Wilma Mankiller (born November 18, 1945, Tahlequah, Oklahoma, U.S.—died April 6, 2010, Adair county, Oklahoma) was a Native American leader and activist, the first woman chief of a major tribe.
Mankiller was of Cherokee, Dutch, and Irish descent; the name Mankiller derives from the high military rank achieved by a Cherokee ancestor. She grew up on Mankiller Flats, the farm granted to her grandfather as part of a government settlement after the forced relocation of his tribe. After the failure of the farm, the family moved to California. During the 1960s Mankiller studied sociology and got a job as a social worker. In 1969 she became active in the Native American Rights movement. She moved back to Oklahoma to reclaim Mankiller Flats in the mid-1970s and in 1977 took a job as economic stimulus coordinator for the Cherokee Nation. Completing her degree in social science and taking courses in community planning at the University of Arkansas, she initiated a number of projects aimed at greater development of the Cherokee communities in Oklahoma.
In 1983 Mankiller won election as deputy principal Cherokee chief, and, when the principal chief became head of the Bureau of Indian Affairs in 1985, Mankiller succeeded him as principal chief. She thereby became the first woman ever to serve as chief of a major Native American tribe. Two years later she was elected chief in her own right. Her victory ushered in an administration that focused on lowering the high unemployment rate and increasing educational opportunities, improving community health care, and developing the economy of northeastern Oklahoma. She emphasized the necessity of retaining certain Cherokee traditions by creating the Institute for Cherokee Literacy. Mankiller was reelected in 1991, but she did not run in 1995. She was inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame in 1993, and in 1998 she received the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Her autobiography, Mankiller: A Chief and Her People, was published in 1993.