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         Delaware Indians Native Americans:     more books (52)
  1. Religion and Ceremonies of the Lenape (Mai Indian Notes and Monographs Miscellaneous) by M. R. Harrington, 1983-10
  2. The Plains of North America and Their Inhabitants by Richard Irving Dodge, 1989-11
  3. Prehistoric Cultures of the Delmarva Peninsula: An Archaeological Study by Jay F. Custer, 1989-06
  4. The Red Record by David McCutchen, 1993-01
  5. The Walam Olum
  6. The Circle Of Lenapehoking by Paul Tobacco Cashman, 2004-07-30
  7. The Beaded Moccasins: The Story of Mary Campbell by Lynda Durrant, 1998-03-23
  8. The Legend of the Cape May Diamond (Legend (Sleeping Bear)) by Trinka Hakes Noble, 2007-05
  9. When the Shadbush Blooms by Carla Messinger, Susan Katz, 2007-09
  10. The Light in the Forest by Conrad Richter, 2001-01

61. Native American History, Kansas State Historical Society
native American Heritage Museum State Historic Site and culture of the Kaw (Kansas)indians and the who traded with her people, the Lenapi (delaware) indians.
http://www.kshs.org/tourists/theme/native.htm
Travel by Historic Theme
Native American History
Discover the stories of the tribes who call Kansas home.
  • Kansas Museum of History
  • Extensive exhibits on Kansas history, including its earliest peoples.
  • Native American Heritage Museum State Historic Site
  • Stories of the Great Lakes Indians forced to emigrate to Kansas, the arts of their present-day descendants.
  • Pawnee Indian Village State Historic Site
  • Spirits of the past fill this 1820s earth lodge exhibiting fascinating artifacts from the powerful Pawnee nation.
  • Kaw Mission State Historic Site
  • Encounter the history and culture of the Kaw (Kansas) Indians and the Santa Fe Trail.
  • Potawatomi Mission
  • See how missions attempted to teach children from this Great Lakes tribe to adapt to white culture.
  • Grinter Place State Historic Site
  • Visit the 1862 farmhouse of Moses and Annie Grinter, who traded with her people, the Lenapi (Delaware) Indians.
  • Shawnee Mission State Historic Site
  • Explore some of the oldest buildings in Kansas at this school for Indian children.

    62. Kids --- Native American Indians
    The native American Experience Images of native American indians from 1600 AD topresent delaware Tribe of indians “The Culture Preservation Committee of the
    http://oceancounty.lib.nj.us/Kids/Indians.htm

    Kid's Home
    Home Search Our Site Site Map
    Native Americans Books Web sites The Native American Experience
    Images of Native American Indians from 1600 A.D. to present day with paragraph descriptions. Collection is provided courtesy of the National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution Delaware Tribe of Indians
    “The Culture Preservation Committee of the Delaware Tribe (Lenape) established the Delaware Home Page.” The Lenni-Lenape
    Search the history of the Lenni-Lenape, with links to Lenni Lenape Historical Museum. Encyclopedia Smithsonian: Native American Resources
    A to Z Index of Native American History and Culture with selected Native American Exhibitions. Smithsonian Information, Smithsonian Institution. Technical Preservation Services for Historic Buildings
    Native American Totem Pole history and preservation notes. National Park Service Researched and compiled by D. Majchrzak.

    63. The Seeker Magazine
    WYOMING A delaware Indian term meaning at (on) the big (great) plains Bennett Iwas reading your list of contributions native americans made to state
    http://www.the-seeker.com/cover.htm
    Index Generally Seeking
    Seeking Classmates
    Seeking Ex-Coworkers
    Seeking Ex-Neighbors
    Seeking Ex-Lovers Relatively Seeking
    Seeking Missing Parent
    Seeking Birth Parent
    Seeking Adopted Child
    Seeking Missing Siblings
    Seeking Other Relatives
    Seeking Heritage Answers Seeking Missing Children Militarily Seeking Seeking Miscellaneous Military Seeking Military Brats Seeking Navy Veterans Seeking Army Veterans Seeking Air Force Vets Seeking Marine Veterans Seeking Coast Guard Vets Seeking Beneficiaries Beneficiaries Seeking Treasury Dept. Refunds Seeking IRS Refunds Seeking State Tax Refunds Seeking Misc. Insurance Policy Holders Place Your Own Message Site Seeking Miscellaneous Database ... Radio Cornplanter Chronicles by Harold Thomas Beck Cornplanter Chronicles is a story unlike any other story about a Native American nation and its war chief. The Seneca, a member of the Iroquois League of Six Nations, is the only tribe to survive intact to this day on their ancestral land. They are the only tribe in the United States that was never defeated by American armies and forced to accept the white man's terms. They fought on the losing side several times (The French against the British in the French and Indian War, and the British against the United States in the Revolutionary War), but in each case the war was lost elsewhere and they fought on. When it finally came in 1791, it was Cornplanter, head chief of the Seneca, who negotiated the terms and brought peace to the Alleghenies.

