Native American Books native American Tribes. Guides you in preparing a family tree of your cherokee ancestors. The Saukie indians and Their Great Chiefs Black Hawk and Keokuk. http://business.michiana.org/jpalmer/nativeam.html
Extractions: ILLINOIS-INDIANA-MICHIGAN-OHIO AND SELECTED OTHER STATES rockingk@michiana.org Native Americans General Cooke, Sarah E. and Ramadhyani, Rachel B. Indians and a Changing Frontier. The Art of George Winter. Catalog of the George Winter Collection Located at the Tippecanoe County Historical Association, Lafayette, Indiana. Indiana Historical Society. Indianapolis. 1993. 269 pages. Hardcover. Winter was born in England but later moved to Logansport, Indiana. A prolific painter who concentrated on Potatawomi and Miami subjects, Winter documents these Native Americans during the late 1830's and early 1840's. Price: $39.95 Illustrated Atlas of Native American History. Chartwell Books, Inc. Edison, New Jersey. 1999. 272 pages. Hardback. Traces the movement of North America's native peoples from prehistoric times to the present day. Price: $37.50 Indian Trade and Traders Martin, Calvin. Keepers of the Game: Indian-Animal Relationships and the Fur Trade. University of California Press. Berkeley. 1978. 226 pages. Hardback.
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Extractions: West "a song in 1996 This can x 11" is in music". Please here with optional was published gift inscriptions. in length. with 58 rate for book is weaving, hideworking, to the Well illustrated note the Ackerman. The and is soft cover 8 1/2" two lengthy is a white photographs. The book half title 3.25 book entitled condition in the ornamental arts, and good native american the plateau". color plates. oklahoma and university of Overall book a oblong lillian a. 174 pages covers "storytelling, of 32 women of a section creator; traditional a good embroidery and cover. Edited by first edition. page has Along with Publisher is be shipped black and media mail arts of Creation's Journey Amer.IndianArtHistory
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Extractions: Links with a check were added recently. Acoyauh's Prehispanic Cultures in Mexico 3 maps of the area ALABAMA FEDERALLY RECOGNIZED INDIAN TRIBES points them out Alabama Maps: 1818-1830 nice maps from the Lowery Pages Alabama Maps: 1832-1870 nice maps from the Lowery Pages Alaska Indian map very big and detailed ALASKA FEDERALLY RECOGNIZED INDIAN TRIBES points them out Alaska Native Language who speaks what where Alaska Native Regional Corporations lots of info, too
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Extractions: This site received over 1,500,000 hits in 2002 from 50 countries throughout the world. American Indian Studies programs were created at a number of universities throughout the United States beginning in the late 1960s. The American Indian Studies Program at California State University, Long Beach celebrated its 25th anniversary in 1994 and is the oldest continuous existing program. This world wide site is a developing site supervised by Professor Troy Johnson and is dedicated to the presentation of unique artwork, photographs, video and sound recordings which accurately reflect the history, culture and richness of the Native American experience in North America and has been expanded to include Indian people of Central America and Mexico. Contributions and comments may be made by contacting Professor Johnson See the various books Troy Johnson has written on the American Indian Culture. Alcatraz Occupation: The Story The 1969 occupation of Alcatraz Island is seen as a watershed event in contemporary Native American history. This site provides a brief history of the occupation as documented in my book, "The Occupation of Alcatraz Island, Indian Self-determination and The Rise of Indian Activism Alcatraz Occupaion in photographs This collection of photographs and descriptions by Ilka Hartmann tell the story of the American Indian occupation of Alcatraz Island through the eyes of those who made up the occupation force.
