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One legend claims stealing someone's shadow (by measuring it against a wall and driving a nail through its head) can turn the victim into a vampire. Avoid people who talk to themselves. According to Ukrainian legend, that could indicate a dual soul and the second one doesn't die! Also watch out for the seventh son of a seventh son, a person born with a red caul (amniotic membrane covering the head), or a child born with teeth. A vampire can result if a cat or dog walks over a fresh grave, a bat flies over the corpse, or the person has died suddenly as a result of suicide or murder. Unfinished business can also cause a body to rise, as can inadequate burial rites, including a grave that is too shallow. Most vampires are described in folklore as flushed and ruddy, with swollen bodies and bloated faces. Often, they can be identified because they're sitting up in the grave. According to folklore, there are a number of ways to protect yourself from vampires, including the ever-popular wearing of garlic or a religious symbol. You can slow a vampire down by giving him something to do, like pick up poppy seeds or unravel a net. (They're quite compulsive.) Cross water and he can't follow. If you can find the body, give it a bottle of whiskey or food so it doesn't have to travel. If that doesn't work, either shoot the corpse (may require a silver bullet) or drive a stake through the heart. And remember, the vampire won't enter your dwelling unless invited. Trivia is the Roman goddess of sorcery, hounds and the crossroads. In Dante's "Inferno" the Ninth Circle of Hell is reserved for those who betray family or country. The denizens of this deepest circle, who are frozen in ice, include Judas (betrayer of Christ) and Cassius and Brutus (betrayers of Julius Caesar). Abe Silverstein, who headed NASA's Space Flight Development Program, proposed the name Apollo for the space exploration programs in the 1960's. He chose that legendary Greek name because the virile Apollo was a god who rode through the skies in a magnificent golden chariot. The precedent of naming manned spacecraft for mythological gods had been set earlier with Project Mercury, also named by Silverstein. Some people consider the $1 bill unlucky because there are so many 13's on it: 13 stars, 13 stripes, 13 steps, 13 arrows and even an olive branch with 13 leaves on it. Of course the $1 bill is unlucky - if it was lucky it would be a $100 bill. The name of the legendary Lady Godiva's horse - Aethenoth An artificial spider and web are often included in the decorations on Ukrainian Christmas trees. A spider web found on Christmas morning is believed to bring good luck. When visiting Finland, Santa leaves his sleigh behind and rides on a goat named Ukko. Finnish folklore has it that Ukko is made of straw, but is strong enough to carry Santa Claus anyway. According to legend, if a hare crosses a person's path as he starts out on a journey, the trip will be unlucky and it's best to return home and start again. If a pregnant woman sees a hare, her child may be born with a hare-lip. If a hare runs down the main street of a town, it foretells a fire. Cornish legend says that girls who die of grief after being rejected by a lover turn into white hares and haunt their former beaus. Ancient Greeks wove marjoram into funeral wreaths and put them on the graves of loved ones. The wreaths served as prayers for the happiness of the deceased in a future life. Breaking of a glass is traditional in some wedding ceremonies. This custom symbolizes different things. To some its the destruction of the temple in Jerusalem, and for some its the represents the fragility of a relationship. In Greek culture, brides carry a lump of sugar in their wedding glove. It's supposed to bring sweetness to their married life. Placing a wreath on a grave is part of an ancient belief it was necessary to provide comforts for the dead and give them gifts in order for their spirits to not haunt the mourners. The circular arrangement represents a magic circle which is supposed to keep the spirit within its bounds. The Sphinx at Giza in Egypt is 240 feet long and carved out of limestone. Built by Pharaoh Khafre to guard the way to his pyramid, it has a lion's body and the ruler's head. The Vikings believed that the Northern lights which are seen from time to time in the north sky were caused by the flashing armor and spears of Odin's handmaidens as they rode out to collect warriors slain in battle. One gift-giving taboo in China is the giving of straw sandals, which are associated with funerals, and therefore considered bad luck. Crossing one's fingers is a way of secretly making the sign of the Cross. It was started by early Christians to ask for divine assistance without attracting the attention of pagans. One sign of rain that farmers once searched for was for their pigs to pick up sticks and walk around with them in their mouths. During the Civil War, Gen. Ulysses S. Grant believed that onions would prevent dysentery and other physical ailments. He reportedly sent the following message via wire to the War Department: "I will not move my army without onions." Within a day, the U.S. government sent three trainloads of onions to the front. Contrary to popular belief, there are almost no Buddhists in India, nor have there been for about a thousand years. On the stone temples of Madura in southern India, there are more than 30 million carved images of gods and goddesses. One superstition says that if a girl leaves her house early on Valentine's Day and the first person she meets is a man, then she will be married within three months. Less romantic was the old historical opinion that Valentine's Day is a good day to prepare eels for the purposes of magic. Eating an eel's heart was once believed to enable a person to see into the future. The reason one wears a wedding ring on the third finger is that (tradition says) there is supposed to be a vein which goes directly from that finger to the heart—i.e., the seat of love. Also, not everyone wears that wedding ring on the third finger of the LEFT hand. In some traditions, such as the Jewish one, it is worn on the right hand. Also, I'm given to understand that nuns ("brides of Christ") wear a wedding ring, again on the right hand. To prevent evil spirits from entering the bodies of their male children, parents dressed them in blue. Blue was chosen because it's the color of the sky and was therefore associated with heavenly spirits. Girls weren't dressed in blue, apparently because people didn't think that evil spirits would bother with them. Eventually, however, girls did get their own color: pink. Pink was chosen because of an old English legend which said that girls were born inside of pink roses. The famous Citgo sign near Fenway Park in Boston is maintained not by Citgo, but by Boston's historical society.

CHEROKEE

Catawba Spoke Sioun language Lived east of the Appalachian Mountains in the Carolina piedmont. Long before Columbus, Catawba women were fashioning sturdy cookware and handsome ceremonial vessels; when the English settled Charleston, the women bartered pots for metal tools, clothing, and other necessities. In the 1860's the Catawba were confined to a tiny reservation in South Carolina-which by chance contained the deposits of distinctive reddish clay they had used for years. Pottery became a key to their very survival. Now as then, Catawba potters eschew kiln firing, modern glazes, and potter's wheels. Using techniques handed down from mother to daughter for generations, they build their vessels from clay coils, polish them with quartzite pebbles, decorate them with ancient designs, and fire them on the hot coals of an open fire. The resulting hard finish produces a metallic ring when tapped-the echo of a well-tended tradition, still audible among the red clay hills of South Carolina. Cayuga Occupied the inland forests that skirted Lakes Ontario and Erie and lived in large fortified villages. They moved from time to time, and they used fire to clear land for crops and to keep the forests open, a practice that encouraged the growth of brushy browse for deer and other animals. Shared a tradition of warfare that centered on taking prisoners and either adopting them into the captor's society or, more often, sacrificing them. Evidence that enemies raided each other's towns regularly appears in distinctive pottery styles found at different sites....The major Northeastern nations might have destroyed each other in due course, but around the 15th century AD-dates and details differ in tribal traditions-a peacemaker came among them, and rival Iroquois tribes formed a political confederation. For more information, see Iroquois as they were part of this nation. Cherokee For the Cherokee, gogi, the warm season between April and October, was the time to travel, to make war, to plant, and harvest. The cold, goga, from October to April, was the time to collect nuts, to hunt for deer, black bears, wild turkeys and other game, and to gather inside to tend the fires and retell the stories. spoke a form Iroquoian and inhabited a large area west of the Appalachian Mountains. Tradition dictated the protocol to be followed in dealings between humans and plants. The Cherokee and others believed, for instance, that ginseng, an aromatic medicinal herb that grew wild in the mountains, was a conscious being and that it could make itself invisible to anyone unworthy of gathering it. The women who went out searching for ginseng were thus instructed to show their respect by leaving the first three plants they found untouched and, before digging up the fourth, to say a prayer and place a small bead on the ground as compensation to the plant's spirit. The Cherokee used a booger mask during a riotous ceremonial dance that may have originated as a reenactment of De Soto's invasion. Dancers wearing the masks ("booger" refers loosely to any ghost or monster) burst loudly into the room and launch a manic display of lewd, aggressive behavior that leaves no doubt about the Cherokee's opinion of the celebrated conquistador. The Spaniards crossed the Blue Ridge Mountains in May of 1540, encountering little hostility but also finding few stockpiles of corn to steal. The area was controlled by people whose descendants would be known as the Cherokee...and were related to other Iroquoian tribes in the Northest. (One township visited by De Soto was called Chalaque, similar to a Muskogean word meaning "people of a different speech.") Cherokee medicine men squeezed tobacco's juice on bee stings and snakebites and boiled its leaves into tea as a cure for fever. The smallpox epidemic in 1738 hit the Cherokee nation. Cherokee elders wondered if the smallpox epidemic might be retribution for sins committed by some of the young people, and had their shamans lead rituals of contrition to appease the offended spirit. But such measures often failed, and when they did, some townspeople began to question the power of their shamans. More than 300 years had passed since the first Europeans stepped into the Southeast...Yet even those who held fast to tribal identities were much changed from the ancestors who had greeted the early white explorers....The Cherokee had their own written language, thanks to the genius of Sequoyah, and their own newspaper, The Cherokee Phoenix, with a readership reaching well beyond the tribal homelands. No group succeeded more dramatically in modernizing itself than the Cherokee. Taking new European ideas of republican government and blending them with their own tradition of tribal councils, progressive Cherokee leaders attempted to construct a model society. They built a capital, New Echota, in Georgia (their original capital in Tennessee having been lost by treaty), established a 32-member legislature, wrote a constitution, and framed a judicial system. But to the growing white majority on the western frontier, the presence of any Indians at all, "civilized" or not, was unacceptable. Every perceived failing was dredged up to discredit the Cherokee-including the fact that they had sided with the British during the American Revolution. (No matter that more recently, in the War of 1812, Cherokee warriors had allied with Jackson to defeat the Red Sticks.) Meanwhile, white planters and land speculators continued to pour in. Hungry for new acreage...they relentlessly pressed the federal government to remove the Cherokee, along with the other Southeastern tribes. In 1828 gold was discovered on the edge of Cherokee territory, and the cries for removal reached a crescendo...later that year...Andrew Jackson was elected president. He objected to the existence of sovereign Indian nations within the boundaries of the United States. He feared they might make their own alliances with Spain or England, which still posed a real threat to America's national ambitions. After a furious debate, Congress passed the Indian Removal Act of 1830 by one vote. The bill allowed the president to give the Five Civilized Tribes land in Indian Territory, later named Oklahoma, in exchange for the Southeastern lands they now occupied. That was the carrot. The stick was a provision that the new law could be enforced, if necessary, with military action. In their battles against removal, the Cherokee were led by their principal chief, John Ross, the de facto head of government at New Echota. He had fought on Jackson's side at Horseshoe Bend. But Ross was adamant in opposing Jackson's removal plans: the Cherokee were a sovereign nation, he