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         Potawatomi Indians Native Americans:     more books (22)
  1. The Algonquian Conquest of the Mediterranean Region of 11,500 Years Ago by Samuel Poe, 2008-05-12
  2. Tree That Never Dies; Oral History of the Michigan Indians (Native American Oral History Project)
  3. Potawatomi (North American Indians Today) by Ellyn Sanna, 2003-12
  4. The Potawatomi of Wisconsin (The Library of Native Americans) by Damon Mayrl, 2003-07
  5. The Potawatomi (First Books - Indians of the Americans) by Suzanne Powell, 1998-03
  6. Potawatomi Indians of Michigan, 1843-1904, Including some Ottawa and Chippewa, 1843-1866, and Potawatomi of Indiana, 1869 and 1885 by Raymond C. Lantz, 1992
  7. The Potawatomi (Native Peoples) by Karen Bush Gibson, 2003-01
  8. Night Of The Full Moon (Stepping Stone,paper) by Gloria Whelan, 2006-01-10
  9. The Prairie People: Continuity and Change in Potawatomi Indian Culture, 1665-1965 by James A. Clifton, 1998-10-01
  10. Potawatomi (Indians of North America) by James A. Clifton, Frank W. Porter, 1987-05
  11. The Potawatomi: A Native American legacy by James Dowd, 1989
  12. Powwows of the proud: Native Americans, including members of the four Kansas tribes, share their heritage through dance and music in powwows presented throughout the year by Joan Morrison, 1993
  13. Ethnobotany of the Forest Potawatomi Indians (Public Museum of the City of Milwaukee : Vol 7) by Huron H. Smith, 1933-06
  14. Making certain technical corrections in laws relating to native Americans, and for other purposes : report (to accompany S. 325) (SuDoc Y 1.1/5:104-150) by U.S. Congressional Budget Office, 1995

61. Kansas State Historical Society, People Of The Plains: Native Americans In Kansa
OF TEACHER'S MANUAL Introductory Lesson An Overview of native americans in Kansas MedicineMan; Comanche Medicine Man; Kansa dog dance; potawatomi indians at a
http://hs5.kshs.org/you/trnative.htm
Traveling Resource Trunks
Kansas State Historical Society
    People of the Plains: Native Americans in Kansas
    Grades 1 - 3
    Students will explore the Native American culture through hands-on activities using replica artifacts. The clothing, religion, housing styles, art forms, and foodways are explored using historic photographs, maps and interactives.
Trunk Specifications
    Weight: 47 lbs.
    Dimensions: 31" x 22" x 16"
    Insure for $500 when shipping
INTRODUCTION
This trunk is designed to be a comprehensive unit used in grades 1 through 3. The information deals with Indians in Kansas, mainly Plains Indians but some information is provided on emmigrant tribes. Thematic units have been developed covering such subjects as food, shelter, clothing and crafts, and spiritualism. Particular focus is given to the buffalo and its importance in Native American culture.
The trunk includes many large photographs and visual aids. Because children learn better by experimenting and discovering firsthand, reproduction objects also are included. Youngsters can examine these and draw conclusions on their own or with the help of the teacher. Historical backgrounds, vocabulary lists, reading lists, and bibliographies are provided for each section. The activities and discussions are only suggestions, written with first to third graders in mind, however the teacher should feel free to adapt the materials to other grade levels. Some activities may not be suitable for younger students. We advise that you read through any activities first to make sure they are appropriate for your students. For example, in the Spiritualism unit several activities are related to the use of the pipe in Native American culture. For some students this may be inappropriate, and you may want to avoid this particular activity.

