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Kinbacher, Kurt E. – Great Plains Quarterly, 2012
The collision of Indian and European cultures created new relationships all across the Great Plains. Native peoples responded to the European presence by redefining their worldviews to include outside ideas and materials. Many tribes not only survived the early impact but also managed to thrive as the result of it. Initially, both the Omaha and…
Descriptors: American Indians, Change, American Indian Culture, American Indian History
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Steinke, Christopher – Great Plains Quarterly, 2012
In 1742 two sons of the explorer Pierre Gaultier de Varennes de La Verendrye met an indigenous nation they called the Gens de l'Arc somewhere along the middle Missouri River near present-day Pierre, South Dakota. Louis-Joseph and Francois were searching for the mythical Sea of the West, and the former asked the chief of the Gens de l'Arc if he…
Descriptors: American Indians, American Indian History, United States History, Violence
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Allison, James R., III – Great Plains Quarterly, 2012
Eighty-six Cheyenne families followed Little Wolf to his self-imposed exile near Rosebud Creek. To most observers, this blind loyalty to a fallen leader required little explanation. After all, Little Wolf had recently led his people in a costly yet courageous escape from Indian Territory, fighting through the dead of winter back to the Northern…
Descriptors: American Indian History, American Indian Reservations, American Indians, Tribal Sovereignty
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Jerman, Hadley – Great Plains Quarterly, 2011
In the late 1920s, Kiowa photographer Horace Poolaw began documenting daily life in southwestern Oklahoma with the camera. As Poolaw began making dramatically posed, narrative-rich portraits of family members, historian Lewis Mumford asserted that the modern individual now viewed him or herself "as a public character, "being…
Descriptors: Photography, Visual Aids, American Indians, Films
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Smith, Laura E. – Great Plains Quarterly, 2011
Many Indians in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century commodified aspects of their cultures in order to make a living and sometimes present their identities, history, and artworks in ways that were satisfying to them. Ten vintage postcards from the Oklahoma Historical Society by Kiowa photographer Horace Poolaw (1906-1984) indicate that…
Descriptors: Photography, Visual Aids, American Indians, American Indian Culture
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Haack, Steven C. – Great Plains Quarterly, 2010
The Battle of Platte Bridge, July 26, 1865, is a noteworthy event in the annals of the American Indian Wars. An alliance of Cheyenne, Sioux, and Arapahoe, numbering in excess of 2,000 warriors, traveled three days to a specific military objective, an undertaking unusual both in terms of its magnitude and its level of organization. The battle,…
Descriptors: American Indian History, War, Letters (Correspondence), American Indians
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Markowitz, Harvey – Great Plains Quarterly, 2012
This article discusses a number of the dominant features of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Indian Catholicism on the Rosebud Reservation, focusing primarily on the Sicangu's responses to the significant differences between their traditional religious customs and the beliefs, rituals, and requirements of Catholicism. It first examines…
Descriptors: American Indian History, American Indian Reservations, Reservation American Indians, Catholics
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Houser, Teresa M. – Great Plains Quarterly, 2011
Franklin Delano Roosevelt's election to the presidency in 1932 signaled a mandate for sweeping reform at the federal level to lift the nation out of the economic turbulence of the Great Depression. Under Commissioner of Indian Affairs John Collier, the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) joined other agencies in launching policies to rebuild economic…
Descriptors: American Indians, Rural Areas, Federal Indian Relationship, American Indian History
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Colpitts, George – Great Plains Quarterly, 2009
The author analyzes a buffalo hunt which occurred in 1869. That spring, many hundreds of Cree, Assiniboine, Stoney, and Metis hunters going to the Plains were joined by a contingent of Wesleyan Methodists and their Native affiliates from Fort Edmonton, Pigeon Lake, Lac Ste. Anne, Lac La Biche, and Whitefish Lake--all located on the most northern…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Canada Natives, Religious Organizations, Role of Religion
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Palmer, Daryl W. – Great Plains Quarterly, 2009
In the spring of 1540, Francisco Vazquez de Coronado led an "entrada" from present-day Mexico into the region we call New Mexico, where the expedition spent a violent winter among pueblo peoples. The following year, after a long march across the Great Plains, Coronado led an elite group of his men north into present-day Kansas where,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Spanish Culture, Literary Genres, Geographic Regions
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Nelson, Elaine M. – Great Plains Quarterly, 2009
Eunice Woodhull Stabler. Eunice Stabler, or Thataweson , meaning "Pale Woman of the Bird Clan," was born in 1885 on the Omaha Reservation in northeastern Nebraska. During a period of continued transitions and federal assimilation efforts directed at the Omaha people--and Indigenous people throughout the United States--Stabler remained…
Descriptors: Public Policy, Educational Policy, Boarding Schools, American Indian Education
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Eick, Gretchen Cassel – Great Plains Quarterly, 2008
This article lays out U.S. Indian policy in the Great Plains during the twenty-five years after the Civil War by examining chronologically specific "players" that shaped and reshaped that policy: the U.S. Army, the President and Interior Department, Congress, religious organizations, whites in the Indian reform movement, settlers surging…
Descriptors: Federal Indian Relationship, United States History, American Indian History, Land Settlement
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Meadows, William C. – Great Plains Quarterly, 2006
Plains Indian cultures have left numerous forms of Native drawings in the form of painted and drawn clothing, robes, tipis and tipi liners, shields and shield covers, calendars, ledger books, religious and historical drawings, and maps. Native drawings of geographic features are distinguished from other forms of drawings by their focus on the…
Descriptors: American Indians, Maps, American Indian Reservations, American Indian History
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Kelton, Paul – Great Plains Quarterly, 2003
In 1876 the bilingual Cherokee diplomat and lawyer William Penn Adair expressed great pride in the level of "civilization" that his nation had achieved. Defining civilization as commercial agriculture, literacy, Christianity, and republican government, Adair believed that his society has reached a sophistication that equaled and in certain areas…
Descriptors: American Indian History, American Indian Culture, Identification, Social Characteristics
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Martin, Jill E. – Great Plains Quarterly, 2003
The U.S. has regulated liquor sales and consumption among Native Americans from the beginning of the republic until 1953. Forms of regulation have included fines and imprisonment for selling alcohol in Indian country, for introducing alcohol into Indian country, and for drinking alcohol if you were an Indian.
Descriptors: American Indians, Drinking, Federal Regulation, American Indian History
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