argued, whose territory the federal and state governments must respect. Ross gained the support of several prominent white politicians, including Sen Henry Clay of Kentucky and the great Massachusetts orator Daniel Webster. Yet he never succeeded in winning over all of his own people. One of those who disagreed with Ross was a Cherokee Council speaker called The Ridge...who believed it was in the tribe's interest to negotiate with Washington, make the best deal possible, and move west. Ridge had another motive as well-he wanted to replace Ross as principal chief. In this he had the support of his son, John; his brilliant cousin, Elias Boudinot, editor of The Cherokee Phoenix; and Boudinot's brother, Stand Watie. The "Ridge Faction", as it was known, inspired little enthusiasm from the rest of the tribe; only a few hundred favored accommodation. When the Supreme Court handed down its verdict, the result at first seemed ambiguous. In Cherokee Nation v. Georgia (1831), Chief Justice John Marshall ruled that Indian tribes were "domestic dependent nations"-wards of the federal government, in effect, with no right to file suit. Then in a second case (Worcester v. Georgia), the court held for the Cherokee, declaring them to be "a distinct community, occupying its territory," which the people of Georgia had no right to enter without Cherokee consent. But President Jackson simply sneered at it, "John Marshall has made his decision. Now let him enforce it." Government negotiators soon began talks with the Ridge Faction and its supporters. In 1835, at the New Echota, Ridge and a group of several hundred supporters agreed to trade the remaining Cherokee lands for territory west of the Mississippi. Remembering a Cherokee law of 1829 that decreed death to anyone selling land without the consent of all Cherokee people, Ridge grimly remarked, "With this treaty, I sign my death warrant." Four years later Ridge, his son, and Elias Boudinot were put to death for their actions. On June 22, 1839, they were stabbed to death by unknown assailants. Amnesty was subsequently granted to others who signed-and to the unidentified executioners. But the treaty of New Echota-which was never approved by the Cherokee Nation nor by John Ross nor by anyone seriously considered a leader-was ratified by the US Senate and became the legal basis for exiling the Cherokee people. To force compliance with the illegal Treaty of New Echota, the US government sent more than 7,000 troops into Cherokee country; state militias swelled the army of occupation to more than 9,000 men. The soldiers built stockades in key locations and in late May of 1838 began to fill them with ordinary people pulled from their homes. Years later an eyewitness remembered the scene: "Families at dinner were startled by the sudden gleam of bayonets in the doorway and rose up to be driven with blows and oaths along the trail that led to the stockade." Individuals were seized "in their fields or going along the road, women were taken from their spinning wheels and children from their play." As soon as soldiers removed the Indians, local whites rushed in, ransacking their abandoned homes and stealing anything of value. Searching for Cherokee gold that was rumored to have been hidden, white mobs feverishly ripped apart burial grounds and opened old coffins, tossing aside the sacred remains of Cherokee ancestors. Within a single month more than 8,000 Cherokees had been rounded up and herded into the stockades. Only one small group managed to escape the soldiers; they took refuge deep in the North Carolina mountains, where their desendants remain today. Drought struck the Southeast, drying up wells and streams and destroying crops. Cholera and dysentery broke out in the stockades. Watching their people die, Cherokee leaders negotiated an agreement that allowed them to control their own removal. As the long caravans began to move toward Oklahoma, the emigrants were already running short of food and supplies. Tuberculosis, pellagra, pneumonia, and other diseases stalked the wagon trains. Of the 16,000 men, women, and children forced to relocate, more than 4,000 died either in the stockades or on the way west. The tragedy of the removal still lingers in the memory of the Cherokee. They call it oosti ganuhnuh dunaclohiluh, "the trail where they cried." The Cherokee laid out a new capital, Tahlequah, and revived their constitution. Ross won reelection as principal chief. A public school system was in operation by 1841. The Cherokee Advocate, the first newspaper in Indian Territory appeared in 1844 and was soon joined by publications from other tribes. The 1893 opening of Cherokee land in Indian Territory to white settlement triggered a stampede that left several would-be-settlers dead. Seven such events added 14 million acres of "surplus" tribal lands to what became the state of Oklahoma. An unforeseen consequence of the Dawes Commission's work is that in Oklahoma today there are no Indian reservations such as exist in states to the north and west of it. Yet Oklahoma boasts the largest Native American population in the US-more than 250,000. About 120,000 of those are Cherokee, which ranks not only as the largest tribe in Oklahoma but-with almost 310,000 people nationwide identifying themselves as Cherokee in the 1990 census-the largest in the United States and Canada. In early 1994, the University of Tennessee repatriated 190 sets of Cherokee remains disinterred during a Tennessee Valley Authority dam construction. Top Cheyenne Bear Butte, just northeast of the Black Hills racetrack, is a sacred place, mato paha. The Cheyenne say their prophet Sweet Medicine was given the tribe's sacred icon of four arrows. And it was here that the Cheyenne, starving at the time were given the gift of the Sun Dance so that they might yearly renew the world, its game, and its bountiful nature. For the Cheyenne, the role of peace chief-charged with handling problems within the tribe-offered the highest degrees of prestige and responsiblity. Men were chosen to join the "council of 44" peace chiefs for a 10-year term of office. During that time a chief was expected to be generous to the poor, to behave as a wise father to every tribal member, and to resolve disputes with a tenderhearted yet decisive manner. Among the Cheyenne and other Plains tribes, artison "guilds" controlled the production of all quillwork and beadwork. Members controlled the highly specialized knowledge needed for certain techniques, and instruction required payment. Those women who were fortunate enough to possess such knowledge were paid well for their creations. A quilled robe made by a member of a quilling society, for example, could easily be traded for a pony from the Arapaho or the Mandan-Hidatsa. The Cheyenne's quilling society offered graded memberships, based on the particular item that the woman had learned how to make. Ascending in order, there were membership divisions for the moccasins, baby cradles; stars for ornamenting lodges; buffalo robes; and lodge linings, back rests and parfleches. Some of the best-known women warriors were members of the Cheyenne tribe. Perhaps the most illustrious woman warrior was Buffalo Calf Woman, sister of the distinguished Cheyenne warrior Chief Comes in Sight. In the early summer of 1876, Buffalo Calf Woman rescued her wounded brother from a battlefield where he had fallen. Had it not been for her courage, Chief Comes in Sight almost certainly would have died that day. The high esteem in which the Cheyenne held her is evidenced by the fact that the fight became known as "Where the Girl Saved her Brother." Another Cheyenne woman who fought in battle was Island Woman, wife of White Frog. While taking part in an attack on the Pawnee, Island Woman was charged by a hatchet-wielding Pawnee warior. She reputedly wrenched the hatchet from her assailant's hand, knocking the Pawnee from his horse. Of all the Plains' manly-hearted women, the most ruthless may have been Ehyophsta, better known as Yellow-Haired Woman. The daughter of Cheyenne Chief Stands in Timber and the niece of the old Bad Faced Bull, Ehyophsta fought not only in the battle of Beecher's Island in 1867 but also during the battle between the Cheyenne and the Shoshone the following year, when she counted coup on one enemy and killed another. One of the last Cheyenne fighting women, Yellow-Haired Woman died in 1915. Some historians suggest that the Sun Dance appeared around 1700, possibly originating with the Cheyenne. To the Plains Indians, however, the ceremony was ageless-a divine gift from the supernatural world. To the Cheyenne, it was known as the New Life Lodge. It was a world-renewal ritual, and the altar featured elements that reminded them of their agricultural heritage. In 1825, Brig. Gen. Henry Atkinson and Indian agent Benjamin O'Fallon sought out chiefs for negotiating treaties concerning trade and friendship. In early July, Atkinson's party intercepted the Cheyenne at their base camp near the Black Hills. An Atkinson aide described the 15 Cheyenne leaders who convened with the general as "decidely the finest-looking Indians we have seen." These 15 individuals willingly put their thumbprints to a document acknowledging US political and commercial authority over their region. But they represented only one of the tribe's 10 bands; they were only 15 out of an estimated 3,000 Cheyenne. As would happen time and again in Indian-white frontier diplomacy, what US officials considered a legally binding agreement, the great majority of Indians neither understood nor accepted. The Cheyenne and the Arapaho made peace in 1840; the same year the Kiowa and the Comanche, who had stopped fighting each other in 1790, forged a potent alliance. For the next quarter century the swift horsemen and stealthy warriors of these southern tribes descended like hawks on the slow-moving pack trains along the Santa Fe Trail and also launched regular rustling forays against the cattle ranches that were proliferating in western Texas and eastern New Mexico. At first these depredations brought new wealth into their tepee circles-silver to be beaten into ornaments, mirrors for dance regalia and silent signaling between war parties, and an occasional Mexican or fair-haired Anglo child as an adopted member of the family. However...in the summer of 1849, a party of Cheyenne horse raiders returning home stopped at a wagon-train camp in the Platte River valley. By the time their leader saw the white gold-rushers dying of cholera, it was too late: water supplies for the Cheyenne campsites had already been contaminated, and the agonizing disease soon killed most of their inhabitants. In the early to mid 1800's, the times were changing, and many Plains Indians read the signs with foreboding. One was a Southern Cheyenne war leader name Yellow Wolf. In August 1846 his buffalo-hide tepee was pitched beside William Bent's trading post, an important stopover on the Santa Fe Trail. Recuperating from an illness at the post was Lt JJ Abert of the US Army, who was about to travel to Pueblo country for the government. Struck by the 60-year-old warrior's engaging intelligence, Abert recorded Yellow Wolf's thoughts in his private journal. The Indian observed that buffalo were harder to find and confided a deeper fear that unless his people adopted the white man's ways and found some alternative to their hunting way of life, they would disappear forever. In fact, another 40 years of Indian rebellion still lay ahead-years of whole tribes removed and resettled, of pitched battles and pitiless massacres and violent deaths of many good-hearted Indians like Yellow Wolf, who fell at the age of 85. Just as the exile at Bosque Redondo was beginning for the Navajo, an incident took place in Colorado that sent shock waves across the country. No sooner had gold turned up along Cherry Creek in 1858 than the city of Denver was born. The eastern flanks of the Colorado Rockies were soon dotted with mining camps....By 1864 the attraction of Montana's goldfields had expanded the territory's population by 30,000 new settlers. In the face of this rampant growth, it was only a matter of time before conflict erupted. The pretext was supplied in Denver, where the slain bodies of a miner's family were laid out for public viewing as evidence of Indian savagery. It was unclear who had actually killed them-but no matter. A force of some 700 "Colorado militia," hastily recruited from local gambling halls and ranches, set out to teach the Indians a lesson. Just after sunrise on December 28, 1864, the ragtag troops, led by a former clergyman, Col. John M. Chivington, found a quiet encampment of Cheyenne and Arapaho families along Sand Creek. Here they had set up their tepees as ordered by a post commander at Ft Lyon, to whom they had surrendered two months earlier. The leader at Sand Creek was the Cheyenne peace chief Black Kettle. In a matter of minutes Chivington delivered his infamous battle cry-"Kill them all, big and small, nits make lice"-and his men attacked. "I saw the bodies of those lying there cut all to pieces," an eyewitness later testified, "worse mutilated than any I ever saw before, the women all cut to pieces...children two or three months old; all ages lying there, from sucking infants up to warriors." Of 123 dead, nearly 100 were women and children. "Colorado Soldiers Have Again Covered Themselves With Glory," headlined the Denver News, Indian scalps were proudly displayed at a local theater. The outcry came from settlers throughout the West to get tough on Indians, with most