62. Las Vegas Weekly: Upfront 2
the billiondollar industry has been a boondoggle for most native americans. Harrah'sEntertainment and the Prairie Band of potawatomi indians, the casino
http://www.lasvegasweekly.com/2002/12_19/news_upfront2.html
Weather Search the Weekly: Indian givers
How Vegas gamers get a cut of tribal casinos

By Damon Hodge
Time magazine's recent cover story paints a none-too-pretty picture of Indian gaming as a business fraught with cronyism and governed by limp regulations. A boon for a few tribes and non-Indian investors, Time reports, the billion-dollar industry has been a boondoggle for most Native Americans. Ironically, Time's examples of the best and worst in tribal gaming have local ties. Harrah's Prairie Band Casino near Topeka, Kan., offers a primer on how Indian gaming should work. Created via a partnership between Harrah's Entertainment and the Prairie Band of Potawatomi Indians, the casino employs 1,000, with 80 percent of the jobs held by tribe members. Profits have paid for infrastructure improvements, housing and stipends for the tribe's 5,000 members. For a bad case study, Time points to the Augustine Band of Cahuilla Mission Indians.

63. Party Time Coming In Sauganash
to the potawatomi indians. The federal government gave it to Billy Caldwell in1829 at the Treaty of the Prairie du Chien. native americans called Billy
http://www.suntimes.com/output/houlihan/cst-nws-houli16.html
Chicago Sun-Times photographers capture the best of Chicago in pictures
Home
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Party time coming in Sauganash
June 16, 2002 BY MIKE HOULIHAN
In the early 1800s, a tribe of Native Americans pitched their tents around Devon and Cicero. Their leader was Billy Caldwell, chief of the Potawatomis, a fellow warrior of Tecumseh, known to the Indians as Sauganash. His mother was a Potawatomi princess, daughter of Chief Yellow Head. His father was an Irishman, probably known to the Indians as "He Who Sits on Stool." Around 1835, Billy cut a deal with the U.S. government under the Old Treaty Elm, sold his 1,600 acres and moved to Iowa. Neighborhood file: Sauganash
  • From Cicero to the first set of tracks, from Bryn Mawr to Devon. Land once belonged to the Potawatomi Indians. The federal government gave it to Billy Caldwell in 1829 at the Treaty of the Prairie du Chien. Native Americans called Billy Caldwellthe son of a British army captain and a Potawatomi womanSauganash, which means Englishman. The tract was annexed by election on June 29, 1889.

64. Awesome Library - Social_Studies
Pocomoke, Pocumtuck, Pomo, Ponca, potawatomi, Powhatan, Pueblo, and of the ancientPlains indians of the Poetry and Stories of native americans (nativeTech.org
http://www.awesomelibrary.org/Classroom/Social_Studies/Multicultural/Native_Amer
Awesome Talking Library Examples ... U.S. Department of Peace
Here: Home Classroom Social Studies Multicultural > Native American
Native American
Also Try
  • Ancient History
  • Ancient Native Americans
  • Multicultural Toolkit
  • Native American Confederacies, Nations, and Tribes ...
  • Native American Languages by Confederacies, Nations, and Tribes
    Lesson Plans
  • History and Cultures of Native Americans - British Columbia First Nations (British Columbia Ministry of Education)
      Provides nine lesson plans regarding the history and cultures of Native Americans in North America. The materials are called an Integrated Resource Package. Grade 12. 2-01

  • Indian Removal Act (Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History)
      Provides lessons and Web resources for studying this Act and its important consequences in American history. 6-02

    Lists
  • -Native American Groups (Awesome Library)
      Provides sources of information on Confederacies, Nations, and Tribes, in alphabetic order by group. 1-01

  • -Tribes and Nations - First Nations (Matin)
      Provides a comprehensive set of resources, organized by subject. 2-01

