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Showing 106 to 120 of 193 results Save | Export
Harrell, Sara Gordon – 1979
First elected Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation in 1828, John Ross served his people with courage and honor through a difficult and tragic period in their history. Born in 1790, he grew up when the Cherokees' world was rapidly changing and treaties with federal and state governments ended in broken promises and the loss of Cherokee lands. He…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indians, Biographies, Civil War (United States)
ICOLARI, DANIEL; KLEIN, BERNARD – 1967
RELATED SOURCE MATERIALS ON AMERICAN INDIANS HAVE BEEN COMPILED IN AN ATTEMPT TO CREATE A GREATER AWARENESS OF THE HISTORY AND CONTEMPORARY LIFE OF AMERICA'S "FIRST COMERS"--THEIR DIVERSIFIED CULTURAL AND SOCIAL HISTORY, LANGUAGES, RELIGIOUS PRACTICES, ART FORMS, AND ACHIEVEMENTS WHICH RANK SOME OF THEM AMONG THE GREAT MEN AND WOMEN OF THIS…
Descriptors: Agencies, American Indians, Audiovisual Aids, Bibliographies
Norris, Mildred W.; Messerli, John H. – 1968
This ESEA Title III bibliography presents books, films, filmstrips, and records that correlate with stories from selected second-grade basic reading books. The list of books is prepared from the suggested lists of the Ginn, Houghton Mifflin, Lippincott, and Scott, Foresman reading series. The bibliography includes sections about animals, biography…
Descriptors: American Indians, Audiodisc Recordings, Bibliographies, Biographies
Slavin, Suzy M. – 1975
Emphasizing reference resources for ethnological research on Canadian American Indians and Eskimos, this guide constitutes a revised and expanded edition of an earlier student's guide entitled "Canadian Ethnology" and includes both reference sources and annotated bibliographic references for the following: (1) Handbooks (8 references);…
Descriptors: American Indians, Annotated Bibliographies, Atlases, Biographies
Antell, Will – 1973
Part of a series on the American Indian, the book presents the biography of William Whipple Warren, Ojibway (Chippewa) historian. Although he led an extraordinary life, Warren is a little-known historical figure. The son of an American fur trapper and a mother of French and Ojibway descent, he was born in 1825 on an island in Lake Superior. Later…
Descriptors: American History, American Indian Reservations, American Indians, Authors
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Reddish, Jennifer Gray – Tribal College, 1995
Presents a review of stories about and historical portrayals of Pocahontas, the Native American who saved John Smith in Colonial America. Indicates that prescripted roles for women and Native Americans have been variously applied to her. Argues that for all the interpretations, there is a dearth of works by Native Americans on the subject. (10…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian History, American Indians, Biographies
Neihardt, John G. – 1972
This classic book describes the life experiences and "great vision" of Black Elk, a holy man of the Oglala Sioux. Black Elk imparted these things to John Neihardt so that he might save them for future generations. Black Elk's power-vision occurred when he was 9 years old during a sickness. The lengthy vision contained profound symbolism…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian History, American Indians, Beliefs
Minneapolis Public Schools, MN. – 1979
A biography for elementary school students of a 19th century American Indian physician and author, Charles Alexander Eastman (Sioux), includes photographs of Dr. Eastman and his wife. A teacher's guide following the bibliography contains information on the Sioux Uprising of 1862 and the Wounded Knee Massacre, learning objectives and directions for…
Descriptors: American Indian History, American Indian Studies, American Indians, Authors
Lee, Betsy – 1979
Dr. Charles Alexander Eastman was a product of two worlds--the Indian and the White. A member of the Santee Sioux Tribe, he was respected and admired in both of these worlds for the work he did on behalf of American Indians, first as a young doctor caring for the sick on the Reservation, and later as a writer and speaker, showing the richness of…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American History, American Indian Reservations, American Indians
Harrell, Sara Gordon – 1977
Tomo-chi-chi was a Creek Indian leader who did much to insure peaceful relations between the first English colonists in Georgia and the native Americans. His wisdom and dedication to peace were known and respected by the Creek people and the English colonists. He developed a lifelong friendship with General James Oglethorpe, the English founder of…
Descriptors: Adults, American Indians, Biographies, Books
DeMarco, Pat, Ed.; And Others – 1978
In the summer of 1978, seven teenagers and several staff members from the Fairbanks Native Association-Johnson O'Malley program set out to record some of Alaska's past by interviewing a number of older Alaska Natives and writing their biographical sketches. Some of the students spent a week along the Yukon River taping and photographing people;…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, American Indians, Biographical Inventories, Biographies
Moulton, Gary Evan – 1974
Emphasizing the dedication with which John Ross (1790-1866) labored to achieve Cherokee social and political cohesion, this biography details the historical and political events which influenced Ross's attempts to make the U.S. honor its treaty obligations and thwart the Federal "Removal Policy" (removal of American Indians from their…
Descriptors: American Indians, Biographies, Civil War (United States), Doctoral Dissertations
Wilson, Dorothy Clarke – 1974
The document is the biography of Susette La Flesche, whose name in Omaha was Inshta Theamba (Bright Eyes). She was the daughter of a French-Indian who, in the mid-1800s, became the last head chief of the Omahas. Her heritage--the legends, songs, sacred ceremonies and ancient wisdom of her people--came into conflict with the white man's world when…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Activism, American Indian Culture, American Indian Reservations
Tahushasha, Wenonah Tausauga, Comp. – 1973
Developed for the Education Services Department of the Illinois Commission on Human Relations, this bibliography contains approximately 120 entries written between 1942-72 by Native American authors. The areas of the "Native American Experience" covered in this bibliography are: a background of Native American literature and authors; reading…
Descriptors: Activism, American Indian Culture, American Indians, Autobiographies
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Fenton, William N. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 1981
Walter D. Edmunds created convincing characters of the Iroquois without pretending to know them. Carl Carmer was less interested in digging for the truth about Indians than in writing a story. Edmund Wilson perceived the Iroquois world view intuitively in his writing, overcoming any obstacle to get at the truth. (Author/LC)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indians, Authors, Beliefs
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