of the nation's military establishment in hearty agreement. At the same time, calls for peace and compassion were heard from abolitionist groups... Liberal-minded citizens in the East-who, angry Westerners pointed out, were comfortably distant from the realities of frontier life-demanded an inquiry into the events at Sand Creek. At length the government acted: In 1865 a congressional team headed by Sen. James Doolittle of WI was dispatched to interview Indians, traders, and missionaries across the West. Its goals were to establish who was to blame for Sand Creek and to determine why the populations on reservations such as Bosque Redondo were declining so rapidly. The commission's final report recommended no action against Chivington or his men. It did cite such factors as disease, lawlessness by whites, corruption by Indian agents, and the loss of hunting grounds as causes in Indian depopulation-but offered no relief for the general "Indian problem," which it concluded, "can never be remedied until the Indian race is civilized or shall entirely disappear." In October 1867, the US government and the Plains Indians held the last major peace treaty negotiations. The first meeting took place in the valley of Medicine Lodge Creek in Kansas. The final Medicine Lodge Creek treaty created two large reservations in Indian Territory-one for the Kiowa and Comanche in the Leased District, and one for the Cheyenne and Arapaho in the Cherokee Outlet-for the containment and pacification of these southern tribes. In the late summer of 1868, Cheyenne war parties wreaked havoc on some 40 white communities over a two month period, killing at least 79 settlers and kidnapping a number of children. In response, Gen Philip Sheridan ordered an ambitious lieutenant colonel of the 7th Calvary, George Armstrong Custer, to lead a surprise attack against a Cheyenne encampment on Oklahoma's Washita River. On the morning of November 27, 1868, for the second time in his life, the peace chief Black Kettle noticed furious soldiers descending on his camp. He had survived Sand Creek; he did not survive Washita. Custer's take-no-prisoners policy resulted in 103 Cheyennes being shot to death-including Black Kettle and his wife, killed riding along the ice-encrusted river in a desperate attempt to flee. All the Cheyennes' horses were shot to inhibit the survivors' movements and to destroy their emergency food supply. Some would later call the engagement Custer's First Stand. The Cheyenne never forgot it. In the summer of 1876, Gen Philip Sheridan proposed to confront the Indian hostiles-composed of Sioux, Cheyenne, And Araphao-from three directions. His three army columns, amounting to about 2,500 men, would include Gen Alfred Terry and Col George Custer coming in from the east, Gen George Crook entering from the south, and Gen John Gibbon striking from the west. Coming upon the Indian camp at Rosebud Creek on June 17, Crook abruptly discovered that their numbers had been disastrously underestimated. For 6 hours his troops faced waves of attacks by well-armed warriors before he ordered a retreat. Meanwhile, other tribal groups were filtering into the area they knew as the Greasy Grass (and whites called the Little Bighorn River). More than 7,000 people in all camped in six great tepee circles, including 1,800 warriors.... Out of touch with Crook, Custer led a detachment of the 7th Calvary toward the Little Bighorn. Unaware that he was approaching the largest fighting force ever assembled on the Plains, Custer made an impulsive and fatal decision. Dividing his troops-about 210 men-into three attacking groups, he positioned them on a ridge above the camp. A warrior named Wooden Leg remembered being awakened by the crack of gunfire. Stripping for the fight and leaping onto his favorite war pony, he and his friend Little Bird took off after a fleeing soldier. 'We were lashing him with our pony whips. It seemed not brave to shoot him. He pointed back his revolver, though, and sent a bullet into Little Bird's thigh. As I was getting possession of his weapon, he fell to the ground. I do not know what became of him.' In the course of an hour, Custer and every one of his men perished; only a horse name Comanche, belonging to one of Custer's captains was left alive. The victors promptly withdrew, most heading up the Little Bighorn Valley-where they held a great celebration below the mouth of Lodge Grass Creek. Only four months after the victory over Custer, a group of Northern Cheyennes led by Little Wolf and Dull Knife had their village destroyed and hundreds of their horses shot by US troops. Accused of involvement at the Little Bighorn, they were deported by train to the Southern Cheyenne Agency in Indian Territory. But these lifelong inhabitants of the northern Plains hated this strange, oppressively humid place and waited for a chance to escape. In September 1878 about 300 of them began a 1,500 mile run for freedom. For four months they managed to elude more than 10,000 pursuing troops, until at the Platte River a dispute over strategy led to a split up. Little Wolf's group surrendered soon afterward at the Little Missouri River and, ironically, was shortly hired as army scouts on the Tongue River Reservation. Dull Knife's followers did not fare so well. Captured near Nebraska's Red Cloud Agency, they were locked in an unheated brig at Ft Robinson in the dead of winter. When the desperate prisoners attempted a breakout, 64 were killed and 78 recaptured. But the 30 or so survivors who remained free were eventually allowed to return to the Rosebud Valley, where their descendants still live today. *Please see "The Cheyenne Woman Iron Teeth Remembers the Great Escape" on my home page for a recount from the Northern Cheyenne woman who lived through the suffering endured after the escape. By the 1860's Plains Indians were beginning to preserve their stories on the pages of ledger books acquired from whites. Ink, pencils, and watercolors on paper were easier media than the stick and bone brushes on hide previously employed. In early 1994, at Busby, MN, tribespeople turned out in force to reclaim and provide a proper burial for the skulls of 24 Cheyennes killed in 1878 while trying to escape from Ft Robinson, NE. The skulls had rested for more than a century at three Eastern museums. Now finally, they reached the destination the fugitives had been seeking.

CHEROKEE

Catawba Spoke Sioun language Lived east of the Appalachian Mountains in the Carolina piedmont. Long before Columbus, Catawba women were fashioning sturdy cookware and handsome ceremonial vessels; when the English settled Charleston, the women bartered pots for metal tools, clothing, and other necessities. In the 1860's the Catawba were confined to a tiny reservation in South Carolina-which by chance contained the deposits of distinctive reddish clay they had used for years. Pottery became a key to their very survival. Now as then, Catawba potters eschew kiln firing, modern glazes, and potter's wheels. Using techniques handed down from mother to daughter for generations, they build their vessels from clay coils, polish them with quartzite pebbles, decorate them with ancient designs, and fire them on the hot coals of an open fire. The resulting hard finish produces a metallic ring when tapped-the echo of a well-tended tradition, still audible among the red clay hills of South Carolina. Cayuga Occupied the inland forests that skirted Lakes Ontario and Erie and lived in large fortified villages. They moved from time to time, and they used fire to clear land for crops and to keep the forests open, a practice that encouraged the growth of brushy browse for deer and other animals. Shared a tradition of warfare that centered on taking prisoners and either adopting them into the captor's society or, more often, sacrificing them. Evidence that enemies raided each other's towns regularly appears in distinctive pottery styles found at different sites....The major Northeastern nations might have destroyed each other in due course, but around the 15th century AD-dates and details differ in tribal traditions-a peacemaker came among them, and rival Iroquois tribes formed a political confederation. For more information, see Iroquois as they were part of this nation. Cherokee For the Cherokee, gogi, the warm season between April and October, was the time to travel, to make war, to plant, and harvest. The cold, goga, from October to April, was the time to collect nuts, to hunt for deer, black bears, wild turkeys and other game, and to gather inside to tend the fires and retell the stories. spoke a form Iroquoian and inhabited a large area west of the Appalachian Mountains. Tradition dictated the protocol to be followed in dealings between humans and plants. The Cherokee and others believed, for instance, that ginseng, an aromatic medicinal herb that grew wild in the mountains, was a conscious being and that it could make itself invisible to anyone unworthy of gathering it. The women who went out searching for ginseng were thus instructed to show their respect by leaving the first three plants they found untouched and, before digging up the fourth, to say a prayer and place a small bead on the ground as compensation to the plant's spirit. The Cherokee used a booger mask during a riotous ceremonial dance that may have originated as a reenactment of De Soto's invasion. Dancers wearing the masks ("booger" refers loosely to any ghost or monster) burst loudly into the room and launch a manic display of lewd, aggressive behavior that leaves no doubt about the Cherokee's opinion of the celebrated conquistador. The Spaniards crossed the Blue Ridge Mountains in May of 1540, encountering little hostility but also finding few stockpiles of corn to steal. The area was controlled by people whose descendants would be known as the Cherokee...and were related to other Iroquoian tribes in the Northest. (One township visited by De Soto was called Chalaque, similar to a Muskogean word meaning "people of a different speech.") Cherokee medicine men squeezed tobacco's juice on bee stings and snakebites and boiled its leaves into tea as a cure for fever. The smallpox epidemic in 1738 hit the Cherokee nation. Cherokee elders wondered if the smallpox epidemic might be retribution for sins committed by some of the young people, and had their shamans lead rituals of contrition to appease the offended spirit. But such measures often failed, and when they did, some townspeople began to question the power of their shamans. More than 300 years had passed since the first Europeans stepped into the Southeast...Yet even those who held fast to tribal identities were much changed from the ancestors who had greeted the early white explorers....The Cherokee had their own written language, thanks to the genius of Sequoyah, and their own newspaper, The Cherokee Phoenix, with a readership reaching well beyond the tribal homelands. No group succeeded more dramatically in modernizing itself than the Cherokee. Taking new European ideas of republican government and blending them with their own tradition of tribal councils, progressive Cherokee leaders attempted to construct a model society. They built a capital, New Echota, in Georgia (their original capital in Tennessee having been lost by treaty), established a 32-member legislature, wrote a constitution, and framed a judicial system. But to the growing white majority on the western frontier, the presence of any Indians at all, "civilized" or not, was unacceptable. Every perceived failing was dredged up to discredit the Cherokee-including the fact that they had sided with the British during the American Revolution. (No matter that more recently, in the War of 1812, Cherokee warriors had allied with Jackson to defeat the Red Sticks.) Meanwhile, white planters and land speculators continued to pour in. Hungry for new acreage...they relentlessly pressed the federal government to remove the Cherokee, along with the other Southeastern tribes. In 1828 gold was discovered on the edge of Cherokee territory, and the cries for removal reached a crescendo...later that year...Andrew Jackson was elected president. He objected to the existence of sovereign Indian nations within the boundaries of the United States. He feared they might make their own alliances with Spain or England, which still posed a real threat to America's national ambitions. After a furious debate, Congress passed the Indian Removal Act of 1830 by one vote. The bill allowed the president to give the Five Civilized Tribes land in Indian Territory, later named Oklahoma, in exchange for the Southeastern lands they now occupied. That was the carrot. The stick was a provision that the new law could be enforced, if necessary, with military action. In their battles against removal, the Cherokee were led by their principal chief, John Ross, the de facto head of government at New Echota. He had fought on Jackson's side at Horseshoe Bend. But Ross was adamant in opposing Jackson's removal plans: the Cherokee were a sovereign nation, he argued, whose territory the federal and state governments must respect. Ross gained the support of several prominent white politicians, including Sen Henry Clay of Kentucky and the great Massachusetts orator Daniel Webster. Yet he never succeeded in winning over all of his own people. One of those who disagreed with Ross was a Cherokee Council speaker called The Ridge...who believed it was in the tribe's interest to negotiate with Washington, make the best deal possible, and move west. Ridge had another motive as