A lot of these books were published years
before the term "First Nations" was adopted by the First Nations
People. (Awesome choice I might add.) But in the effort to keep
each work as a finished product, original, the work of an
Author. The original choice of language has been retained, even
in the description of each book. My sincerest hope is to not
offend any, but make the works of many, available, for the
enjoyment of many others. TheEbookStore.com Management
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Autobiography Of
Ma-Ka-Tai-Me-She-Kia-Kiak, Or Black Hawk
Alaska Indian Dictionary
Hunting With The Bow & Arrow
History Of The Ottawa And Chippewa
Indians Of Michigan
Shea's Library Of American
Linguistics
Tale Of The Mackenzie River Indians
The Way of an Indian
Hunting With The Bow & ArrowDirect Download!
It
became almost a legend that wild Indians lived in
the Mount Lassen district. From time to time
ranchers or sheep herders reported that their
flocks had been molested, that signs of Indians
had been found or that arrowheads were discovered
in their sheep. But little credence was given
these rumors until the year 1908, when an electric
power company undertook to run a survey line
across Deer Creek Canyon with the object of
constructing a dam.
As the explorers reached the slide of volcanic
boulders where the apparition of the day before
had disappeared, two arrows flew past them. They
made a run for the top of the slide and reached it
just in time to see two Indians vanish in the
brush. They left behind them an old white-haired
squaw, whom they had been carrying. She was
partially paralyzed, and her legs were bound in
swaths of willow bark, seemingly in an effort to
strengthen them.
A great sense of relief entered the situation.
Watterman had discovered one of the lost tribes of
California; Ishi had discovered a friend.
From him they learned little
of his personal history and less of that of his
family, because an Indian considers it unbecoming
to speak much of his own life, and it brings ill
luck to speak of the dead. He could not pronounce
the name of his father without calling him from
the land of spirits, and this he could only do for
some very important reason. But he knew the full
history of his tribe and their destruction.
As an artisan he was very
skilful and ingenious. Accustomed to primitive
tools of stone and bone.
He knew the history and use
of everything in the outdoor world. He spoke the
language of the animals. He taught me to make bows
and arrows, how to shoot them, and how to hunt,
Indian fashion. He was a wonderful companion in
the woods, and many days and nights we journeyed
together.
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Alaska Indian DictionaryDirect Download!
COMPILED BY CHARLES A. LEE 1896
Aleutian Indian And English Dictionary Common Words In The Dialects Of The
Aleutian Indian Language As Spoken By The Oogashik, Egashik, Egegik,
Anangashuk And Misremie Tribes Around Sulima River And Neighboring Parts
Of The Alaska Peninsula Compiled By Charles A. Lee Oogashik, 1896
The author, in placing this little book before the public, feels that in
so doing he adds his mite to the useful and timely literature of the day.
The ground has not been covered before, and all travelers in the Alaskan
Peninsula will appreciate to its fullest extent the purpose of this work.
The aborigines of this far away country have no written language, and this
work aims to put before the traveler or trader a means of communication
with this people which it is hoped will be of mutual benefit to both. Many
years of residence in this country and thorough familiarity with its
people, have, we believe, well equipped us for the realization of our
task.
THE AUTHOR
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Autobiography Of Ma-Ka-Tai-Me-She-Kia-Kiak, Or Black HawkDirect Download!
Embracing The
Traditions Of His Nation, Various Wars In
Which He Has Been Engaged, And His Account Of The
Cause And General History Of The Black Hawk War Of
1832,
His Surrender, And Travels Through The United
States.
Dictated By Himself.
Antoine Leclair, U. S. Interpreter.
J.B. Patterson,
Editor And Amanuensis.
Rock Island. Illinois, 1833.
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History Of The Ottawa And Chippewa Indians Of MichiganDirect Download!
by; Andrew J. Blackbird,
The author of this little
book, is an educated Indian, son of the Ottawa
Chief. His Indian name is Mack-aw-de-be-nessy (Black
Hawk), but he generally goes by the name of
"Blackbird," taken from the interpretation of the
French "L'Oiseau noir." Mr. Blackbird's wife is an
educated and intelligent white woman of English
descent, and they have four children. He is a
friend of the white people, as well as of his own
people. Brought up as an Indian, with no
opportunity for learning during his boyhood, when
he came to think for himself, he started out
blindly for an education, without any means but
his brains and his hands.
He was loyal to the Government during the
rebellion in the United States, for which cause he
met much opposition by designing white people, who
had full sway among the Indians, and who tried to
mislead them and cause them to be disloyal; and he
broke up one or two rebellious councils amongst
his people during the progress of the rebellion.
When Hon. D. C. Leach, of Traverse City, Mich.,
was Indian Agent, Mr. Blackbird was appointed
United States Interpreter and continued in this
office with other subsequent Agents of the
Department for many years. Before he was fairly
out of this office, he was appointed postmaster of
Little Traverse, now Harbor Springs, Mich., and
faithfully discharged his duties as such for over
eleven years with but very little salary.
He has also for several years looked after the
soldiers' claims for widows and orphans, both for
the whites as well as for his own people, in many
instances without the least compensation, not even
his stamps and paper paid. He is now decrepit with
old age and failing health, and unable to perform
hard manual labor.
We therefore recommend this work of Mr. A. J.
Blackbird
as interesting and reliable.
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Shea's Library Of American LinguisticsDirect Download!
Grammar Of The Mutsun Language, Spoken At The Mission Of San Juan
Bautista, Alta California. The accompanying volume is printed exactly from
a manuscript of 76 pages, small quarto, belonging to the College of Santa
Inez, by whose president it was, at the suggestion of A.S. Taylor, Esq.,
forwarded to the Smithsonian Institution.
