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Charles Owen Tillman Jr.

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Charles Owen Tillman Jr. Veteran

Birth
Death
1 Feb 2022 (aged 84)
Burial
Fairfax, Osage County, Oklahoma, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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The Osage Nation has lost one of its most distinguished leaders, Former Principal Chief Charles Owen Tillman Jr., (Ho.Tha.Lin), longtime resident of Fairfax, Oklahoma. He passed peacefully on February 1, 2022, at the age of 84. He was born September 22, 1937, to parents Charles Owen Tillman Sr. and Josephine Goode Tillman in Ponca City, Okla. His grandparents, Hall Emerson Goode Sr. and Maggie (Bates) Goode were original Osage Allotees and from the Grayhorse District.
Charles, well known as Charlie, graduated from Fairfax High School and studied at the University of Oklahoma. He served in the military as a member of the US Army.
Charles married Cordelia (Mahan) Tillman. Together, they had three sons Chuck, Jody, and Mike.
In his younger days, he worked at W.W. Steele, Conoco Phillips in the Geology Department, as an entrepreneur in the plastic industry, and was involved in the early stages of Indian Gaming.
Charles had a long career in Osage politics serving as a councilman on the 25th Osage Tribal Council from 1978-1982; and elected Principal Chief for three consecutive four-year terms from 1990 to 2002.
During his tenure he began the Highest Posted Price lawsuit, which turned into the Osage Trust Case. Becoming the largest settlement in the U.S. government history ever negotiated with a single Native American tribe, the Osage won in 2010. Charlie was the first Osage Leader to attend what would become the White House Tribal Nations Summit, but in 1994 it was called the "United States-First Nations Historic Meeting" where he met with President Bill Clinton and had breakfast with Vice President Al Gore.
Former Chief Tillman took pride participating in Inlonshka every year with his children and grandchildren along beside him. He also enjoyed playing golf, watching OU football, and had a short stint as an OSU football fan when his son played for OSU. He was preceded in death by his grandparents Hall and Maggie Goode; his mother Josephine Goode Tillman; his father Charles O. Tillman Sr.; his brother Rodney Tillman and his son Michael Tillman.
The Osage Nation has lost one of its most distinguished leaders, Former Principal Chief Charles Owen Tillman Jr., (Ho.Tha.Lin), longtime resident of Fairfax, Oklahoma. He passed peacefully on February 1, 2022, at the age of 84. He was born September 22, 1937, to parents Charles Owen Tillman Sr. and Josephine Goode Tillman in Ponca City, Okla. His grandparents, Hall Emerson Goode Sr. and Maggie (Bates) Goode were original Osage Allotees and from the Grayhorse District.
Charles, well known as Charlie, graduated from Fairfax High School and studied at the University of Oklahoma. He served in the military as a member of the US Army.
Charles married Cordelia (Mahan) Tillman. Together, they had three sons Chuck, Jody, and Mike.
In his younger days, he worked at W.W. Steele, Conoco Phillips in the Geology Department, as an entrepreneur in the plastic industry, and was involved in the early stages of Indian Gaming.
Charles had a long career in Osage politics serving as a councilman on the 25th Osage Tribal Council from 1978-1982; and elected Principal Chief for three consecutive four-year terms from 1990 to 2002.
During his tenure he began the Highest Posted Price lawsuit, which turned into the Osage Trust Case. Becoming the largest settlement in the U.S. government history ever negotiated with a single Native American tribe, the Osage won in 2010. Charlie was the first Osage Leader to attend what would become the White House Tribal Nations Summit, but in 1994 it was called the "United States-First Nations Historic Meeting" where he met with President Bill Clinton and had breakfast with Vice President Al Gore.
Former Chief Tillman took pride participating in Inlonshka every year with his children and grandchildren along beside him. He also enjoyed playing golf, watching OU football, and had a short stint as an OSU football fan when his son played for OSU. He was preceded in death by his grandparents Hall and Maggie Goode; his mother Josephine Goode Tillman; his father Charles O. Tillman Sr.; his brother Rodney Tillman and his son Michael Tillman.


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