well-he wanted to replace Ross as principal chief. In this he had the support of his son, John; his brilliant cousin, Elias Boudinot, editor of The Cherokee Phoenix; and Boudinot's brother, Stand Watie. The "Ridge Faction", as it was known, inspired little enthusiasm from the rest of the tribe; only a few hundred favored accommodation. When the Supreme Court handed down its verdict, the result at first seemed ambiguous. In Cherokee Nation v. Georgia (1831), Chief Justice John Marshall ruled that Indian tribes were "domestic dependent nations"-wards of the federal government, in effect, with no right to file suit. Then in a second case (Worcester v. Georgia), the court held for the Cherokee, declaring them to be "a distinct community, occupying its territory," which the people of Georgia had no right to enter without Cherokee consent. But President Jackson simply sneered at it, "John Marshall has made his decision. Now let him enforce it." Government negotiators soon began talks with the Ridge Faction and its supporters. In 1835, at the New Echota, Ridge and a group of several hundred supporters agreed to trade the remaining Cherokee lands for territory west of the Mississippi. Remembering a Cherokee law of 1829 that decreed death to anyone selling land without the consent of all Cherokee people, Ridge grimly remarked, "With this treaty, I sign my death warrant." Four years later Ridge, his son, and Elias Boudinot were put to death for their actions. On June 22, 1839, they were stabbed to death by unknown assailants. Amnesty was subsequently granted to others who signed-and to the unidentified executioners. But the treaty of New Echota-which was never approved by the Cherokee Nation nor by John Ross nor by anyone seriously considered a leader-was ratified by the US Senate and became the legal basis for exiling the Cherokee people. To force compliance with the illegal Treaty of New Echota, the US government sent more than 7,000 troops into Cherokee country; state militias swelled the army of occupation to more than 9,000 men. The soldiers built stockades in key locations and in late May of 1838 began to fill them with ordinary people pulled from their homes. Years later an eyewitness remembered the scene: "Families at dinner were startled by the sudden gleam of bayonets in the doorway and rose up to be driven with blows and oaths along the trail that led to the stockade." Individuals were seized "in their fields or going along the road, women were taken from their spinning wheels and children from their play." As soon as soldiers removed the Indians, local whites rushed in, ransacking their abandoned homes and stealing anything of value. Searching for Cherokee gold that was rumored to have been hidden, white mobs feverishly ripped apart burial grounds and opened old coffins, tossing aside the sacred remains of Cherokee ancestors. Within a single month more than 8,000 Cherokees had been rounded up and herded into the stockades. Only one small group managed to escape the soldiers; they took refuge deep in the North Carolina mountains, where their desendants remain today. Drought struck the Southeast, drying up wells and streams and destroying crops. Cholera and dysentery broke out in the stockades. Watching their people die, Cherokee leaders negotiated an agreement that allowed them to control their own removal. As the long caravans began to move toward Oklahoma, the emigrants were already running short of food and supplies. Tuberculosis, pellagra, pneumonia, and other diseases stalked the wagon trains. Of the 16,000 men, women, and children forced to relocate, more than 4,000 died either in the stockades or on the way west. The tragedy of the removal still lingers in the memory of the Cherokee. They call it oosti ganuhnuh dunaclohiluh, "the trail where they cried." The Cherokee laid out a new capital, Tahlequah, and revived their constitution. Ross won reelection as principal chief. A public school system was in operation by 1841. The Cherokee Advocate, the first newspaper in Indian Territory appeared in 1844 and was soon joined by publications from other tribes. The 1893 opening of Cherokee land in Indian Territory to white settlement triggered a stampede that left several would-be-settlers dead. Seven such events added 14 million acres of "surplus" tribal lands to what became the state of Oklahoma. An unforeseen consequence of the Dawes Commission's work is that in Oklahoma today there are no Indian reservations such as exist in states to the north and west of it. Yet Oklahoma boasts the largest Native American population in the US-more than 250,000. About 120,000 of those are Cherokee, which ranks not only as the largest tribe in Oklahoma but-with almost 310,000 people nationwide identifying themselves as Cherokee in the 1990 census-the largest in the United States and Canada. In early 1994, the University of Tennessee repatriated 190 sets of Cherokee remains disinterred during a Tennessee Valley Authority dam construction. Top Cheyenne Bear Butte, just northeast of the Black Hills racetrack, is a sacred place, mato paha. The Cheyenne say their prophet Sweet Medicine was given the tribe's sacred icon of four arrows. And it was here that the Cheyenne, starving at the time were given the gift of the Sun Dance so that they might yearly renew the world, its game, and its bountiful nature. For the Cheyenne, the role of peace chief-charged with handling problems within the tribe-offered the highest degrees of prestige and responsiblity. Men were chosen to join the "council of 44" peace chiefs for a 10-year term of office. During that time a chief was expected to be generous to the poor, to behave as a wise father to every tribal member, and to resolve disputes with a tenderhearted yet decisive manner. Among the Cheyenne and other Plains tribes, artison "guilds" controlled the production of all quillwork and beadwork. Members controlled the highly specialized knowledge needed for certain techniques, and instruction required payment. Those women who were fortunate enough to possess such knowledge were paid well for their creations. A quilled robe made by a member of a quilling society, for example, could easily be traded for a pony from the Arapaho or the Mandan-Hidatsa. The Cheyenne's quilling society offered graded memberships, based on the particular item that the woman had learned how to make. Ascending in order, there were membership divisions for the moccasins, baby cradles; stars for ornamenting lodges; buffalo robes; and lodge linings, back rests and parfleches. Some of the best-known women warriors were members of the Cheyenne tribe. Perhaps the most illustrious woman warrior was Buffalo Calf Woman, sister of the distinguished Cheyenne warrior Chief Comes in Sight. In the early summer of 1876, Buffalo Calf Woman rescued her wounded brother from a battlefield where he had fallen. Had it not been for her courage, Chief Comes in Sight almost certainly would have died that day. The high esteem in which the Cheyenne held her is evidenced by the fact that the fight became known as "Where the Girl Saved her Brother." Another Cheyenne woman who fought in battle was Island Woman, wife of White Frog. While taking part in an attack on the Pawnee, Island Woman was charged by a hatchet-wielding Pawnee warior. She reputedly wrenched the hatchet from her assailant's hand, knocking the Pawnee from his horse. Of all the Plains' manly-hearted women, the most ruthless may have been Ehyophsta, better known as Yellow-Haired Woman. The daughter of Cheyenne Chief Stands in Timber and the niece of the old Bad Faced Bull, Ehyophsta fought not only in the battle of Beecher's Island in 1867 but also during the battle between the Cheyenne and the Shoshone the following year, when she counted coup on one enemy and killed another. One of the last Cheyenne fighting women, Yellow-Haired Woman died in 1915. Some historians suggest that the Sun Dance appeared around 1700, possibly originating with the Cheyenne. To the Plains Indians, however, the ceremony was ageless-a divine gift from the supernatural world. To the Cheyenne, it was known as the New Life Lodge. It was a world-renewal ritual, and the altar featured elements that reminded them of their agricultural heritage. In 1825, Brig. Gen. Henry Atkinson and Indian agent Benjamin O'Fallon sought out chiefs for negotiating treaties concerning trade and friendship. In early July, Atkinson's party intercepted the Cheyenne at their base camp near the Black Hills. An Atkinson aide described the 15 Cheyenne leaders who convened with the general as "decidely the finest-looking Indians we have seen." These 15 individuals willingly put their thumbprints to a document acknowledging US political and commercial authority over their region. But they represented only one of the tribe's 10 bands; they were only 15 out of an estimated 3,000 Cheyenne. As would happen time and again in Indian-white frontier diplomacy, what US officials considered a legally binding agreement, the great majority of Indians neither understood nor accepted. The Cheyenne and the Arapaho made peace in 1840; the same year the Kiowa and the Comanche, who had stopped fighting each other in 1790, forged a potent alliance. For the next quarter century the swift horsemen and stealthy warriors of these southern tribes descended like hawks on the slow-moving pack trains along the Santa Fe Trail and also launched regular rustling forays against the cattle ranches that were proliferating in western Texas and eastern New Mexico. At first these depredations brought new wealth into their tepee circles-silver to be beaten into ornaments, mirrors for dance regalia and silent signaling between war parties, and an occasional Mexican or fair-haired Anglo child as an adopted member of the family. However...in the summer of 1849, a party of Cheyenne horse raiders returning home stopped at a wagon-train camp in the Platte River valley. By the time their leader saw the white gold-rushers dying of cholera, it was too late: water supplies for the Cheyenne campsites had already been contaminated, and the agonizing disease soon killed most of their inhabitants. In the early to mid 1800's, the times were changing, and many Plains Indians read the signs with foreboding. One was a Southern Cheyenne war leader name Yellow Wolf. In August 1846 his buffalo-hide tepee was pitched beside William Bent's trading post, an important stopover on the Santa Fe Trail. Recuperating from an illness at the post was Lt JJ Abert of the US Army, who was about to travel to Pueblo country for the government. Struck by the 60-year-old warrior's engaging intelligence, Abert recorded Yellow Wolf's thoughts in his private journal. The Indian observed that buffalo were harder to find and confided a deeper fear that unless his people adopted the white man's ways and found some alternative to their hunting way of life, they would disappear forever. In fact, another 40 years of Indian rebellion still lay ahead-years of whole tribes removed and resettled, of pitched battles and pitiless massacres and violent deaths of many good-hearted Indians like Yellow Wolf, who fell at the age of 85. Just as the exile at Bosque Redondo was beginning for the Navajo, an incident took place in Colorado that sent shock waves across the country. No sooner had gold turned up along Cherry Creek in 1858 than the city of Denver was born. The eastern flanks of the Colorado Rockies were soon dotted with mining camps....By 1864 the attraction of Montana's goldfields had expanded the territory's population by 30,000 new settlers. In the face of this rampant growth, it was only a matter of time before conflict erupted. The pretext was supplied in Denver, where the slain bodies of a miner's family were laid out for public viewing as evidence of Indian savagery. It was unclear who had actually killed them-but no matter. A force of some 700 "Colorado militia," hastily recruited from local gambling halls and ranches, set out to teach the Indians a lesson. Just after sunrise on December 28, 1864, the ragtag troops, led by a former clergyman, Col. John M. Chivington, found a quiet encampment of Cheyenne and Arapaho families along Sand Creek. Here they had set up their tepees as ordered by a post commander at Ft Lyon, to whom they had surrendered two months earlier. The leader at Sand Creek was the Cheyenne peace chief Black Kettle. In a matter of minutes Chivington delivered his infamous battle cry-"Kill them all, big and small, nits make lice"-and his men attacked. "I saw the bodies of those lying there cut all to pieces," an eyewitness later testified, "worse mutilated than any I ever saw before, the women all cut to pieces...children two or three months old; all ages lying there, from sucking infants up to warriors." Of 123 dead, nearly 100 were women and children. "Colorado Soldiers Have Again Covered Themselves With Glory," headlined the Denver News, Indian scalps were proudly displayed at a local theater. The outcry came from settlers throughout the West to get tough on Indians, with most of the nation's military establishment in hearty agreement. At the same time, calls for peace and compassion were heard from abolitionist groups... Liberal-minded citizens in the East-who, angry Westerners pointed out, were comfortably distant from the realities of frontier life-demanded an inquiry into the events at Sand Creek. At length the government acted: In 1865 a congressional team headed by Sen. James Doolittle of WI was dispatched to interview Indians, traders, and missionaries across the West. Its