The Mutsunes were the Indians
among whom the mission of San Juan Bautista was planted, June 24, 1799.
Their village lay in the centre of a valley, with abundance of rich land,
and as late as 1831 numbered 1200 souls. The mission is about 40 miles
northwest from Monterey, and they are thus the most northerly tribe, of
whose language, to our knowledge, the Spanish missionaries compiled a
grammar.
For purposes of comparison this little work, accordingly,
possesses great value, as the language was one of considerable extent,
covering, according to Mr. Taylor's estimate, a district one hundred and
seventy miles long by eighty broad.
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Tale Of The Mackenzie River IndiansDirect Download!
Owindia:
A True Tale Of The Mackenzie River Indians, North-West America.
Michel the Hunter was but an average type of the Indian character; of a
fiery, ardent nature, and unschooled affections, he never forgot a wrong
done him in early youth by a white man. His sweetheart was taken from him,
cruelly, heartlessly, mercilessly, during his absence, without note or
sign or warning, while he was working with all energy to make a home for
the little black-eyed maiden, who had promised to be his bride. If Michel
could but once have seen the betrayer to have given vent to his feelings
of scorn, rage, and indignation! To have asked him, as he longed to ask
him, if this was his Christian faith, his boasted white man's creed! To
have asked if in those thousand miles he had traversed to reach the red
man's home, there were no girls suited to his mind, save only the one
betrothed to Indian Michel! He would have asked, too, if it were not
enough to invade his country, build houses, plant his barley and potatoes,
and lay claim to his moose-deer and bear, his furs and peltries, but he
must needs touch, with profane hands, his home treasures, and meddle with
that which "even an Indian" holds sacred? It might, perchance, have been
better for Michel if he could have spoken out and unburdened himself of
his deep sense of wrong and injury, which from henceforth lay like a hot
iron in his heart. The Italian proverb says, "It is better to swear than
to brood;"
The funeral rites of the North American Indian, it need hardly be
remarked, are of the very simplest description; indeed, it is only of late
years, and since Christianity has spread among them, that they have been
persuaded to adopt the rites and ceremonies of Christian burial.
Formerly, in many instances, the body of the deceased would be wrapped in
its blanket, and then hoisted up on a wooden stage erected for the
purpose; after which the friends of the departed would make off with the
utmost speed imaginable. Sometimes even this tribute to a lost friend
would not be forthcoming; the Indian has an unspeakable dread of death,
and of the dead; from the moment that the heart of his best beloved has
ceased to beat, he turns from the lifeless form, nor cares to look upon it
again. The new blanket which, perhaps, was only worn a day or two by the
departed, will now, with scrupulous care, be wrapped around his dead body;
for although he were blanketless himself, no Indian could be persuaded to
use that which had once been a dead man's property.
Then, it may be, the corpse would be left lying in the leather lodge or
tent, which would afterwards be closely fastened up; and it has sometimes
devolved upon the Missionaries to spend the night outside, watching the
camp and keeping a fire burning in order to ward off dogs or wolves, which
would otherwise undoubtedly have broken into the tent and made short work
of the lifeless body deserted by all its friends and neighbours and
dearest connexions.
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Indian Story and SongDirect Download!
INDIAN
STORY AND SONG
FROM NORTH AMERICA
By
ALICE C. FLETCHER
Holder of the Thaw
Fellowship
Peabody Museum Harvard University
At the Congress of Musicians held in connection with the
Trans-Mississippi Exposition at Omaha in July, 1898, several essays upon the
songs of the North
American Indians were read, in illustration of which a number
of Omaha Indians, for the first time, sang their native melodies to an audience
largely composed of trained musicians.
This unique presentation not only
demonstrated the scientific value of these aboriginal songs in the study of the
development of music, but suggested their availability as themes, novel and
characteristic, for the American composer. It was felt that this availability
would be greater if the story, or the ceremony which gave rise to the song,
could be known, so that, in developing the theme, all the movements might be
consonant with the circumstances that had inspired the motive. In response to
the expressed desire of many musicians, I have here given a number of songs in
their matrix of story.
Material like that brought together in these pages has
hitherto appeared only in scientific publications, where it has attracted the
lively interest of specialists both in Europe and America. It is now offered in
a more popular form, that the general public may share with the student the
light shed by these untutored melodies upon the history of music; for these
songs take us back to a stage of development antecedent to that in which culture
music appeared among the ancients, and reveal to us something of the foundations
upon which rests the art of music as we know it to-day.
Many of the stories and
songs in this little book are now for the first time published. All have been
gathered directly from the people, in their homes, or as I have listened to the
earnest voice of the native priest explaining the ancient ceremonials of his
fathers. The stories are close translations, losing only a certain picturesqueness and vigour in their foreign guise; but the melodies are exactly
as sung by the Indians.
Indian myths embodying cosmic ideas have passages told
in song, tribal legends have their milestones of song, folk-tales at dramatic
points break into song; but into these rich fields I have not here entered. This
collection reveals something of the wealth of musical and dramatic material that
can be gleaned outside of myth, legend, and folk-lore among the natives of our
country.
Aside from its scientific value, this music possesses a charm of
spontaneity that cannot fail to please those who would come near to nature and
enjoy the expression of emotion untrammelled by the intellectual control of
schools. These songs are like the wild flowers that have not yet come under the
transforming hand of the gardener.
ALICE C. FLETCHER.
Peabody Museum, Harvard
University.
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The Way of an IndianDirect Download!
by; FREDERIC REMINGTON
Author of "Men With the Bark On" "Crooked Trails,"
&c. Published, February, 1906