Helena Conley

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Born(1864-09-10)September 10, 1864
DiedSeptember 15, 1958(1958-09-15) (aged 94)
EducationPark College
Helena Conley
Floating Voice
20th-century B&W portrait photo of a Native American woman looking at the camera, wearing a dark hat, fur-collared coat, sparkling necklace, and pale blouse.
Conley in 1930
Born(1864-09-10)September 10, 1864
DiedSeptember 15, 1958(1958-09-15) (aged 94)
Resting placeWyandot National Burying Ground
EducationPark College
OccupationsActivist, herbalist
Known forDefense of Huron Cemetery, "The Wyandot Curse"
Relatives
FamilyZane family

Helena Gros Conley (September 10, 1864 – September 15, 1958) was a Wyandot activist and self-styled sorceress known for her fierce defense of the Huron Cemetery in Kansas City, Kansas. Along with her sisters, Lyda and Ida, she gained national attention for occupying the cemetery in a makeshift fort to prevent its sale and development by the federal government. Conley was particularly noted for her role in physically guarding the grounds, her use of curses against political opponents, and her reputation as a "force to be reckoned with."

Helena Conley was born on September 10, 1864, on a farm near Nearman station in Wyandotte County, Kansas.[1] She was the third of four daughters born to Andrew Serenes Conley and Eliza Burton Zane.[1] Her father was born in New York and died in 1885, while her mother was born in Ohio and died in 1879.[1] Through her mother, Conley was one-sixteenth Wyandot and the great-great-granddaughter of Chief Tarhe, a distinguished head of the Wyandot tribe and the Huron confederacy.[1]

Her mother had received a 65-acre land grant at the age of 17, which became the family farm where Helena and her sisters were born.[1] Around 1890, the sisters were forced to abandon the farm after the Missouri River eroded the land on its south bank.[1] Following this loss, they moved to 1712 N. 3rd Street in Kansas City, Kansas, a property willed to them by their aunt, Sarah Zane.[1]

Conley pursued higher education at Park College, rowing a boat across the Missouri River daily to attend classes.[1] As a young woman, she was secretary of the Sunday school at Six Mile Methodist Church and later became a member of the Seventh Street Methodist Church.[1] For a time, she also worked as an instructor and matron for girls at the Wyandot Indian reservation in Oklahoma.[1]

Defense of Huron Cemetery

Later life and death

References

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