goals were to establish who was to blame for Sand Creek and to determine why the populations on reservations such as Bosque Redondo were declining so rapidly. The commission's final report recommended no action against Chivington or his men. It did cite such factors as disease, lawlessness by whites, corruption by Indian agents, and the loss of hunting grounds as causes in Indian depopulation-but offered no relief for the general "Indian problem," which it concluded, "can never be remedied until the Indian race is civilized or shall entirely disappear." In October 1867, the US government and the Plains Indians held the last major peace treaty negotiations. The first meeting took place in the valley of Medicine Lodge Creek in Kansas. The final Medicine Lodge Creek treaty created two large reservations in Indian Territory-one for the Kiowa and Comanche in the Leased District, and one for the Cheyenne and Arapaho in the Cherokee Outlet-for the containment and pacification of these southern tribes. In the late summer of 1868, Cheyenne war parties wreaked havoc on some 40 white communities over a two month period, killing at least 79 settlers and kidnapping a number of children. In response, Gen Philip Sheridan ordered an ambitious lieutenant colonel of the 7th Calvary, George Armstrong Custer, to lead a surprise attack against a Cheyenne encampment on Oklahoma's Washita River. On the morning of November 27, 1868, for the second time in his life, the peace chief Black Kettle noticed furious soldiers descending on his camp. He had survived Sand Creek; he did not survive Washita. Custer's take-no-prisoners policy resulted in 103 Cheyennes being shot to death-including Black Kettle and his wife, killed riding along the ice-encrusted river in a desperate attempt to flee. All the Cheyennes' horses were shot to inhibit the survivors' movements and to destroy their emergency food supply. Some would later call the engagement Custer's First Stand. The Cheyenne never forgot it. In the summer of 1876, Gen Philip Sheridan proposed to confront the Indian hostiles-composed of Sioux, Cheyenne, And Araphao-from three directions. His three army columns, amounting to about 2,500 men, would include Gen Alfred Terry and Col George Custer coming in from the east, Gen George Crook entering from the south, and Gen John Gibbon striking from the west. Coming upon the Indian camp at Rosebud Creek on June 17, Crook abruptly discovered that their numbers had been disastrously underestimated. For 6 hours his troops faced waves of attacks by well-armed warriors before he ordered a retreat. Meanwhile, other tribal groups were filtering into the area they knew as the Greasy Grass (and whites called the Little Bighorn River). More than 7,000 people in all camped in six great tepee circles, including 1,800 warriors.... Out of touch with Crook, Custer led a detachment of the 7th Calvary toward the Little Bighorn. Unaware that he was approaching the largest fighting force ever assembled on the Plains, Custer made an impulsive and fatal decision. Dividing his troops-about 210 men-into three attacking groups, he positioned them on a ridge above the camp. A warrior named Wooden Leg remembered being awakened by the crack of gunfire. Stripping for the fight and leaping onto his favorite war pony, he and his friend Little Bird took off after a fleeing soldier. 'We were lashing him with our pony whips. It seemed not brave to shoot him. He pointed back his revolver, though, and sent a bullet into Little Bird's thigh. As I was getting possession of his weapon, he fell to the ground. I do not know what became of him.' In the course of an hour, Custer and every one of his men perished; only a horse name Comanche, belonging to one of Custer's captains was left alive. The victors promptly withdrew, most heading up the Little Bighorn Valley-where they held a great celebration below the mouth of Lodge Grass Creek. Only four months after the victory over Custer, a group of Northern Cheyennes led by Little Wolf and Dull Knife had their village destroyed and hundreds of their horses shot by US troops. Accused of involvement at the Little Bighorn, they were deported by train to the Southern Cheyenne Agency in Indian Territory. But these lifelong inhabitants of the northern Plains hated this strange, oppressively humid place and waited for a chance to escape. In September 1878 about 300 of them began a 1,500 mile run for freedom. For four months they managed to elude more than 10,000 pursuing troops, until at the Platte River a dispute over strategy led to a split up. Little Wolf's group surrendered soon afterward at the Little Missouri River and, ironically, was shortly hired as army scouts on the Tongue River Reservation. Dull Knife's followers did not fare so well. Captured near Nebraska's Red Cloud Agency, they were locked in an unheated brig at Ft Robinson in the dead of winter. When the desperate prisoners attempted a breakout, 64 were killed and 78 recaptured. But the 30 or so survivors who remained free were eventually allowed to return to the Rosebud Valley, where their descendants still live today. *Please see "The Cheyenne Woman Iron Teeth Remembers the Great Escape" on my home page for a recount from the Northern Cheyenne woman who lived through the suffering endured after the escape. By the 1860's Plains Indians were beginning to preserve their stories on the pages of ledger books acquired from whites. Ink, pencils, and watercolors on paper were easier media than the stick and bone brushes on hide previously employed. In early 1994, at Busby, MN, tribespeople turned out in force to reclaim and provide a proper burial for the skulls of 24 Cheyennes killed in 1878 while trying to escape from Ft Robinson, NE. The skulls had rested for more than a century at three Eastern museums. Now finally, they reached the destination the fugitives had been seeking.

APACHE

Abenaki in Vermont learned from childhood that the Creator, Tabaldac, had set aside the rivers and mountains of their homeland for their eternal use. Each landmark had a story: An enormous boulder in Lake Champlain, for instance, contained the spirit of the giant Odzihozo, who in his birth pangs had gouged out the basin that held the lake's waters. These stories, told by firelight during long winter evenings, reminded people of why things were the way there, and of their own place in the world around them. tended to move about seasonally. Abenaki groups congregated in farm villages for planting and harvesting but migrated to waterfalls and other choice sites when salmon, shad, and alewife headed upstream to spawn in the spring. held celebrations to mark the time of spring planting, the ripening of blueberries, the bringing in of the corn. The activity of the hunt...also required powerful rituals to ensure success. Hunters knew the habits and habitats of the animal world intimately, and they felt an almost personal bond with the animals they tracked. Before setting out, each hunter sought to discover his quarry in a dream-a sign that the creature would willingly surrender itself to his spear or arrow. After making the kill, a hunter treated the carcass with respect, ceremoniously burying the carcass with respect, ceremoniously buring the bones lest the animal's spirit take offense and depart forever from the hunting grounds. were in the northern New England area. sided with the French in the 17th century, however tried to remain neutral during the 1770's. In the 1780's, Abenaki...tried against all odds to maintain their ancient way of life-hunting, gathering, roaming the fringes of what had once been extensive homelands. Top Acoma Pueblo... conversed in Keresan, a language unique to the Southwest. In the Keres culture of Acoma Pueblo, the cacique bore the title of Inside Chief, signifying his power within the village. Beyond the pueblo walls, power passed to one or more war leaders, or Outside Chiefs, who were responsible for constructing defenses and keeping watch against invaders. say the earth was formed when the Great Father Uchtsiti, Lord of the Sun, hurled a clot of his own blood into the heavens. In the soil of this new world, he set germinating the souls of two sisters, the Corn Mothers, who were raised to maturity by a spirit called Thought Woman. When the time was ripe, Thought Woman gave the two sisters baskets filled with seeds and showed them the way to the earth's surface. Corn was the first thing they planted. They learned to cultivate and harvest it, to grind and cook it, and to make daily offerings of cornmeal and pollen to their father, Uchtsiti. These lessons the Acomans would practice each day of their lives . Drought in the 1100's to the 1200's was caused, as explained by Acoma storytellers, who say that one night the Horned Water Serpent, spirit of rain and fertility, abruptly left his people. No amount of prayer, no charms or dances of the rain priests, would bring him back. Unable to survive without their snake god, the people followed his trail until it reached a river. There they established a new home. The people of Acoma-so the elders recounted-once followed the Salt Mother's (an elderly matriarch who gave herself freely to anyone who sought her) trail far into the wilderness, trekking past dry gulches and sage-purpled hills for days on end. Finally they reached a large salt lake. "This is my home," the Salt Mother declared. After that, all who traveled there read their fortune in the water, and if ailing in body they were made well again. When the column of Spanish troops came into view on a cold winter afternoon-January 21, 1599, by European reckoning-the fighting men of Acoma fanned out from their village to guard the edge of the mesa. As the Spaniards drew closer, the defenders unleashed a barrage of insults, rocks, and arrows from more than 300 feet above. Just seven weeks earlier, a party of Spanish soldiers seeking food had been treated in a friendly manner until their demands turned aggressive-and provoked a furious reaction. When it was over, almost all the intruders were dead, including their commander, Juan de Zaldivar, nephew of the military govenror of New Mexico, Juan de Onate Resolved to make an example of Acoma, Onate dispatched 70 of his best men under the command of Vicente de Zaldivar...These were the troops approaching the seemingly impregnable "Sky City" that January afternoon, and with them arrived a harsh new reality. Over the next 3 days the Spaniards fought their way to the top of the mesa, where they rolled out a fearsome new weapon-a cannon that spewed thundrous blasts of small stones, tearing flesh and shattering bones. The battle became a massacre. As many as 800 Acomans soon lay dead in the rubble of their ruined city. Some 500 survivors were herded into dismal captivity: all males over the age of 12 were condemned to 20 years' servitude; those over 25 were also sentenced to have one foot cut off. In time, some of the Acomans managed to escape and made their way home, there to begin the long process of rebuilding. The Sky City has been continuously inhabited since then, and never again has it fallen to an invader. The Acoma 16th century pueblo-settlement still survives west of the Rio Grande in midwest New Mexico. Top Aleutians... were descended from the Anungulas thought to have migrated from Siberia and are closely related by language and facing similar challenges were the Inuit, known to white as Eskimos. divided into two cultures around 4000 BC, the Norton (spreading out from Norton Sound along Alaska's perimeter) and Dorset (reaching eastward from the Mackenzie River). The Nortons contrived the first toggle harpoons and light, maneuverable kayaks they built to ply the frigid coastal waters. The Dorset people moved eastward all the way to the Atlantic and Greenland. An Orthodox priest, Ivan Veniaminov, arrived in Aleutian territoy in 1824. He built a church, founded schools, and devised an Aleut alphabet. inhabited the islands that arc 1,000 miles west from Alaska. They were superb kayakers; in fog, they would navigate by wind direction, the cries of gulls, the crash of surf, wave shapes, and shifts in water currents. They also hunted birds, gathered roots and berries, and wove beautiful watertight baskets from the tall grasses that grew on the beaches. While hunting, a kayaker invoked the spirit of the animals he pursued. Sometimes he wore a visored helmet made of steam-bent wood, painted with signs that would call the animals to him. Plumes of sea-lion whiskers each marked a successful catch, testifying to his hunting prowess. By 1763 people of several islands had suffered enough from Russian fur traders. They waited until 5 Russian ships came within striking distance; then they attacked-and in one stroke destroyed 4 ships and killed most of the crew members. The Russian retaliation appeared in the person of a ruthless and determined navigator name Ivan Soloviev. Moving swiftly, Soloviev destroyed 18 villages on one island, every native dwelling on a second island, and several more on a third....Prisoners faced terrible abuses. By one account, Soloviev, wondering how many bodies a musket ball could penetrate, tied a dozen Aleuts in a row, front to back, and fired a shot. The bullet stopped at the 9th man. Top Anasazi were of the Southwest and built apartmentlike dwellings of a size and complexity not matched until the cola-powered urbanization of the 19th century. The Anasazi community of Pueblo Bonito was built by AD 900 in Chaco Canyon, NM Within an area of 32 square miles are nine old Anasazi towns, each containing hundreds