American, Maidu Tribe of the Federated Indians of California
Other names
Marie Potts, Chankutpan, "One With Sharp Eyes"
Occupation(s)
Maidu cultural leader, activist, educator, author, journalist, editor
Spouse
Hensley Potts (m. 1915)
Children
7
Marie Mason Potts (1895 – 1978) was a Mountain Maidu cultural leader, activist, educator, writer, journalist, and editor.[1][2] She was an influential California Native American activist who travel lectured on tribal sovereignty, heritage, and cultural preservation.[3] Potts had authored two books, "The Northern Maidu" (1971) and "Honey Run Bridge".[4] She was also known as Chankutpan,[5] "One With Sharp Eyes",[6] and néeMarie Mason.
Early life and education
Marie Mason was born in 1895, in Big Meadows (now known as Chester), Plumas County, California.[7] Her father was a minerals prospector of European-origins that had sexually assaulted her mother; and then left her as a single parent.[6] She was a member of the Maidu Tribe of the Federated Indians of California.[8]
In 1915, she married her former classmate from Greenville, Hensley Potts (Concow Maidu), and together they had 7 children.[7][11] Starting in 1942, the family moved to Sacramento, California.[7]
Career
In 1946 and 1947, she participated in the founding of the Federated Indians of California (FIC), an organization formed to support land claims case before the judicial relations arbiter Indian Claims Commission, against the United States government.[7] For three decades Potts was an editor of the FIC alternative newspaper, "The Smoke Signal" (published from 1947 until 1977).[12] It has been reported as the earliest Native American newspaper.[4]
Potts was a founding member of the Sacramento Indian Center, and the American Indian Press Association Intertribal Council Center.[3] She was a part of a group that later became the California Education Association.[3] Potts taught American and Californian Native American history at California State University, Sacramento (CSU).[3]
In 1975, she was honored by the state of California; and in 1977 the California State Park and Recreation Department.[5] The California State Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (now the California Department of Public Health) had a building named after her and included a lobby plaque in her dedication.[5][10][13]
Publications
Potts, Marie (1971). The Northern Maidu. Happy Camp, CA: Naturegraph and Keven Brown Publications. ISBN978-0879610708.