    64. FindLaw: Legal Subjects: Indian And Native Peoples Law: Primary Materials - Laws
    Ottawa, and Pottawatimie, Tribes of indians, Sept. the Wyandot, Ottawa, Chipawa, Munseeand delaware, Shawnee and and the Office of native American Programs of
    http://www.findlaw.com/01topics/21indian/gov_laws.html
    FindLaw Legal Professionals Students Business ... Lawyer Search State AL AK AZ AR CA CO CT DE DC FL GA HI ID IL IN IA KS KY LA ME MD MA MI MN MS MO MT NE NV NH NJ NM NY NC ND OH OK OR PA RI SC SD TN TX UT VT VA WA WV WI WY AS GU MP PR VI Select a Practice Area Administrative Law Adoption Agriculture Law Alternative Dispute Resolution Animal Bites Asbestos Mesothelioma Aviation Bankruptcy Law Business Organizations Child Support Civil Rights Constitutional Law Construction Law Consumer Protection Contracts Criminal Law Criminal Law Federal Debtor/Creditor Discrimination Divorce DUI/DWI Education Law Elder Law Eminent Domain Employment Law Employee Employment Law Employer Energy Law Environmental Law Estate Planning Family Law Franchising Gaming Law Government Contracts Insurance Law Intellectual Property Law International Law Internet Cyberspace Labor Law Landlord/Tenant Legal Malpractice Lemon Law Medical Malpractice Military Law Motor Vehicle Accidents Motor Vehicle Defects Native Peoples Law Natural Resources Law Nursing Home Patents Personal Injury Defense Personal Injury Premises Liability Products Liability Law Professional Malpractice Law Real Estate Law Securities Law Sexual Harassment Social Security Disability Taxation Law Toxic Substances Trademarks Traffic Violations Transportation Law Trusts Wills Workers' Compensation Law Wrongful Death Document Library Legal Dictionary Legal News FindLaw Legal Web Sites All Web Sites US Government Sites US Supreme Court All Circuit Courts US Constitution FindLaw Newsletters Top Legal News Headlines
    Legal Grounds
    More Newsletters
    MY Find Law Email Password: Keep me logged in until I sign out.

    65. Links To Information On Specific North American Indian Tribes Sites By Phil Kons
    North American indians end of delaware/Lenape links from the Encyclopedia of NorthAmerican indians end of article about North Carolina native American tribes
    http://www.americanindian.net/links12.html
    Links to Information on Specific North American Indian Tribes Sites by Phil Konstantin - Page 12
    Click here to find out about getting paid to surf the net!
    About My Book
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    "This Day in North American Indian History"

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    Purchasing a book through this link helps support my site. Click on the appropriate line below:
    American Indian History Books
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    ... American Indian Music
    If you find a link which no longer works properly, or you wish to suggest a site for inclusion in this list, please let me know.
    Sites With Information About Specific Tribes, Nations, Clans, or Bands
    This section has so many different groups that I have divided it into several sections. This page has the links to groups which have just a few links. Listed below are links to tribes which have many different websites with information about them.

    66. Alexandria, VA - Fort Ward Museum - Themes From The Past
    US Commissioner of Indian Affairs, asked native American agents to assembly of the1st and 2nd Indian Home Guard that included delaware, Creek, Seminole
    http://oha.ci.alexandria.va.us/fortward/special-sections/americans/
    Themes from the Past
    Introduction
    Allegiance to the Federal Government
    Civil War Within the Cherokee Nation
    In the East ... Sources of Information and Illustrations Swearing in of Native Indians recruits. Credit: State Historical Society of Wisconsin INTRODUCTION
    At a time when fear of removal from tribal homelands permeated Native American communities, many native people served in the military during the Civil War. These courageous men fought with distinction, knowing they might jeopardize their freedom, unique cultures, and ancestral lands if they ended up on the losing side of the white man's war. In an interesting twist of history, General Ely S. Parker, a member of the Seneca tribe, drew up the articles of surrender which General Robert E. Lee signed at Appomattox Court House on April 9, 1865. Gen. Parker, who served as Gen. Ulysses S. Grant's military secretary and was a trained attorney, was once rejected for Union military service because of his race. At Appomattox, Lee is said to have remarked to Parker, "I am glad to see one real American here," to which Parker replied, "We are all Americans." Read this intriguing account of Native American contributions to the war effort for a fuller understanding of what the conflict meant to "all Americans."