of rooms capable of housing thousands of people. The communal dwellings were "solar powered" in that their dressed stone walls were built to take maximum advantage of the sun's heat in winter and to limit exposure in summer. were reknowned basket makers. A basket discovered in a cave in Arizona was made of sturdy yucca fibers and decorated with plant and mineral pigments, still had 48 ears of corn stored in it. Chaco was considered a "capital of capitalism", for it appears to have been the center of a turquoise-based economy...and was also a center of learning, certainly in astronomy as well as architecture. But it remains an enigma. Why was it abandoned in the 15th century? Why have few human remains been found there? Why did Chaco have the capacity to house a population several times larger than what the land surrounding it could possibly support? Only one thing seems clear...the reason for Chaco's abandonment which occurred around 1450's...decades of drought. Chaco Canyon was the center of a far-flung cultural area, its parts connected by a star-burst of roads that stretched as far as 400 miles unerringly straight lines. Sometimes several yards wide, these roads ignored topography, running in carved steps straight up and down canyon walls. Since the Anasazi had neither vehicles nor beasts of burden, the design of these roads must have had symbolic importance; they manifested community and communication at least as much as they carried freight. No one knows what language the Anasazi spoke or even what they called themselves. Their modern name is Navajo meaning "enemy ancestors." Their heartland was a lofty, semi-arid plateau in the Four Corners region. Here, after centuries of nomadic hunting and foraging, they settled in and began to raise corn, make pottery, and acquire the amenities of permanent habitation. They planned their farming and ceremonial cycles by watching the skies, noting the position of the sun, moon, and stars. Notches were cut into sticks.. .Carved symbols on these calendar sticks indicated the dates of rituals. Each morning at dawn the village high priest would make careful note of the place on the horizon where the sun's first rays appeared....The priest's observations served as a kind of landscape calendar, allowing him to calculate the time for planting crops or for staging certain festivals. Certain sun rituals were common to all Anasazi groups. They greeted the morning sun by facing east and offering a pinch of cornmeal. Mothers held newborn babies up to the dawn to receive the sun's blessing. As with all things, the Anasazi knew their bond with the sun was based on mutual obligation: show it proper respect, and it would reward you with the gift of fine weather. Top Apache speak the Athabscan language, which originated in their former homeland: the vast subarctic taiga of northwestern Canada. arrived in the Southwest during 15th & 16th centuries. They set up camp on the outskirts of the pueblos, dressed in animal skins, used dogs as pack animals, and pitched tentlike dwellings made of brush or hide, called wikiups. They exchanged buffalo hides, tallow and meat, bones that could be worked into needles and scrapers, and salt from the desert with the Pueblos for pottery, cotton, blankets, turquoise, corn and other goods. But at times they simply saw what they wanted and took it. They became known among the Pueblo villages by another name, apachu, "the enemy". However, the Apache and Pueblos managed to maintain generally peaceful relations. But the arrival of the Spaniards changed everything. One source of friction was the activity of Spanish slave traders, who hunted down captives to serve as labor in the silver mines of Chihuahua in northern Mexico. The Apache, in turn, raided Spanish settlements to seize cattle, horses, firearms, and captives of their own. Their prowess in battle became the stuff of legend. An Apache warrior, it was said, could run 50 miles without stopping and travel more swiftly than a troop of mounted soldiers. During the mid-1700's, one Apache raid caused as many as 4,000 colonists to lose their lives. In the late 1800's, one U.S. Army general who had fought them meant it as a grudging compliment when he described the Apache as "tigers of the human species." The Apache saw themselves differently, they faced constant struggle to survive. When they raided a village, they did so from pure necessity, to provide corn for their families when game was scarce. Most of the time they went their own way, moving from camp to camp in pursuit of deer and buffalo, collecting roots and berries, sometimes planting seeds that they later returned to harvest. They called themselves Nide, an Athabascan word meaning "the people." Apache lived in extended family groups, all loosely related through the female line. Generally speaking, each group operated independently under a respected family leader....settling its own disputes, answering to no higher human authority. The main exception to this occurred during wartime, when neighboring groups banded together to fight a common enemy. Unlike ordinary raiding, where the main object was to acquire food and possessions, war meant lethal business: an act of vengeance for the deaths of band members in earlier raids or battles. Leaders of the local family groups would meet in council to elect a war chief, who led the campaign. But if any one group preferred to follow its own war chief, it was free to do so. Apache bands that roamed the same area admitted to a loose cultural kinship. Thus, the Jicarilla of northeastern New Mexico hunted buffalo in the plains, planted corn in the mountains...By contrast, the Mescalero to the south were hunter-gatherers who developed an appetite for the roasted heads of wild mescal plants. The Chiricahua, fiercest of all tribal groups, raided along the Mexican border, while the more peaceble Western Apache of Arizona spent part of each year farming. Two other tribal divisions, the Lipan and Kiowa-Apache, lived as plainsmen in western Kansas and Texas. Despite these differences, all Apache groups spoke variations of the same Athabascan language. And all subscribed to certain common customs and beliefs. A strict code of conduct governed Apache life, based on strong family loyalties. The most important bond led from an Apache mother to her children and on to her grandchildren....Beyond this code of propriety and family obligations, the Apache shared a rich oral history of myths and legends and a legacy of intense religious devotion that touched virtually every aspect of their lives. In 1861, the cooperation between the Americans and Apache evaporated when the Chiricahua Apache chief Cochise (who had granted the Americans use of Apache Pass) was falsely accused of stealing cattle and kidnapping a child. Cochise arrived with his brother and two nephews at Apache Pass under a flag of truce to discuss the accusations against him with an army officer-who promptly tried to take them all prisoner. Cochise managed to escape and soon seized three civilian captives to exchange for his relatives, but the offer was refused, and Cochise, enraged, killed the hostages. The army in turn hanged his brother and nephews, triggering the furious vendetta known as the Cochise War. Before it was over, some 150 whites were dead, and the combined forces of Cochise and his father-in-law, Mangas Coloradas-"Red Sleeves,"...had brought all California-bound traffic through Apache Pass to standstill. During a pitched battle in July 1862, an estimated 500 Apache fighters...engaged the Californians in ferocious combat until the enemy howitzers forced them to retreat. In a later skirmish Mangas, then in his seventies, was struck by a bullet in the chest. Surviving but in fragile health, Mangas sought to parley for peace. In January 1863 he agreed to meet with an officer of the California militia - a trap, as it turned out. Mangas was lockd up at Ft. McLane, and when some soldiers began to taunt him one night with heated bayonets, he rose to protect himself and was shot dead-trying to escape, the official report said. Cochise assumed leadership of the hostiles. From his stronghold in the Dragoon Mountains of sourthern Arizona, he and about 200 warriors renewed their attacks on white settlements. At this point another US commander, Gen. George Crook, tried a strategy that proved more effective than any firearm-using Apache scouts as diplomats who traveled from band to band, cajoling their kinsmen to move onto federal reservations. Reassured that his people would not be forced to relocate to the dreaded Ft. Tularosa in western New Mexico, but instead could retain their ancestral lands on a reservation in the Chiricahua mountains, Cochise and his followers relented in the fall of 1872. A peaceful interlude for the Apache held until 1875, when the government sought to consolidate all the Apache bands on the San Carlos Reservation along the Gila River. Many independent-minded fighters among the Warm Springs and Chiricahua groups balked at the idea. Leading the Warm Springs renegades was Victorio who fled from San Carlos in September 1877 with more than 300 folowers. Recaptured a month later, he staged another breakout with 80 warriors within a year. Victorio's swift-moving bands crossed the Rio Grande repeatedly-until a sharpshooter killed him in Chihuahua, Mexico in October 1880. Shortly after Victorio's death the appalling conditions on the San Carlos Reservation sparked a further series of Apache breakouts...a new leader emerged from among the Apache guerrillas, a seasoned fighter who had fought alongside Cochise and Victorio. He was named Goyathlay, or "One Who Yawns," but he was better known as Geronimo. Geronimo led about 70 Chiricahua warriors along with their families across the Rio Grande....But this time a regiment of Mexican troops managed to cut off most of the Apache women and children and slaughtered them all. General Crook ...was back in Arizona territory. War-weary and losing followers, Geromino managed to evade the paid Apache scouts Crook used to track him down until May 1883, when Crook located his base camp and took the women and children hostage. The last of Geromino's band finally gave themselves up in March 1884. In May 1885 Geronimo and other leaders were caught consuming home-brewed corn beer, a violation of army rules. While the authorities debated his punishment, Geronimo cut the telegraph wires, killed a ranching family, and slipped back into his old haunts in Mexico's Sierra Madre with 134 warriors. In March 1886, Crook finally managed a two-day parley with Geronimo in Mexico's Canon de los Embudos. Geronimo agreed to surrender and accept a two-year imprisonment at Ft Marion, 2,000 miles away in Florida. But along the way, while being led to Ft Bowie by Apache scouts, Geronimo and a handful of his followers broke free again. The army at this point replaced Crook with Gen. Nelson Miles, who committed 5,000 troops and 400 Apache scouts to the recapture of Geronimo. Even when confronted by a force of this magnitude...Geronimo's band of 38 men, women, and children still eluded their pursuers for six months. When Apache scouts finally talked Geronimo into laying down his gun in early September 1886, the surrender was bloodless and strangely anticlimactic. Recounted Geronimo's cousin Jason Betzinex:"Kayitah [an Apache scout] delivered General Miles' message. The general wanted them to give themselves up without any guarantees. The Indians seemed stunned. Finally Geronimo's half-brother, White Horse, spoke out. 