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Extractions: BEN NIGHTHORSE CAMPBELL Campbell is the only American Indian presently serving in the United States Senate, and is one of 44 Chiefs of the Northern Cheyenne Tribe. He received a bachelors degree in physical education and fine arts from San Jose University in 1957 and later attended Meiji University in Tokyo in 1960 as a special research student. Before entering college Campbell served in the U.S. Air force from 1951-53, stationed in Korea, where he attained the rank of Airman 2nd Class. Campbell is a renowned jewelry designer, athlete, and trainer of champion quarter horses. He participated in the 1964 Olympic Games as a U.S. Olympic Judo Team as a member, and has has been a judo instructor. He was elected to the Colorado State Legislature in 1982, serving for four years. CHARLES CURTIS (Kaw) He was elected to and served in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1893- 1907. He also served in the U.S. Senate from 1907- 1912 and 1915- 1929. He was elected Vice President of The United States with his running mate as President, Herbert Hoover 1929-1933 No Picture available (if you know a source for one please contact me DEGANAWIDA and HAYOWENTHA (Iroquois) Both Iroquois chiefs and co-founders of the Iroquois League of Nations, the first constitutional democracy of North America. The League was founded about 1550.
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Extractions: (Focus on Buncombe County(NC) and Clyde A. Erwin H ) THE ISSUE Click Here Before you leave, please send an email to the Chair of the Buncombe County Board of Education, Mr. Wendell Begley requesting him to re-open the issue and to eliminate American Indian mascots at Erwin and in the Buncombe Co. (NC) Public Schools. Also, you can contact other Buncombe County School Board Members or Superintendent or Attorney Thank you! You may also use this internal search engine to look for specific people or other aspects of the mascot issue: -Recommended by the N.C. Advisory Council on Indian Education, the Resolution calls on all public schools in North Carolina to "educate themselves on the educational, curricular, and psychological effects of using American Indian sport mascots and logos, and; that all public school administrators review their policies and procedures toward the use of American Indian sport mascots, logos, and all demeaning imagery." June 5, 2002, The Charlotte Observer: "Indian mascot moniker at issue: N.C. board may ask schools to revisit images of Native Americans"
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Extractions: Good afternoon I want to thank you all for coming, and I want to thank the organizers, particularly Drs Barbara McCaskill and Timothy Powell, of this celebration of the Cherokee Phoenix and those who have worked so hard on the Phoenix project to digitize and make more widely available this newspaper. As I said to Tim when he invited me, the Cherokee Phoenix is truly a landmark in American Indian intellectual history. It represents the first Indian newspaper and the first Native language, bilingual paper in the country. You see it here behind me. Published both in English and in Cherokee, using the syllabary developed by Sequoyah. More on both of those things in a few minutes. But right now, I simply want to repeat my thanks. What I want to do this afternoon is talk a little about the Phoenix and its founding editor, Elias Boudinot, and situate it a bit in the context of other developments in the Cherokee Nation as it existed here in Georgia. I want to talk about my own work on the subject and some of the other scholarship, particularly a recent article prepared under my supervision by Elma Mingli Ju, a doctoral student at the Graduate Institute of American Studies of Tamkang University in Taipei, Taiwan. During the winter of 1825-1826, Albert Gallatm, former U.S Minister to France, asked Thomas McKenney, head of the new Indian bureau in the War Department, to request from John Ridge "a sketch of the progress made in the civilization of the Cherokees." He planned to communicate the resulting report to Baron Alexander on Humboldt, with the hope that it would have a "favourable effect on public opinion both here and abroad." Among the items Gallatin wished covered was "Knowledge, Number of students, Do the Indians contribute to their support? Of schools? What proportion already read and write?"(1). Ridge complied with the request, producing a essay in late February or early March 1826. On the question of "knowledge," Ridge estimates that one third of the Cherokees are able to read and write English. He goes on to note, however, "In the Cherokee Language, there is a large majority who read and write in George Guess' syllabic character"(2).