    67. Indiana Historical Bureau Publications - American Indians In Indiana
    the historic Lenape or delaware indians and their A People Oral Histories of ContemporaryWoodland indians. the 20thcentury native American Woodland People
    http://www.statelib.lib.in.us/www/ihb/publications/aipeoplein.html
    document.write(""+list[j]+""); American Indians in Indiana Indians and a Changing Frontier: The Art of George Winter Sarah E. Cook and Rachel B. Ramadhyani, comps. Illustrated volume of watercolors and drawings of Potawatomi Indians in northern Indiana by the artist (b.1809). Also contains two essays on Winter's life and work. cloth 269 pp. 1993/ISBN 0-87195-097-9/$24.95
    Order No. 2011 Home Before The Raven Caws: The Mystery of Indiana's Alaskan Totem Pole Richard Feldman The story of totem poles and the stories they tell and includes the history of a totem pole that stood in the Golden Hills neighborhood of Indianapolis from 1905 until 1939. paper 78 pp. 2003/ISBN 1-57860-126-6/$15.95
    Order No. 2463 Lenape-Delaware Indian Heritage 10,00 BC to AD 2000 Herbert C. Kraft This scholarly narrative treats the historic Lenape or Delaware Indians and their prehistoric ancestors over a span of 12,000 years. Extensive footnotes and bibliography. paper 700 pp. 2001/ISBN 0-935137-03-3/$51.50

    68. American Indian Bibliography
    American Cultures in Indiana Proceedings of the First Minnetrista Council for GreatLakes native American Studies. Weslager, CA The delaware indians A History
    http://www.statelib.lib.in.us/www/ihb/publications/nabib.html
    document.write(""+list[j]+""); American Indian Bibliography Great Lakes/Woodland Resources
    Indiana Resources

    Tribal Histories

    Classroom Resources
    ...
    Resource Books.
    Great Lakes/Woodland Resources
    • Ritzenthaler, Robert Eugene. The Woodland Indians of the Western Great Lakes . Prospect Heights, Illinois: Waveland Press, 1983. Tanner, Helen Hornbeck. Atlas of Great Lakes Indian History . Norman: Oklahoma Press, 1987. Trigger, Bruce G., ed. Handbook of North American Indians: Northeast . vol 15, Washington D.C.: Smithsonian Institution, 1978.
    Indiana Resources
    • Cooke, Sarah E. and Rachel B. Ramadhyani. Indians and a Changing Frontier: The Art of George Winter . Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society with cooperation from the Tippecanoe County Historical Association,1993. Hicks, Ronald, ed. Native American Cultures in Indiana: Proceedings of the First Minnetrista Council for Great Lakes Native American Studies . Muncie: Minnetrista Cultural Center and Ball State University, 1992. The Indiana Historian . Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Bureau, September, October, November 1992; November 1993.

    69. Native American Arkansas Encyclopedia Encyclopedia Of Arkansas Arkansas History
    no longer exist; delaware Oklahoma originally near delaware; term is consideredoffensive by many American indians because most native religions state
    http://anythingarkansas.com/arkapedia/pedia/Native/
    Home Free Offers Directory A ... Z
    Native American
    Native Americans officially make up the majority of the population in Bolivia , Peru and Guatemala and are significant in most other former Spanish colonies, with the exception of Costa Rica , Cuba , Argentina , Dominican Republic and Uruguay
    History
    The Native Americans are widely believed to have come to the Americas via the prehistoric Bering Land Bridge . However, this is not the only theory. Some archaeologists believe that the migration consisted of seafaring tribes that moved along the coast, avoiding mountainous inland terrain and highly variable terrestrial ecosystems. Other researchers have postulated an original settlement by skilled navigators from Oceania , though these American Aborigine people are believed to be nearly extinct. Yet another theory claims an early crossing of the Atlantic Ocean by people originating in Europe . Many native peoples do not believe the migration theory at all. The creation stories of many tribes place the people in North America from the beginning of time. Mormon tradition holds that some Native Americans are descendants of the lost tribes of Israel Based on anthropological evidence, at least three distinct migrations

