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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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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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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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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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Carbaugh, Donal; Rudnick, Lisa – Great Plains Quarterly, 2006
Among every known people, places are named, and in every known place, stories are told. Yet the meanings of the place and the variety of stories attached to it can derive from a variety of traditions and can lead in many different directions. Just as various pilgrims are drawn to some sacred places, so do all people, in all places, come to know…
Descriptors: American Indian Reservations, Parks, American Indians, Geographic Regions
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Umberger, Mary L. – Great Plains Quarterly, 2002
In 1987, Frank and Deborah Popper, a planner/geographer team from Rutgers University, proposed the Buffalo Commons. If implemented, the Buffalo Commons would have preserved a large area of the Great Plains, including land in ten states, in a national park to be used by exiting Native American reservations, and for the reintroduction of buffalo.
Descriptors: Parks, United States History, American Indian History, American Indian Reservations
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Barsh, Russel Lawrence – Great Plains Quarterly, 1993
With the backing of America's wealthy citizenry, Joseph Dixon organized the 1913 Expedition of Citizenship in an effort to advance the acculturation of American Indians. Dixon's efforts were a melodramatic charade in which the Indians gained nothing but patriotic rituals, still practiced at tribal meetings and powwows. Too late, Dixon realized the…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian History, American Indian Reservations, Citizenship