Houston Benge Teehee (sometimes spelled Tehee) (October 14 or 31, 1874 – November 19, 1953) was an American lawyer and politician from Oklahoma most known for serving as Register of the Treasury from 1915 to 1919. Teehee was from a prominent Cherokee family, with his father serving in all three branches of the Cherokee Nation's government. Before and after statehood, he was elected to positions in city government in Tahlequah, Oklahoma, between 1902 and 1910 when he was elected to the Oklahoma House of Representatives, where he would serve two terms.
After serving as Register of the Treasury he returned to Oklahoma and continued to practice law, until he was appointed assistant attorney general in 1926; in 1927, he was appointed to the Oklahoma Supreme Court Commission. He retired from political office after his Commissioner term expired in 1930.
Family, early life, and education
Teehee[b] was born in the town of Muldrow, in the Cherokee Nation[5] (modern-day Oklahoma) on October 14 or 31, 1874.[c]
He was five-eighths Cherokee.[2][d] His father, Rev. Stephen Teehee (or "Tehee") (1837–1907) was a Baptist minister and a unilingual speaker of Cherokee, who was originally from Cherokee territory in Georgia; at various times, he served the Cherokee Nation as a district clerk, a district solicitor, and a circuit judge, and was part of its Executive Council and its senate. His mother was Rhoda Benge, who died in 1886, when she was thirty-nine;[8] at the time, Teehee was twelve.[7]
He then returned to Tahlequah, where he spent ten years working in retail,[6] and two in a bank.[8] During this time, he studied law with John H. Pitchford.[6]
Political and business careers
In 1902, Teehee was elected alderman of Tahlequah, a position he retained until 1906. In March 1907, he was admitted to the bar.[8] Later that year, he was elected Mayor of Tahlequah succeeding Horace Gray, the city's first Republican mayor.[10] At the end of his term in 1909, he was succeeded by T.J. Adair.[11] In June 1908 he resigned from the bank and opened his own law practice.[8]
After leaving the Oklahoma House in 1914, he was appointed as a United States Probate Attorney in the United States Department of the Interior.[4] On March 3, 1915, Woodrow Wilson nominated Teehee to be Register of the United States Treasury, replacing Gabe E. Parker;[13] Teehee was sworn in on March 24, 1915.[14] As Register, Teehee personally signed so many Liberty Bonds that he experienced repetitive strain injury, permanently damaging his hand and arm.[5] In October 1919, Teehee announced his resignation as Register, to become effective as of the 31st of that month.[15]
After leaving the United States Treasury in 1919, he entered the private sector and was the treasurer for Seamans Oil Company and the R. E. Seaman Company. By 1921 he was one of the vice-presidents of the Continental Asphalt and Petroleum Company.[8]
He served as an assistant attorney general from 1926 until his appointment to the Oklahoma Supreme Court Commission's First Judicial District on May 28, 1927.[16][17] His term ended on December 31, 1930.[f]
^Cherokee Nation citizens were granted United States citizenship in 1907.[1]
^The surname is said to have originated when his grandfather, whose name was transliterated by later sources as "Dehininee"[2] and "Di-hi-hi",[3] (meaning "killer"), enlisted in the Union Army[4] during the American Civil War; "the nearest the recruiting sergeant could come to it was 'Teehee', and so it went into the record and became affixed as a family name."[2]
^Sources disagree on whether Teehee was born on October 14th[6][7] or October 31st[5][8] of 1874.
^According to Emmet Starr's 1922 History of the Cherokee Indians and Their Legends and Folk Lore, "On the rolls of the Cherokee Nation his father is listed as seven-eighths Cherokee. Houston B. Teehee as five-eighths. His mother was a one-half Cherokee, her death occurring prior to the enrollment."[8]
^Sources differ on listing his term in office as starting in 1910/12[6] or 1911/13,[5] because elections were held in even-numbered years and the new legislative session would start in the following odd-numbered year. In Oklahoma, legislators officially take office the year of their election.[12]
^ abcHouston B. Teehee, from the Arizona Range News; excerpted in The Native American, magazine of the Phoenix Indian School, vol. 16, no. 22, published May 29, 1915; compiled in The Native American volume 16, p. 256
^ abc"Houston B. Tehee", by Beulah Bluebird, in The Oklahoma Indian School Magazine; vol. II, no. 1, January 1933; p. 16
^ abcdefghTehee, Houston Benge, in History of the Cherokee Indians and Their Legends and Folk Lore; by Emmet Starr; published 1922 by Warden Company; via archive.org