Cornplanter Medal


The Cornplanter Medal was named for the Iroquois chief Cornplanter and is an award for scholastic and other contributions to the betterment of knowledge of the Iroquois people. It was initiated by University of Chicago anthropologist Frederick Starr with seed money from nine associates in order to engrave and print sketches of Iroquois games and dances. Starr had two main goals while he planned the medal:
One, he wanted to recognize and award the people who were contributing to research and knowledge of the Iroquois.
Two, he intended to prove that the tribe, contrary to some academic opinion, had artisans that showed abilities of a "true artist", by presenting and preserving the art of the Iroquois youth Jesse Cornplanter.
The medal was endowed through sales of the publication of the sketches in the booklet Iroquois Indian Games and Dances. The young artist of the sketches was credited as "Jesse Cornplanter, Seneca Indian Boy".
First presented in 1904 by the Cayuga County Historical Society in Auburn NY, it was awarded every two years to people who fall into one or more of the following classes:
  • Ethnologists, making worthy field-studies or other investigations among the Iroquois.
  • Historians, making actual contributions to our knowledge of the Iroquois.
  • Artists, worthily representing Iroquois life or types by brush or chisel.
  • Philanthropists, whose efforts are based upon adequate scientific study and appreciation of Iroquois conditions and needs.

List of medal recipients

1904 General John S. Clark, historian and archaeologist1906 Rev. William Martin Beauchamp, archaeologist and ethnologist1908 Dr. David Boyle, archaeologist and ethnologist1910 William P. Letchworth, philanthropist1912 Reuben Gold Thwaites, historian1914 J. N. B. Hewitt, ethnologist1916 Arthur C. Parker, archaeologist and ethnologist1919 Alvin H. Dewey, philanthropist1920 Mary Clark Thompson, philanthropist1923 Professor Frederick Houghton, archaeologist1926 Edwin H. Gohl, archaeologist and artist1965 William N. Fenton, ethnologist and historian1966 William A. Ritchie, archaeologist1967 Merle H. Deardorff, ethnologist and historian1968 Aldelphena Logan, artist1969 Kenneth E. Kidd, historian and archaeologist1970 Anthony F. C. Wallace, ethnologist and historian1971 Floyd G. Lounsbury, linguist and ethnologist1975 Marian E. White, archaeologist and historian; and Walter K. Long, artist1977 Richard S. MacNeish, archaeologist1979 Bruce G. Trigger, historian and archaeologist