    70. NativeWeb Resources: US Tribal Pages (BIA Recognized)
    The delaware of today number close to 10,000 and The Narragansett indians are thedescendants of the to the Navajo Nation, the largest native American tribe in
    http://www.nativeweb.org/resources/us_tribal_websites/us_tribal_pages_bia_recogn

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  • Hosting Information ... US Tribal Websites US Tribal Pages (BIA Recognized)
    Listings here are restricted to US Government "recognized" tribes. NativeWeb realizes that there is great controversy about who is "recognized" and who is not. We take no political position in this matter other than to designate official US recognition. Web sites with specific information about recognized tribal governments, reservations, and contacts. The BIA maintains a list of U.S. Federally Recognized Nations See also the 1992 BIA criteria for acknowledgement as as Indian tribe Resources: 142 listings Name and Description Nation Location Hits
    Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, North Carolina Cherokee US - Southeast
    Official home page of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians.
  • 71. Delaware - Ethnos - Books About The Delaware People
    The Lenape or LenniLenape (later named delaware indians by Europeans) were, inthe 1600s, loosely organized bands of native American people practicing small
    http://www.almudo.com/ethnos/delaware.htm
    Ethnos
    Peoples of the World
    Delaware
    The Lenape or Lenni-Lenape (later named Delaware Indians by Europeans) were, in the 1600s, loosely organized bands of Native American people practicing small-scale agriculture to augment a largely mobile hunter-gatherer society in the region around the Delaware River, the lower Hudson River, and western Long Island Sound. The Lenape were the people encountered by Henry Hudson when he entered New York Bay in 1609. Their language was in the Algonquian language family and had two main dialects. Proto-Munsee was spoken in the upper Delaware River (including North Jersey), New York, and Long Island Sound. Proto-Unami was the dialect spoken in the lower Delaware River (including South Jersey). In the Unami dialect, "Lenape" means "our men," "men of the same nation," "common people," etc. The Lenape name for the area they inhabited was Lenapehoking, which meant "place where the Lenape dwell." In colonial times, families were organized into clans based on a common female ancestor. Phratries, which were groups of two or more clans, were identified by an animal sign. Children were members of their mother's phratry. Land was assigned to a particular clan for hunting, fishing, and cultivation. Invidual private ownership of land was unknown, but rather the land belonged to the clan collectively while they inhabited it (see New Amsterdam for discussion of the Dutch "purchase" of Manhattan). The Lenape were the first native american tribe to enter into a treaty with the future United States government during the American Revolutionary War. The Lenape supplied the revoluntary army with warriors and scouts in exchange for food supplies and the promise of a role at the head of a future native american state.

    72. CSU Libraries: Native Americans
    American Indian Tribe Discussion Forum. delaware Indian Discussion Board. Hopi InformationNetwork. nativeLitL nativeNet - Formerly AISESnet. Turtle Island native
    http://lib.colostate.edu/research/natam.html
    Native American Resources
    General Resources on American Indian Tribes and Other Indigenous Cultures
    Aboriginal Canada Portal

    This portal provides a single gateway to online resources, contacts, and information for and about aboriginal peoples in Canada. It is organized by broad subject area, such as employment, health, and social services. American Indian Tribe
    This Website presents an overview of available resources on and historical background of numerous American Indian tribes.
    Cultural Survival

    Cultural Survival promotes the rights, voices, and visions of indigenous peoples and develops new strategies for responding directly to the critical needs of the world's indigenous populations. Information is organized by region or by topic; each subsection features the full-text of relevant articles, news briefs, links, and other documents. The Website links to the Indigenous Action Network. First Nations Periodical Index
    This index contains journals of mainly Canadian Native content. It provides access to information about First Nations for students, educators, instructors, and researchers.

    73. Cyndi's List - Native American
    More than 209 300 links! 206 850 links, categorized crossreferenced, in over 160 categories. Another 2 450+ uncategorized new links in the works. connections between the missions and indians
    http://www.cyndislist.com/native.htm
    document.write('');
    Native American
    The index links below work best if you allow
    your web browser to load the entire page first.
    Category Index:

    Related Categories:
    Planting Your Family Tree Online
    Preview the Table of Contents

    Cyndi's List The BOOK!

