Legend has it that Native American chiefs held council under its shade.
Peace treaties were made with surrounding Native American chiefs.
Wanamassa was a Native American chief of the 17th century.
He is the only Native American chief interred there.
The American chief told us he wanted land.
One story says it was named after an Algonquian Native American chief who once lived in the area.
Then there was the pesticide deal with the Native American chief.
Norm Stamper is an American former chief of police and writer.
As stated in the first article cited above, the majority opinion of the find at the time was that it represented a Native American chief.
The latter, he saw, was a career diplomat from the aristocracy, immaculately dressed for a meeting with the American chief of state.