  • Aboriginal Peoples Worldwide Links (Henderson)
  • Native American Indian Resources (Giese)
      Provides sources of information on the cultures of Native Americans.
  • 65. WWWVL: American Indians - Cultural Resources
    WWW Virtual Library American indians. Index of native American Cultural Resources on of Creek indians Pocomoke Indian Nation Citizen Band of potawatomi Nation Prairie
    http://www.hanksville.org/NAresources/indices/NAculture.html
    WWW Virtual Library - American Indians
    Index of Native American Cultural Resources on the Internet
    F requently A sked ... uestions for this site
    This document must be read before sending any email!
    Search this site
    3/15/03 - New I am now entering new additions each day. The site is now run from a database. It will be about a week until the last new pages appears online. All new or updated links will be noted on the page where they appear. The What's New page is no longer updated. Trust Fund Filing , A New York Times, 1/07/03 Fed up with Spam?
    Try one of these programs! Mac users, my choice is Spamfire, from Matterform Media VIRUS ALERT - Save 50% on McAfee.com VirusScan Online!
    Save $25 on McAfee Internet Essentials
    Thanks again to the many people who support this website with their book purchases and donations. Please learn how you can support this site.
    Multi-Cultural Sites
    A Line In The Sand , issues of cultural property and cultural sensitivity Assembly of First Nations Center For World Indigenous Studies
    Fourth World Documentation Project:
    Indigenous Peoples' Information for the Online Community
    ... American Indian Art and Ethnographica Magazine
    Tribe/Nation Sites
    United States
    Iroquois Confederacy [Including Canada]
    Haudenosaunee Lacrosse: An Iroquois Tradition Mohawk Council of Kahnawake ... St. Regis Mohawk Tribe Environment Division

    66. Native Americans -  American Indians, The First People Of America
    native AMERICAN NATIONS Last update January 20, 2003. Maintained by Lisa Mitten INFORMATION ON INDIVIDUAL native NATIONS
    http://www.nativeamericans.com/
    Tribes find common ground in sorrow By Martin Kasindorf, USA TODAY TUBA CITY, Ariz. On the desert mesas east of the Grand Canyon, Hopis and Navajos have been quarreling for centuries over land, grazing rights and water. Now, war and loss have eased the tensions, at least for a while. Army Pfc. Lori Piestewa, one of the few American Indian women in the military, was found dead during the rescue of an American POW in Iraq. By Rudy Gutierrez, El Paso Times The Native American tribes united in anxiety when Army Pfc. Lori Piestewa, 23, was reported missing in an ambush in Iraq on March 23. When word came over the weekend that she had been killed in action and her body found, shock stirred Hopi and Navajo alike. (Related stories: Fallen comrades Remembered soldiers Lori Piestewa, daughter of a Hopi man and a Hispanic woman, was the first woman to die in the line of duty in

    67. The Native American Anthology: Internet Resources
    Historical Images on File The native American Experience Events for the Prairie Bandof potawatomi Indian Tribe Status of the American indians, United States
    http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~dee/NAINRES.HTM
    Alaska Natives and the Land Claims Settlement Act of 1971
    University of Connecticut
    American Historical Images on File: The Native American Experience
    Troy Johnson, PhD., California State University, Long Beach
    The American Indian Occupation of Alcatraz Island, 1969-1971
    Troy Johnson, PhD., California State University, Long Beach
    A Brief History of the Innu A Brief History of the Trail of Tears (Cherokee) Cherokee History Cherokee History Timeline ... Database of Native American Treaties and Federal Laws
    University of Massachusetts
    First Nations History
    Lee Sultzman
    History and Culture of the Sisseton-Wahpeton Sioux Tribe A History of the Northwest Coast A History of the Western Shoshone
    Scott Robert Ladd
    Indian Removal Debate, 1830 Kaw Nation History Little Known Historical Facts (Oneida) Native Nations of Iowa ... The Rogue River War: Alea, Siletz: 1894
    California State University, San Marcos
    Treaties Project
    Oneida Nation
    Treaty of Fort Stanwix, 1784 Theodore De Bry Woodcuts
    Troy Johnson, PhD., California State University, Long Beach
    What Were the Results of Allotment (The Dawes Act, 1887)

