Claremore
HISTORY
The principal chief of the Arkansas Band of Osage, Claremore, was formally known as Gra-mo’n (Arrow Going Home) and is believed to have been the son of Gra moie (Moving Hawk) or Gra-to-moh-se (Iron Hawk), a hereditary Osage chief. French and Spanish officials in Louisiana knew Gra moie by several names, including Glamore, Clarmont, and Clermont; Americans called his son “Claremore.” Gra moie died circa 1795. Chief Claremore was young when his right to succeed his father was usurped. He subsequently moved from the Osage villages in Missouri to the Three Forks vicinity of present Oklahoma. There many Osage had relocated under Cashesegra (Makes Tracks Far Away). Because they lived near the Arkansas River, these Osage were designated the Arkansas Band. Claremore was more influential than Cashesegra and became their leader. Claremore’s village was located along the Verdigris River northwest of present Claremore in Rogers County. Western Cherokees and their allies destroyed the settlement during the so-called Battle of Claremore Mound in autumn 1817. Claremore, a noted warrior, and his braves were absent when the attack occurred. The settlement reportedly consisted of three hundred lodges and three thousand inhabitants circa 1820. Because of his village, Claremore was also called To-Wo’n Ga-Xe (Town Maker). Chief Claremore had good relations with whites. He welcomed the Union Mission in
6 Guide to Claremore