Chickasaw WWI veteran’s story lives on

Published: 16 November 2024

via the Duncan Banner newspaper (OK) website

Sarah Elisabeth Sawyer

Author Sarah Elisabeth Sawyer poses with her book "Otis W. Leader: The Ideal American Doughboy." The book was selected by the Oklahoma Center for Books to be placed on the Great Reads from Great Places list in the adult category at the 2024 National Book Festival of the Library of Congress. Special to The Banner

The Chickasaw Nation is filled with stories passed down from generation to generation. Sarah Elisabeth Sawyer’s book “Otis W. Leader: The Ideal American Doughboy” recounts the story of a First American World War I veteran. The book was featured at the Library of Congress National Book Festival in August and won two Oklahoma Book Awards.

Each year, the Affiliate Centers for the Book chooses a book that represents its state’s heritage to go to a Washington, DC convention where each state and territory has a table for their “Great Reads.” Sawyer’s book was selected by the Oklahoma Center for the Book to be Oklahoma’s “Great Read.”

Sawyer is a story archaeologist who looks at past lives and events to share with the world. She works diligently to uncover historic events and allow people’s legacies to live forever. Through years of dedicated research through documents, letters and excerpts from Leader’s personal journal, Sawyer weaves together the story of Otis W. Leader’s journey during the war.

“Otis W. Leader: The Ideal American Doughboy” describes the life of Leader and his service to his country. Leader was a 35-year-old man of Chickasaw, Choctaw, Cherokee and Irish descent. Leader was a widower with three children. He was accused of being a German spy, despite being a patriot. Sawyer said Leader’s mind was set to serve his country even before America entered the war. He knew he wanted to do his part.

According to Sawyer, Leader was one of the first to be shipped off to France in WWI and was one of the initial First American soldiers to step foot on French soil. Upon his arrival in France, there was a Fourth of July parade. An artist at the event noticed how Leader stood out from the crowd.

“The artist had spotted Otis in the Fourth of July parade,’ Sawyer said. “He thought, ‘Who better to represent the American soldiers than an American Indian?’

“He was chosen in France to represent the ideal American doughboy and along those lines, he was chosen to represent the state of Oklahoma at the Library of Congress’s National Book Festival,” said Sawyer. “Otis will be doing everyone proud once again.”

Sawyer said Leader personifies what it means to be selfless and to fight for what is right.

Read the entire article on the Duncan Banner website.
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