohio 6? ›

Tecumseh (born 1768, southeast of Old Chillicothe [north of modern Xenia, Ohio, U.S.]—died October 5, 1813, near Thames River, Upper Canada [now in Ontario, Canada]) was a Shawnee Indian chief, orator, military leader, and advocate of intertribal Indian alliance who directed Indian resistance to white rule in the Ohio ...

Who was Shawnee chief in the War of 1812? ›

Tecumseh: (1768-1813) Shawnee Indian political leader and leader of the pan-Indian coalition, known as Tecumseh's Confederacy which, joined by British forces, fought against the United States during the War of 1812.

Who was the chief of Shawnee at the Battle of Tippecanoe? ›

The Battle of Tippecanoe (/ˌtɪpəkəˈnuː/ TIP-ə-kə-NOO) was fought on November 7, 1811, in Battle Ground, Indiana, between American forces led by then Governor William Henry Harrison of the Indiana Territory and tribal forces associated with Shawnee leader Tecumseh and his brother Tenskwatawa (commonly known as "The ...

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