'I am going to surrender. My wife and children have been captured. I love them, and want to be with them.' Then another brother said that if White Horse was going, he would go too. In a moment the third and youngest brother made a similar statement. Geronimo stood for a few moments without speaking. At length he said slowly, "I don't know what to do. I have been depending heavily on you three men. You have been great fighters in battle. If you are going to surrender, there is no use in my going without you. I will give up with you.'" Almost immediately Gen Miles had Geronimo's band taken into custody-along with the Apache scouts who had tracked him down-and put on a train for Florida. Their destination was Ft Marion, the old Spanish fortress in St. Augustine where the army imprisoned its most dangerous Indians. There Geronimo would spend the next eight years. Released from confinement in 1894, the old guerilla accepted an offer from the Kiowa and Comanche to share their reservation in Indian Territory and spent his final years as a farmer outside Oklahoma's Ft Sill. He joined the Dutch Reformed church, where he taught Sunday school. Later, with government approval, Geronimo spent a year with a Wild West show and appeared in Omaha, Buffalo, New York, and at the St. Louis World's Fair, where he made money selling his photographs and bows and arrows. In 1905 President Theodore Roosevelt invited him to Washington DC to ride in the inaugural parade. But to the day of his death in 1909, Arizona never considered Geronimo safe enough to let him set foot in his homeland again. Around 1917 after the Selective Service Act was passed, many Native Americans had rushed to join the armed forces. By war's end, about 17,000 were in uniform-close to 30% of adult Indian males, double the national average. Commanding General John J. Pershing authorized an Apache company of scouts: some of them were descendants of warriors Pershing himself had fought on the Sothwestern frontier 30 years earlier. In protest of Nazi Germany's aggression in Europe, the Apache along with the Navajo, Papago and Hopi, banned the swastika, an ancient native symbol, from their blanket and basket designs. Apache Miguel Flores and Hopi Fred Kabotie signed the document proclaiming the ban in February 1940. Top Arapaho Warriors were "age-graded", boys grew up through membership in an advancing series of societies, each with increased responsibilities. Unique to their history was the sacred object, a Flat Pipe. They were given the name "Arapaho" from the Pawnee meaning "he buys or trades", their self designation is Hinonoeino, "Big Sky People". In one version of the Sun Dance, the Arapaho placed a bleached and decorated buffalo skull stuffed with prairie grass on the Sun Dance altar to serve as a temporary dwelling place for the Great Spirit during the proceedings. They allied with the Sioux during the late 18th century, where they with the Cheyenne became the most formidable fighting force on the northern Plains. The Cheyenne and the Arapaho made peace in 1840. In 1864, the Cheyenne and Arapaho had settled along Sand Creek as ordered by a post commander at Ft. Lyon, to whom they had surrendered. Just after sunrise on Dec 28, 1864, ragtag troops, led by a former clergyman, Col John M Chivington, found their quiet encampment. In a matter of minutes Chivington delivered his infamous battle cry-"Kill them all, big and small, nits make lice"-and his men attacked. Young and old, male and female, every Indian was fair game. "I saw the bodies of those lying there cut all to pieces," an eyewitness later testified, "worse mutilated than any I ever saw before, the women all cut to pieces...children two or three months old; all ages lying there, from sucking infants up to warriors." Of 123 dead, nearly 100 were women and children....."Colorado Soldiers Have Again Covered Themselves With Glory," headlined the Denver News. At the same time, calls for peace and compassion were heard...demanded an inquiry into the events at Sand Creek. At length the government acted: In 1865, a congressional team headed by Sen. James Doolittle of Wisconsin was dispatched to interview Indians, traders and missionaries across the West. Its goals were to establish who was to blame for Sand Creek and to determine why the populations on reservations such as Bosque Redondo were declining so rapidly. The commission's final report recommended no action against Chivington or his men. It did cite such factors as disease, lawlessness by whites, corruption by Indian agents, and the loss of hunting grounds as causes of Indian depopulation-but offered no relief for the general "Indian problem", which, it concluded, "can never be remedied until the Indian race is civilized or shall entirely disappear." Enraged at the Sand Creek slaughter, war chiefs of the Cheyenne, Arapaho, and Sioux had in the meantime held a council near the Republican River. Even as the Doolittle team was conducting its interviews, their warriors descended on stagecoaches and ranches, tore down telegraph lines, and raided with impunity from Colorado into the Dakotas. In October 1867, the US government and the Plains Indians held the last major peace treaty negotiations. The first meeting took place in the valley of Medicine Lodge Creek in Kansas. The final Medicine Lodge Creek treaty created two large reservations in Indian Territory-one for the Kiowa and Comanche in the Leased District, and one for the Cheyenne and Arapaho in the Cherokee Outlet-for the containment and pacification of these southern tribes. In 1876, Gen Philip Sheridan, proposed to confront the Indian hostiles-composed of Sioux, Cheyenne and Arapaho, who had been raiding angry over the promised but undelivered goods from the Medicine Lodge treaty and also the deep, abiding hatred of white men that the Sand Creek Massacre had planted. His three army columns, amounting to about 2,500 men, would include Gen. Alfred Terry and Col. George A Custer. Custer made an impulsive and fatal decision. Dividing his troops into three attacking groups, he positioned them on a ridge above the camp. In the course of an hour, Custer and every one of his men perished; only a horse name Comanche, belonging to one of Custer's captains was left alive. On the reservation, the Arapaho at Wind River, Wyoming, a weekly ration in 1884 included 4 lbs of beef and 1.6 lbs of flour per person. But widespread corruption in the BIA siphoned off a sizable amount of the money appropriated by Congress each year; by 1890 the weekly ration at Wind River was down to 14 oz of beef and 8 oz of flour-and only about half the eligible people received even that. Top Blackfeet Would travel to the Arkansas' hot springs to gather together with other tribes to hunt, trade, and take the healing waters. Even when their peoples were at war, individuals of opposing tribes could come together here in safety and peace. According to Blackfeet storytellers, their forefathers successfully goaded buffalo to their deaths by "buffalo jumps" only when a gifted shaman oversaw the proceedings. At the start, hunt leaders would position women and children behind piles of stones arranged in a V-shape that narrowed to a point at the edge of a sheer cliff. The buffalo were enticed to enter the wedge by a slow-hobbling man disguised in a fur robe. Other people brought up the rear, yelling and flapping robes and waving the scented smoke of burning cedar in the air. This gave the impression of a terrifying forest fire, causing the great beasts to stampede over the edge of the cliff. Down below, a makeshift enclosure prevented wounded animals from escaping, while arrows and spears rained down from all sides until the lifeless carcasses could be approached by the butchering parties. Nearby, on the flat prairie, there would be a campsite where women quartered and finally "flaked" the fresh meat, slicing very thin strips and drying them on pole racks. The dried meat was later prepared in various ways; a favorite and highly nutritious method was to pound it with granite pestles, blending in dried berries and buffalo tallow, and finally packing the mix into rawhide containers later winter consumption. They survived by hunting and gathering in the wooded pockets and broad grasslands of southern Manitoba and western Saskatchewan. The horse effigy were often used to honor specially trained warrior horses that had distinguished themselves in battle. Told of an orphan boy, considered dim-witted, who sought this mysterious creature in a spirit lake. After undergoing a series of ordeals, he finally reached the lake and plunged into its waters. Underneath was a sacred landscape, where a spirit chief led him to galloping, lively pono-makita, or "elk dogs." From the spirit chief the boy requested part of the elk dog herd. When he rode back into his home village, his people thought he was some half-man, half-animal monster. The boy turned the horses over to the people, saying, "Now we no longer need be humble footsloggers, because these animals will carry us swiftly everywhere we want to go. Now buffalo hunting will be easy. Now our tepees will be larger, our possessions will be greater, because an elk dog travois can carry a load ten times bigger that that of a dog." After the appearence of horses, tepees doubled in height and Blackfeet women began sewing such large tepees that their hide covers had to be tailored in two halves, with store-bought brass buttons used to fasten them up the western side, while old-fashioned willow pins were used to lace them together on the eastern doorway side. Blackfeet boys were "age-graded" as they grew up through membership in an advancing series of societies, each with increased responsibilities. Among the Blackfeet, buffalo-calling ceremonies were performed by members of the all-female mutokaiks, or Buffalo Bull Society. A Blackfeet four-pole tepee floor plan shows the doorway facing the rising sun. Its steeper rear side braces the tilted structure against prevailing westerly winds, allowing the fire to be directly below the smoke flaps. In 1839-1840, small pox broke out, killing as many as 8,000 Blackfeet. In 1883-1884, the Montana Blackfeet, already reduced to little more than 2,000 in all, were unable to locate any game due to the buffalo "vanishing", and were helpless to prevent 600 of their tribe from freezing or starving to death

Navajo or Dine

Interesting Facts & Legends from the... Navajo or Dine The Navajo spoke the Athabascan language and arrived in the Southwest sometime during the 15th and 16th centuries. The Navajo populated the northeastern of today's Arizona and northwestern portion of New Mexico. The Navajo were known to themselves as Dine and became increasingly distinct from their ancient Apache kinsmen. Settling in scattered groups through northern New Mexico in a land they came to call Dinetah -"home of the people"-they adapted so thorougly to this new environment that they virtually reinvented themselves. The Navajo, like other nomadic tribes, had arrived in the Southwest with a rich spiritual tradition but few material possessions. They dressed in skins, wove reed baskets, hunted and foraged for food. To them the Pueblo villages, with their well-stocked granaries and abundant stores of pottery and blankets, must have seemed like centers of fabulous wealth. Their hunger whetted for the amenities of Pueblo life, the Navajo began by raiding. Gradually, though,as they settled in, they turned from plunder to emulation. No other Athabascan group took so readily to farming. Picking up the basics from their Pueblo neighbors, they were soon harvesting family plots of beans, squash, tobacco, and corn; their very name derives from the Tewa nava hu meaning "place of large planted fields." Their clothing changed as well. Discarding their buckskin tunics, they began wearing cotton shirts and richly dyed cotton blankets in the Pueblo fashion. Pueblo influence increased during the Spanish wars of the late 1600's, as thousands of displaced villagers from the Rio Grande battlegrounds fled west into Navajo country. The Navajo gave the refugees protection, and soon the two groups began to intermarry. The Navajo learned the refinements of weaving, sandal making, and ceramics, and they acquired the technique of diverting streams to irrigate their cornfields. Overtones of Pueblo rituals and beliefs crept into Navajo religion. Celebrations began to center on the agricultural cycle of planting and harvest, and kachina-like masked figures called yeibichai would dance the appropriate rites. Navajo priests developed the Pueblo-inspired technique of ritual sand painting into a high art. Corn pollen became an essential sacrament, used to promote fertility and prosperity. "The Colorado River, you bless it. Every time you go across it, you say a few prayers. To go across it, you get your corn pollen-we carry it around all the time, corn pollen-so we take it out and bless the water. If we don't have water, we can't get anywhere."-Navajo medicine man. The Navajo also took freely from the Spaniards. Metal tools and firearms, the cultivation of fruit trees and other European crops, all became part of Navajo tradition. So did livestock-not just horses and cattle but, most important of all, sheep. The Navajo became the great master shepherds of the Southwest. Family flocks sometimes numbered in the hundreds, and every child, as part of his or her education, would be given a lamb to raise. Wool from the flocks, carded and dyed, was woven into blankets of remarkable beauty. Even today, Navajo blanket weaving still counts among the highest expressions of Native American artistry in the Southwest. Yet even as they borrowed from others, the Navajo retained key elements of their Apachean heritage. Resisting all overtures by Spanish missionaries to learn Castillian and convert to Christianity, they continued to speak an exceptionally pure form of Athabascan. Even as they intermingled with the Pueblos, they continued to live in hogans, mud-plastered, log-framed structures that resembled permanent wickiups. Like their Apache cousins, they cherished independence while at the same time observing a complex code of family obligations. Women played an equally powerful role as owners of property and as family matriarchs. Newlyweds set up housekeeping near the bride's relatives, even as the groom maintained close ties to his own parents. To avoid family conflicts, Navajo men treated their sisters-in-laws with distant courtesy; if their mother-in-law so much as entered the same area, they had to leave without speaking a word. The Navajo strove to avoid external conflict as well. A people who in earlier times had made their way by marauding, they now went to extreme lengths to prevent confrontation. An traditional tale describes how the first ancestral humans wandered through successive worlds of chaos and confusion, then eventually arrived in a land of perfect harmony.... The original world lay deep within the present earth. Lit by neither sun nor moon, it contained dimly colored clouds that moved around the horizon to mark the hours. At first life was peaceful; then the evils of lust and envy took hold, and violence broke out. So the ancestral Navajo fled into exile, grappling upward through a hole in the sky to another world directly above. Here, where the light was blue, harmony at first prevailed. Then again the same story: bitter quarreling, followed by escape and a climb to yet another world, and then another. Finally, First Man and First Woman, the direct ancestors of humankind, emerged on the present earth. Water covered the earth's surface, but sacred winds gusted in to blow it away. With the aid of a sacred medicine bundle, and guided by beings known as diyin dine, the holy people, First Man then filled the world with all its natural bounty and wonder. He laid out each object in the bundle and by chanting transformed it into an animal, a plant, a mountain peak, an hour of the day. Everything in the new universe resided in perfect balance, controlled by a kind of spiritual symmetry: four directions, four winds, four seasons, and the four basic colors of black, blue, amber, and white. Most of all, an essential harmony prevailed, called hozho, which blended the concepts of beauty, peace, happiness, and righteousness. As every Navajo still knows, hozho must be maintained. The principal method was to follow closely the strict codes of behavior and custom laid out by the Holy People, in which any careless or unseemly act might upset the delicate balance of the universe. An unintended lapse of good manners, a clumsy movement while hunting, even a badly made basket might throw the world into turmoil. "This covers it all, the Earth and the Most High Power whose ways are beautiful. All is beautiful before me, All is beautiful behind me, All is beautiful above me, All is beautiful around me."