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Extractions: Sacred Texts Native American Southeast Index ... Previous COMPARISON OF MYTHS p. 268 RELATIVE RESEMBLANCES IN MYTHS Koasati (65) Alabama (61) Creek (110) Yuchi (21) Do. Hitchiti (45) Do. Natchez (43) Koasati (65 do. Cherokee (110) do. Hitchiti (45) Yuchi (21) Koasati (65) do. Alabama (61) Natchez (43) Creek (110) Alabama (61) Hitchiti (45) Natchez (43) Creek (110) Koasati (65) Cherokee (110) Yuchi (21) Natchez (43) do. Alabama (61) do. Cherokee (110) Hitchiti (45) Alabama (61) do. Cherokee (110) Alabama (61) Do. Koasati (65) Koasati (65) Hitchiti (45) Cherokee (110) Creek (110) In the comparative guide to the myths which follows these authorities are quoted or indicated: BOAS, FRANZ. Tsimshian Mythology. In Thirty-first Ann. Rept. Bur. Amer. Ethn., Washington, 1916. BUSHNELL, DAVID I., JR. The Choctaw of Bayou Lacomb. Bull. 48, Bur. Amer. Ethn., Washington, 1009. Myths of the Louisiana Choctaw. In American Anthropologist, Vol. 12, no. 4, pp. 526-535, Lancaster, Pa., 1910. CURTIN, JEREMIAH, and HEWITT, J. N. B. Seneca Fiction, Legends, and Myths. In Thirty-second Ann. Rept. Bur. Amer. Ethn., Washington, 1918.
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Extractions: OAI Header Identifier oai:oai.sunsite.utk.edu:0000000148 Datestamp Dublin Core Metadata Title Letter, 1819 Sept. 3, Department of War to Rev[erend] Samuel Worcester, Sec[retar]y of the Amer[ican] Board of Commissioners for For[eig]n Missions Creator Calhoun, John C. (John Caldwell), 1782-1850. Subject Southern States Subject Cherokee Indians Subject Missions Subject Monroe, James, 1758-1831. Description Digital image of original manuscript, scanned by the University of Tennessee Libraries in 2000, as part of GALILEO, funded in part by a grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services. Description Document ID: ch041 Description Document held by the Tennessee State Library and Archives, Nashville, Tenn. Cherokee Collection, box 1, folder 29, document 041. Description Copy of a letter wherein John C. Calhoun, Secretary of War, writes to Reverend Samuel Worcester, Corresponding Secretary of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions and missionary to the Cherokees, about an enclosed letter pertaining to the views of President Monroe, September 3, 1819. The enclosed letter appears in the Southeastern Native American Documents Database as ch042. Description Cherokee Indian History Collection Contributor University of Tennessee, Knoxville Libraries
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Extractions: Discusses four books that illustrate the sacred and secular as one. Mary Crow Dog's "LAKOTA WOMAN," N. Scott Momaday's "HOUSE OF DAWN," Ricardo Pozas' "JUAN THE CHAMULA," Thomas Sanchez's "RABBIT BOSS." The sacred as an integral part of the environment of Native Ameicans. Role of ancient religion to health and identity. Discussion of the concept of Shamanism in contemporary times. Definitions. Beliefs and pracitces. Rituals. Mass hypnosis. Meditation. Psychotropic herbs. An alternate reality. Carlos Castaneda's book "A SEPARATE REALITY." Shamanism and the healing process as alternative medicine. Importance of specific rituals and their repetitive behaviors to produce altered states of consciousness.
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Extractions: Your Support is greatly needed. You can DO WELL while DOING GOOD. You can make a tax-deductable charitable contribution to help thousands of needy American Indian Children and families all across the country. Your Support is needed now and throughout the year. This is the time when we need your generous Support the most. Give Now Many ways to show Your Support. The American Indian Heritage Foundation has served the emergency relief needs of native peoples of this land for over 30 years. Your generous contribution today will help with our relief efforts in Indian Country tomorrow.
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Extractions: INTRODUCTION So They Say You Are Black Dutch Cherokee or Black Dutch? 10 Step to Genealogy Research ... American Indian Genealogy Links INTRODUCTION The good thing about genealogy research is that it is getting easier. Genealogy is the fastest growing hobby today. More people are looking for their roots than ever before. New software and the internet are contributing to quicker access and more reliable information. The bad thing about genealogy research is that it is very time consuming and requires a great deal of patience. It can become expensive with long distance phone calls, stamps, travel, books, copy fees, and computer software. The rewards are great. There is an old saying, "Whenever you search for your ancestors, you honor them. Whenever you honor your ancestors, they in turn will honor your children's, children's, children."
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