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  1. Chief John Smith (likely born between 1822 and 1826, though allegedly as early as 1780; died February 6, 1922) was an American Ojibwe (Chippewa) Indian who lived in the area of Cass Lake, Minnesota. In 1920, two years before his death, he appeared as the main feature in a motion picture exhibition that toured the US, featuring aged Native ...

    • Did Chief John Smith Live to 137?
    • Further Investigations Into Chief John Smith’s Age
    • The Last Days of The “137-Year-Old Man”

    According to the Chippewa people, eyewitness accounts, and Chief John Smith himself, he was 137 when he died, putting his birth year at 1785. There’s no doubt that his age is highly contested. However, no one has ever been able to figure out exactly when John Smith was born. Paul Buffalo, a man who livedwith the Chippewa as a child and even called ...

    The newspaper that reported Smith’s death, Minnesota’s Star Tribune, attempted to validate his age. The paper pointed out that Smith clearly remembered specific battles that the Chippewa had with their neighbors — the Sioux — that were said to have taken place before the turn of the 19th century. The Star Tribunealso said that Smith remembered the ...

    His only heir was an adopted son named Tom Smith who maintained that his father was indeed 137 when he died. He also claimed that Smith was active in the years up until his death, mentioning that he had been hit by a train while crossing the railroad tracks in 1920 and had only taken three weeks to recover. He was even active in the year that he di...

  2. Oct 13, 2020 · White Wolf Chief John Smith was a Native American of the Ojibwe (also known as Ojibwa, Chippewa, or Saulteux) people that lived in the Cass Lake, Minnesota area of the United States during the 1800s and early 1900s. He is best known for his extremely wrinkled appearance, and that people claimed that he is the oldest Native American to ever live.

  3. Apr 28, 2017 · Smith was a Chippewa Indian who lived in the Cass Lake, Minnesota area and is reputed to have died at the age of 138. He was known as “The Old Indian” to the white people.

  4. Mar 30, 2018 · The Chippewa Native American named Ga-Be-Nah-Gewn-Wonce —which translates to Sloughing Flesh or Wrinkled Meat, depending on your source—was called John Smith by white people, according to a February 8, 1922, front-page obituary in the Minneapolis (Morning) Star Tribune.

  5. 137-Year-Old Chippewa Indian Dies in North Minnesota Home. Oldest Man in Country Was Active Until Week Before Death. Cass Lake, Minn., Feb. 6 – Ga-Be-Nah-Gewn-Wonce, also known as John Smith, a Chippewa Indian reputed to be 137 years old, died here today after a week's illness with pneumonia.

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  7. Aug 3, 2017 · At the ripe age of 137, White Wolf a.k.a. Chief John Smith is considered the oldest Native American to have ever lived, 1785–1922.