-Navajo song. To ensure the preservation of hozho, the Navajo accompanied virtually any important activity with a song or chant. There were hundreds of songs, all in some way drawing on tribal myth and legend. Sometimes they would be chanted as people went about everyday tasks-herding sheep or grinding corn on a metate. On other occassions, lengthy rituals were held for specific purposes-to cure the sick, ward off evil, bring good luck, commemorate a birth or a housewarming, or simply to maintain tribal harmony. Perhaps the most important was, and is, the Blessingway. The Blessingway ceremony might last anywhere from two days to four. Chanters versed in tribal lore would reeenact an episode from the creation story or other pertinent myth, all the while manipulating holy talismans and praying over a medicine bundle containing earth from each of the four sacred mountains. A priest might fashion a dry painting of colored sand, corn pollen and crushed flowers. Variations of the Blessingway rite would be held to celebrate a marriage, to protect a mother in childbirth, to guide a pubescent girl into womanhood, or to ensure success in any great enterprise. Like so much else in Navajo tradition, the supreme artistry of tribal weavers had divine origins. Legend recalls the many deeds of Spider Man, who taught the Navajo how to make the loom, and even more importantly of Spider Woman, who taught them how to use it. In one tale a Navajo girl was walking through the barrens when she saw smoke rising from a tiny hole in the ground. Looking inside, she spied an ugly old crone-Spider Woman. "Come down and sit here beside me and watch what I do," said the old woman. She was passing a wooden stick in and out between strands of thread. "What is it that you do, Grandmother?" asked the girl. "It is a blanket that I weave," the ancient woman replied. Over the next three days, the Navajo girl watched Spider Woman weave three different blankets of wonderful design. She then went home and showed her people all she had learned. Later she visited Spider Woman again and told her how everyone was now busy weaving. "That is good," the old woman replied. But she also gave the girl this warning: "Whenever you make a blanket, you must leave a hole in the middle. For if you do not, your weaving thoughts will be trapped within the cotton-not only will it bring you bad luck, but it will drive you mad." Since then, Navajo women have always left a spider hole in the middle of their blankets. Even today in Navaho country, the sacred rites endure. Navajo men who joined the US Army during WWII took part in a Blessingway ceremony much like those sung in ancient times to ensure the protection of warriors going into battle. Many who returned from combat were purified in an Enemyway ritual designed to protect them from the spirits of slain enemies. And the Navajo are not alone. In communities throughout the Southwest-among the Apache, Pima, Tohono O'odham, and others, on the mesas of the Hopi, in the pueblos at Zuni and Acoma and along the Rio Grande-sons and daughters of the tribal groups remember the old ways. Each time they perform a sacred ceremony, they breathe new life into the traditions, summoning up spirits that have dwelt in this stark, spectacular landscape since the earliest days of human habitation. In the 17th century was the well established colony of Santa Fe, the Spanish maintained a near monopoly on horse trading until 1680, when rebellious Pueblo Indians drove Spanish colonists and priests south out of New Mexico. Whole stables were suddenly unguarded; horses were there for the taking. Pueblo Indian traders and their Navajo allies wasted little time making these mounts available to the Comanche, who also became quite accomplished at stealing their own. As Anglo-American settlers began trickling into the region in the 1840's, the Navajo considered them fair game as well the Mexican and Pueblo settlements had been in their history. Losses of sheep, horses, mules, and cattle rose steadily, as did public clamor for the authorities to do something about it. The US government tried to negotiate peace treaties in 1846 and 1849, but there was no possiblility of coordinated talks among the far-flung Navajo-an estimate 12,000 poeple living in small, autonomous clans, herding sheep in canyons and mesas across the vast desert between the Rio Grande and the Grand Canyon. A more aggressive approach was signaled in 1851 by the construction of several military posts, including Ft Defiance about 30 miles southeast of Canyon de Chelly. Land that the Navajo had long used to graze their sheep was abruptly taken over for the soldiers' horses. The result was predictable: a long, increasingly bloody cycle of attacks and reprisals, climaxing in 1860 with all all-out attack by 1,000 warriors on Ft Defiance, which the army soon abandoned. Any celebrations of this symbolic victory were cut short, however, by a punitive military campaign that cut across Navajo country, systematically destroying crops and confiscating livestock. Facing a threat of mass starvation, Navajo leaders signed a peace agreement early in 1861; its terms included a promise of government rations for the tribe, and later that year they were duly distributed at a fort in New Mexico. The atmosphere was festive, highlighted (as such gatherings often were) by horse racing and heavy betting by both sides. In the final race the army's rider was accused of cheating, but the judges-all soldiers-named him the winner. An uproar ensued and the troops hastily withdrew into the fort, whereupon their commander ordered them to open fire on the crowd. Within minutes more than 30 Navajos lay dead, a dozen women and children among them, and a brutal new round of vengeance seeking had begun. Following the outbreak of the Civil War, General Carleton-who had so ruthlessly dealt with the Apache raiders in southern Arizona-turned his attention to the Navajo. In the summer of 1863, on Carleton's orders, Col Christopher "Kit" Carson began a new campaign against the Navajo homesteads of northeastern Arizona, a larger version of the scorched-earth policy used three years earlier. By January his forces were sweeping into Canyon de Chelley, the ancient and sacred stronghold of the Navajo. Families living in and around the canyon were rousted from their adobe-covered hogans, which were then burned-along with their saddles, clothing, and blankets. Their sheep, cattle, and horses were seized or slaughtered, their peach orchards were hacked down, and about 2 million pounds of Navajo corn went up in smoke. Families hiding in caves in the canyon walls were hunted down. Tribal accounts tell of some who chose to leap from the cliffs rather than leave their homeland. Before long, some 8,000 men, women, and children-most of the Navajo nation-were under armed guard. After months of harsh internment at Ft Wingate and elsewhere, the prisoners were forced to make the infamous Long Walk,a grueling 300-mile forced march across most of New Mexico. Their destination was a narrow strip of land along the Pecos River in eastern New Mexico, a dry, desolate place known as Bosque Redondo. There, as General Carleton envisioned it, they would "acquire new habits, new ideas, new modes of life...and thus, little by little, they will become a happy and contented people." The Navajo men were conscripted to mold adobes and construct Ft Sumner, while their families suffered terrible privations for nearly four years. The drinking water was bitter, the sterile land no good for growing corn. The fort used up all the available wood, so there was not enough fuel for fires to withstand the winter rains and cold winds. Illness was rife. "Most of the people got sick and had stomach trouble. The children also had stomach ache. The prisoners begged the Army for some corn, and the leaders also pleaded for it for their people. Finally they were given some-one ear of corn each."-Navajo survivor of Bosque Redondo One Navajo headman, a silversmith named Herrero, complained to Senate investigators in 1865 that his people were "dying as though they were shooting at them with a rifle....There is a hopsital here for us, but all who go in never come out." Starvation, prostitution, venereal disease, and sheer despair were wasting them away before his eyes. Initially a few bands of Navajo renegades evaded Carson's search-and-destroy campaign. Led by such men as Manuelito, a war chief of the Folded Arms People clan, and Barboncito-"The Orator"-a signatory of the ill-fated peace treaties of 1846 and 1849, they endured great hardships as they hid in canyons and caves. Most were eventually forced by hunger, thirst, or disease to surrender at Ft Sumner. At least one small band of Kayenta Navajo held out, however-having found freshwater springs in a hidden canyon behind the top of Navajo Mountain (called "Head of Earth Woman" in their language) that sustained them during the four years of the Ft Sumner captivity. The crushing of the Navajo resistance and their Ft Sumner incarceration ultimately had its desired effect. "If we are taken back to our own country," one subdued tribal spokesman promised General Sherman, "we will call you our father and mother." The treaty they finally signed in 1868 was in fact quite generous: the Navajo survivors retraced their Long Walk back to a new 3.5 million acre reservation covering the old country they loved so much and virtually encircling the Hopi mesas, and the government let them keep 35,000 sheep and goats to give them a fresh start. During the ordeal of 1864-1868, the Navajo had lost about one-quarter of their population. No longer a threat to their white neighbors, they quietly set about rebuilding their shattered lives and replenishing their treasured herds of sheep and cattle. In the process not much more than 10,000 in 1868 to an estimated 17,000 by 1890-a conspicuous exception to the fate awaiting so many other native nations during the same dark period. In the late 1800's, schools, such as Albuquerque and the one at Ft Wingate, also in New Mexico, Navajo students learned traditional weaving. Pueblo painters worked with Santa Fe Indian School students to create murals of Indian life and Indian symbols on the walls of the cafeteria. The outstanding Navajo silversmith of his day, Ambrose Roanhorse, began to teach his art. Parents began to feel more welcome on the Santa Fe campus. But don't be deceived, leading up to this point....the boarding schools children were forbidden to speak their native languages, forced to shed familiar clothing for white men's garments, and subjected to harsh discipline. Denied the teachings of tribal elders, the company of kin, the familiar foods, smells, and sights of home, students sometimes ran away from school or hid when it came time to leave in the first place. Youngsters who had seldom heard an unkind word spoken to them were all too often verbally and physically abused by their white teachers. For parents, as well as students, the prospect of such long separations was a cause for deep anxiety. Many argued to keep their children at home, contending they were needed to work or to help out, or would miss necessary rituals or were simply too young to go away. But they usually had little or no say in the matter. Children without parents and children from the the poorest families constituted likely recruits; the food and clothing offered by the schools enticed some to enroll. As time proved, the slow pace of white settlement meant an advantage for many native residents. The Navajo had survived the agony of their Long Walk to exile and imprisonment at Bosque Redondo in eastern New Mexico in 1864, and by 1868 they had returned to a portion of their homeland. The reservation established by the government initially consisted of a 3.5 million acre rectangular tract situated on either side of what became the Arizona-New Mexico state line. The rapid increase of the Navajo population and the need for additional territory for their livestock made an expansion of the reservation crucial. Congress had put an end to treaty making in 1871, but reservations could still be created or enlarged by executive order. By 1917 a total of nine such orders quadrupled the size of the Navajo estate.
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