*** Welcome to piglix ***

Patricia Ann McGee

Patricia Ann McGee
Patricia Ann McGee.jpg
Prescott Yavapai Tribal president
Preceded by Don S. Mitchell
Succeeded by Stanhope Rice, Jr.
Personal details
Born (1926-07-09)July 9, 1926
Holbrook, Arizona
Died April 6, 1994(1994-04-06) (aged 67)
Phoenix, Arizona
Resting place Yavapai-Prescott Tribal Cemetery
Spouse(s) Ernest “Ernie” McGee (1931-1994)
Parents Amy Jimulla and Albert Vaughn

Patricia Ann McGee (1926-1994) (Yavapai-Hualapai) was a Native American tribal leader who served as President of the Yavapai-Prescott Tribe. An effective advocate for her tribe, she garnered millions of dollars in federal and state funds to improve the infrastructure on the Yavapai reservation. She negotiated a water settlement agreement between the federal government and the tribe and established the first gaming license for any Indian tribe in Arizona. She helped develop a community center which earned a federal design award and served as an educational center to preserve both the culture and language of the Yavapai. In 2006, McGee was nominated by Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor and inducted into the Arizona Women's Hall of Fame.

Patricia Ann Vaughn was born on July 9, 1926 in Holbrook, Arizona to Amy (née Jimulla) and Albert Vaughn. Her heritage was half Yavapai and half Hualapai. After her mother's death in 1940, Vaughan and her brother went to live with their grandparents, Sam and Viola Jimulla, chief and chieftess of the Yavapai-Prescott Tribe. Vaughn attended the Indian school at Valentine, Arizona and then graduated from Prescott High School. She continued her studies and was an honor student at the Haskell University in Lawrence, Kansas and took extension courses at the University of Kansas in psychology and public speaking. In the 1950s, she married Korean War veteran, Ernest McGee (1931-1994).


...
Wikipedia

...