Dorothy Lonewolf Miller

Dorothy Lonewolf Miller
Born 1920
West Liberty, Iowa
Died May 30, 2003(2003-05-30)
Richmond, California
Nationality American
Occupation social worker
Years active 1940-2000
Known for Alcatraz occupation health worker, activist

Dorothy Lonewolf Miller (1920-2003) was a Blackfoot activist from Iowa. She was a union organizer, social worker and health care advocate, who participated in the Alcatraz occupation, providing support at the health clinic established on the island. She spent 40 years researching social issues and providing social services to Native Americans, children, prisoners, and mental health patients in California and was posthumously inducted into the California Social Work Hall of Distinction in 2004.

Biography

Dorothy Lonewolf Miller, who was part Blackfoot, was born in 1920 in West Liberty, Iowa[1] At age 19, she was part of the Iowa Writers' Workshop and began publishing poems in anthologies.[2] Around the same time, she began working in factories in Iowa as a union organizer, starting a lifelong career of activism.[3] Miller enrolled in the University of Iowa earning a bachelor's degree in 1955 in sociology. She continued her studies there, obtaining a master's degree in Social Work in 1957.[2]

In the 1960s, she moved to California and became a part of the national deinstitutionalization movement, advocating for mental health patients to be treated from home rather than institutionalized. She worked and researched at the California Department of Mental Hygiene and contributed to the legislative reforms of the state hospital systems.[3] In 1966, Miller left public service to found a non-profit research firm, Scientific Analysis Corporation, of San Francisco. Among the social policies she researched were alcoholism's effect on children, mental health, prison reform, runaways and urban American Indians. In 1967, Miller completed her PhD in Social Welfare at UC Berkeley[2] and in 1968 her research was used to help pass the Lanterman-Petris-Short Act. That same year, she founded and became director of the Institute for Scientific Analysis (ISA).[3]

When Native Americans began the occupation of Alcatraz Island, Miller worked with Stella Leach, an LPN who was the primary organizer, and Jenny Joe, along with volunteer doctors to provide health services at a clinic established on the island in one of the buildings.[4] She also wrote poems about the event to help publicize it and preserve the memory of the occupation for posterity,[5] in nearly a dozen verses written during the occupation.[6] Miller also sat up an "Indian Desk" at her company to channel money and communications to the occupiers,[2] manning both the Indians of All Tribes bank account and radio services between Alcatraz and the mainland.[1]

Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, Miller conducted research and published her findings on social services and welfare. Many of her studies were state- or federally-funded programs which launched initiatives and organizations for improving education and services to various sectors of society.[3] She continued serving as director of the ISA until her retirement in 2000.[1] She donated 400 books on Native Americans to the Soboba Band of Luiseno Indians in San Jacinto, California shortly before her death to enable to tribe to establish a library. In her honor, they created the Lonewolf Reading Room and established the Cham-Mix Poki (House of our Culture) to house the collection.[3]

Miller died on May 30, 2003[2] and in 2004 was posthumously inducted into the California Social Work Hall of Distinction.[7]

Selected works

References

  1. 1 2 3 Goldstein 2011, p. 147.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Knight, Heather (June 10, 2003). "Dorothy Lonewolf Miller -- poet, Indian activist". San Francisco, California: SF Gate. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 "Miller, Dorothy". Social Work Hall of Distinction. San Francisco, California: University of Southern California. 2006. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
  4. Johnson 1996, p. 89.
  5. Johnson 1996, p. 49.
  6. Rader 2011.
  7. "Hall of Distinction". Social Work Hall of Distinction. 2004. Retrieved 29 October 2015.

Sources

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