Marie C. Cox

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Marie C. Cox
1971
Born
Marie Cerday

(1920-01-17)January 17, 1920
DiedMay 10, 2005(2005-05-10) (aged 85)
Midwest City, Oklahoma, U.S.
Occupation(s)Native American, children's and women's rights activist
Years active1970–1990
Known forfounding the North American Indian Women's Association and foster care reform
Spouse
James M. Cox
(m. 1938)

Marie C. Cox (January 17, 1920 – May 10, 2005) was a

David Hall. She was named as an Outstanding Indian Woman of 1977 by the North American Indian Women's Association, and served on the National Advisory Council on Indian Education from 1983 to 1990. In 1993, she was inducted into the Oklahoma Women's Hall of Fame
for her work with foster children and the founding of the North American Indian Women's Association.

Early life

Marie Cerday was born on January 17, 1920, at the Lawton, Oklahoma Indian Hospital to Herlinda (née Portillo) and Dave Cerday.[1][2] She attended the Ft. Sill Indian Boarding School and later went to Walters High School. Cerday went on to further her education, studying at Central State University in Edmond, Oklahoma. On June 6, 1938, in Lawton, Cerday married James M. Cox.[1] James was the grandson of Chief Quanah Parker and later served as chair of the Comanche Nation.[3]

Years of activism

In 1970, Cox founded the

Albuquerque, New Mexico, establishing education as its focus for the coming year.[5] Cox served as national president of the organization through 1973.[6]

In the early 1970s, Cox began touring Native American communities throughout the United States collecting data on the needs of Indian children. She specifically focused on institutionalized children, who were part of the

David Hall as the Outstanding Citizen of Oklahoma.[1]

In 1975, Cox was a speaker in Window Rock, Arizona, at the Southwest Indian Women's Conference.[10] More than 800 native women attended the conference, which looked at both political and cultural mechanisms that fostered discrimination against Native American women, but their goals were to empower women within their traditional tribal identity.[11] In 1977, at a banquet hosted at the Chilocco Indian Agricultural School by the NAIWA, Cox was honored as the "Outstanding Indian Woman of 1977" for her work in establishing the NAIWA and with children's needs.[3] That same year, she attended the NAIWA conference which was investigating the sterilization of Native American women by the Indian Health Service. Other issues examined included the provisions of the Indian Child Welfare Act,[12] which had long been a focus for Cox.[9]

In 1983, Cox was appointed by President Ronald Reagan to succeed Nadine Chase on the National Advisory Council on Indian Education.[13] She was reappointed in 1985,[14] 1987,[15] and 1989, serving until she was replaced in 1990 by Terry Neese.[16] In 1984, Cox was appointed to the board of the Child Welfare League of America and in 1988 she served as a member for the Oklahoma Indian Affairs Commission.[1] In 1993, Cox was inducted into the Oklahoma Women's Hall of Fame[17] and in 1999 she and her husband James were interviewed as part of the Museum of the Great Plains Oral History Project.[18]

She died in

Midwest City
, Oklahoma, on May 10, 2005, aged 85.

References

Citations

Bibliography