Green McCurtain

Greenwood McCurtain
Ititʋpa Okchamali
Principal Chief of the Choctaw Nation
In office
1896–1900
Preceded byJefferson Gardner
Succeeded byGilbert Dukes
In office
1902–1910
Preceded byGilbert Dukes
Succeeded byVictor Locke Jr.
Member of the Choctaw Senate
from the Moshulatubbee District
In office
1893–1896
ConstituencyIskvlli Kaunti
Choctaw National Treasurer
In office
1888–1892
Trustee of schools for the
Moshulatubbee District
In office
1880–1884
Member of the Choctaw National Council
from the Moshulatubbee District
In office
1874–1880
ConstituencyIskvlli Kaunti
Sheriff of Skullyville County
In office
1872–1874
Personal details
BornNovember 28, 1848
Skullyville, Choctaw Nation, Indian Territory
DiedDecember 27, 1910 (aged 62)
Kinta, Oklahoma, U.S.
CitizenshipChoctaw Nation
American
Political partyTuskahoma Party
Other political
affiliations
Republican
Parent
RelativesJane Austin McCurtain (sister-in-law)
Jackson McCurtain (brother)
Edmund McCurtain (brother)
Known forVice President of the Sequoyah Convention, last independent Choctaw chief

Greenwood "Green" McCurtain (November 28, 1848 – December 27, 1910) was a Choctaw statesman and law enforcement officer, and the last elected Principal Chief of the Choctaw Nation (1896–1900 and 1902–1906), serving a total of four elected two-year terms. After 1906 and dissolution of tribal governments under the Dawes Act prior to Oklahoma's annexation and achieving statehood, McCurtain was appointed as chief by Theodore Roosevelt. He served in that capacity until his death in 1910, and was the last freely-elected Chief of the Choctaws until 1971.

Green McCurtain also achieved notice for represented his tribe as a delegate at the Sequoyah Constitutional Convention. This was an effort by American Indian nations in Indian Territory to create an Indian-controlled state in what is now Oklahoma. They were not successful in getting Congressional support for this proposal, as Euro-Americans who had established considerable presence in the Oklahoma Territory with Federal backing, lobbied strongly for the two territories to be admitted as a single state.