    2nd Edition
    2 Volumes Netting Your Ancestors Genealogy Bookstore
    In association with Amazon.com Ancestry Magazine Genealogical.com GPC and Clearfield Company Genealogy Warehouse Submit a New Link Report a Broken Link Update a Link
      General Resource Sites
      • Celebrating the Estelusti ~ The Freedmen Oklahoma's Black Indians of the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek, and Seminole Nations.
      • From the Atlanta-Fulton Public Library System in Georgia.

    74. Delaware (Lenape) Tribe Of Indians: Common Words And Phrases In Lenape
    Common Words and Phrases in Lenape. The Lenape (delaware) Indian Language.
    http://www.delawaretribeofindians.nsn.us/language.html

    Homepage
    Frequently Asked Questions Social Dances
    Lenape Football Game
    ... Common Words and Phrases in Lenape - Page 1 To print out this chart, click on the Title (above), then click
    the Print button on your browser. Then click the back
    button on your browser to return to this page. Click the Lenape Word to Hear Pronounciation Lenape English Hè Hello! (or) Hi! Làpìch knewël I will see you again. (Goodbye) tëmike Come in! (or) Go in! lëmatahpi Sit down! wëndaxa Come here! mitsi Eat! (speaking to one person) mitsikw You eat! (speaking to two or more) mitsitàm Let's eat! tukihëla Wake up! taktani I don't know ngatupwi I am hungry ngatusëmwi I am thirsty ngatungòm I am sleepy mili kàpi Give me some coffee Lënape nàn He (or she) is a Lenape Lënape hàch nàn Is he a Lenape? ktalënixsi hàch Do you speak Lenape? kèxiti a little kèku hàch lakeyu What tribe (or nationality) is he? wëli kishku It is a good day lëlëwàxën There is a breeze shëlànde It is a hot day sukëlan It is raining kwëti one nisha two naxa three newa four palenàxk five kwëti, nisha, naxa, newa, palenàxk

    75. Ohio History Central - Historic Indian - Tribes - Delaware Indians
    Some delaware indians came to live in eastern Ohio along the at the end of the Frenchand Indian War. These natives thanked England for the Proclamation of 1763
    http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/ohc/history/h_indian/tribes/delaware.shtml
    - Browse By : -
    LETTER

    TOPIC

    BY KEYWORD:

    The Delaware Indians, also called the Lenape, originally lived along the Delaware River in New Jersey. They speak a form of the Algonquian Indian language and are thus related to the Miami Ottawa , and Shawnee Indians. The Delawares are called "Grandfathers" by the other Algonquian tribes because they believe them to be the oldest and original Algonquian nation. As British colonists came to North America, the Delawares fled westward from the land-hungry Europeans. While trying to escape the British colonists, the Delawares encountered the Iroquois Indians, who proceeded to conquer the Delawares and drive them further west. Some Delaware Indians came to live in eastern Ohio along the Muskingum River , while others settled in northwestern Ohio along the Auglaize River . Once in Ohio, the Delawares grew into a powerful tribe that could resist the further advances of the Iroquois. Upon arriving in the Ohio Country , the Delawares formed alliances with Frenchmen engaged in the fur trade . The French provided the natives with European cookware and guns, as well as alcohol, in return for furs. This alliance would prove to be tenuous at best, as French and English colonists struggled for control of the Ohio Country beginning in the 1740s. As one European power gained control of the area the Delawares chose to ally themselves with the stronger party. This held true until the

    76. Ohio History Central - Historic Indian - Lifestyles - Dwellings
    a rounded or Quonsettype roof, while the delaware indians and the and even afterthe Europeans arrived in North America, some Indian tribes fortified
    http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/ohc/history/h_indian/life/dwelling.shtml
    - Browse By : -
    LETTER

    TOPIC

    BY KEYWORD:
    The Longhouse
    The log, pole and bark houses
    The Tepee

    The tepee was generally used as a temporary shelter in a hunting camp. This cone-shaped tent covered with mats or bark had a framework of long poles set upright in a circle, leaning together at the top. Mats were made of cattails or "flags" stitched together in sections about five by fifteen feet. These light-weight mats were easy to transport when rolled up. Wigwam
    The wigwam was a circular, or oval, dome-shaped structure, housing one or two families. The butt-ends of the pole or sapling frame were imbedded in the earth; the tapered ends were bent down and tied in place with bark strips. Over this frame was fastened a covering of bark or mats, sometimes a combination of both. Mats were made of cattails or common marsh "flags" as they were called. In the center of the domed roof was a smoke hole; a section of bark on a long pole resting against the side of the wigwam could be adjusted to keep the wind from blowing the campfire smoke back inside. Indian Villages
    OHIO HISTORICAL SOCIETY
    OHIOKIDS!

    77. Lenni Lenape Historical Society
    The mission of the Society is to preserve and educate the public about the localLenape (delaware Indian) culture as well as other native American cultures.
    http://www.lenape.org/
    Welcome to the Lenni Lenape Historical Society. The mission of the Society is to preserve and educate the public about the local Lenape (Delaware Indian) culture as well as other Native American cultures. The Lenni Lenape Historical Society was founded in 1980 and is a registered non-profit organization in Allentown, Pennsylvania. Visit the Museum of Indian Culture, housed in the 18th century Bieber farmhouse and learn about the rich history, traditions and values of the region's "first people". NEW! - View our new online photo gallery featuring our recent May event.

    78. Indian Tribes Of Delaware
    Indian Genealogy. Indian Tribes of delaware. Indian Tribes of NorthAmerica, Swanton. delaware. The Unalachtigo division of the delaware
    http://www.accessgenealogy.com/native/delaware/
    document.write('');
    Indian Tribes of Delaware Indian Tribes of North America, Swanton
    1900 Indian Territory Census

    Dawes Commission Index, 1898-1914
    Circle of First Nations
    Our Free Newsletter 14-day Free Trial of Ancestry.com's Databases
    Add a link or report a Broken Link!!
    Delaware . The Unalachtigo division of the Delaware occupied all of the northern parts of this State when it was first visited by Europeans. (See New Jersey
    Nanticoke
    . Bodies of Indians classed, under this general head extended into the southern and western sections. Unalachtigo and Nanticoke are two forms of the same word though, as differentiated, they have been applied to distinct tribes. (See Maryland
    Home
    Rolls Tribal Directory ... Books Online This site is a member of WebRing.
    To browse visit Here
    Other Indian Records Quick Links

    79. Mitsawokett: A 17th Century Delaware Native American Community
    The History and Genealogy of the native American Isolate Communities of Kent County,delaware, and Surrounding Areas on the Delmarva Peninsula and Southern New
    http://www.mitsawokett.com/
    The History and Genealogy of the
    Native American Isolate Communities
    of Kent County, Delaware, and
    Surrounding Areas on the Delmarva Peninsula
    and Southern New Jersey
    Site search Web search SEARCH TIPS
    (Use BACK to return to Mitsawokett)
    Entire contents
    by Betty and Ray Terry

    NONE of the on-line information may be used without written permission
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    80. NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURE
    is not the name of a native tribe or Algonquian languages, and many of the Indian words common Abenaki, Wampanoag, Nipmuc, Penboscot, Shawnee, delaware, etc.
    http://www.greatdreams.com/native.htm
    updated 2-14-04 PLEASE BE PATIENT WHILE THIS PAGE LOADS IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR INFORMATION ON A PARTICULAR TRIBE
    AND YOU DON'T SEE IT HERE,
    E-MAIL Dee777@aol.com AND I WILL ADD IT TO THE DATABASE THIS PAGE HAS BEEN DIVIDED INTO TWO PARTS
    TO SPEED LOADING. A THRU N - PAGE 1
    O THRU Z - PAGE 2
    FOR STUDENTS NATIVE AMERICAN HOUSING TEEPEE, TIPI, WICKIUP, WIGWAM, LONGHOUSE
    PIT, MOUND WORKING WITH A NATIVE HAND DRILL CLASSES IN CALIFORNIA NATIVE SKILLS HOW TO MAKE A WICKIUP HOW TO MAKE A CANOE
    NOTE! THIS IS NOT A ONE PERSON JOB
    NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURE
    Mitakuye oyasin! We are all related! It isn't too late. We still have time to recreate and change the value system of the present. We must! Survival will depend on it. Our Earth is our original mother. She is in deep labor now. There will be a new birth soon! The old value system will suffer and die. It cannot survive as our mother earth strains under the pressure put on her. She will not let man kill her. The First Nation's Peoples had a value system. There were only four commandments from the Great Spirits: 1.Respect Mother Earth

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