    68. Eastern Woodland Indians : Northeastern Indians Bibliography
    Ojibwa, Winnebago, Algonquin and potawatomi indians lived in Calloway, Colin G. indiansof the Northeast. native peoples of the Northeast, including Narraganset
    http://falcon.jmu.edu/~ramseyil/indnorth.htm
    Eastern Woodland Indians: Northeastern Indians Bibliography
    By Inez Ramsey
    The Northern Maize (Corn) Area extended from southern New England and Maryland to the Lower Missouri River. These peoples practiced agriculture and were hunters and fishermen. Some tribes included the Iroquois [Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga and Seneca Indians]; the Huron, the Lenni-Lenape [Delaware]. The Penobscots lived in the far northeastern corner of the United States [Maine, Vermont, etc.]. The Ojibwa, Winnebago, Algonquin and Potawatomi Indians lived in the north central part of the U.S. in the Great Lakes Area [Superior, Erie] The Fox, Sauk and Menomini tribes also lived in this area. Tribes in this area had wild rice as a staple in their diets.
    For availability information check visit your school or public library or Amazon Books
    Biography. Juvenile

    Fiction. Juvenile

    Nonfiction. Juvenile
    Bierhorst, John. The Woman Who Fell from the Sky; The Iroquois Story of Creation
    Ill. by Robert Parker. Morrow, 1993. Rev. in Bklst. Challenging work for ages 5 to 9. Wonderful imagery.
    Bruchac, Joseph.

    69. Native American Home Pages - Nations
    Mohegan Tribe Added 2/28/98; updated 6/13/00; Mohegan History Added 7/3/00; NativeAmerican Mohegans Added 9 Kashaya Band of Pomo indians Added 6/30/01. potawatomi.
    http://www.nativeculture.com/lisamitten/nations.html
    NATIVE AMERICAN NATIONS
    Last update - March 27, 2003
    Maintained by Lisa Mitten
    INFORMATION ON INDIVIDUAL NATIVE NATIONS
    This section contains links to pages that have either been set up by the nations themselves, or are pages devoted to a particular nation, and are ALPHABETICAL BY TRIBAL NAME. Pages maintained by Indian Nations or individuals are indicated with this symbol: . Pages without this symbol are primarily ABOUT specific nations, but not by them. Included are both recognized and unrecognized tribes. First Nations Histories - a good source for student papers! Dick also has a listing of tribes , both federally and state recognized, as well as those with no formal governmental recognition at all. Added 8/3/99; updated 5/15/00. A-C D-H I-L M-N ... T-Z

    70. THE ILLINI: LORDS OF THE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY
    Scholarly resource on the Illinois indians, also known as the Illiniwek or Illini Confederation.Category Society Ethnicity Tribes, Nations and Bands I Illini...... has sound files of the potawatomi language being CHIEF ILLINIWEK Many native Americansdisapprove of the of this are The Cleveland indians, The Washington
    http://members.tripod.com/~RFester/
    Get Five DVDs for $.49 each. Join now. Tell me when this page is updated The Illini Confederation: Lords of the Mississippi Valley Kaskaskia Peoria Cahokia Tamaroa Michigamea When you visit Illinois remember that others walked here first. The Illiniwek When French explorers first journeyed down from Canada to the upper Mississippi Valley in the early Seventeenth Century, they found the region inhabited by a vigorous, populous Algonquin nation who called themselves "Hileni" or "Illiniwek" which means "men." . This the French rendered as "Illinois". Today most people know little about this once powerful confederation of tribes: the Peoria, Kaskaskia, Tamaroa, Cahokia, and Michigamea. The purpose of this web page is to provide an overview of the Illinois People which will hopefully stimulate the reader to further investigate the history of the Illinois people and their population decline. Peoria warriors with captive near Lake Pimitoui Diorama photograph used with permission of Illinois State Museum The Confederation The five most populous tribes of the Illini Confederation were the Kaskaskia, the Cahokia, the Peoria, the Tamaroa, and the Michigamea. Other smaller affilliated groups were the Taporouas, the Moingwenas, the Chinkoa, the Omouahoa, the Coiraconetanon, and the Chepoussa, While some authors (e.g., Scott) consider the Wea (Ouiatenon) and Piankeshaw to be Illinois affilliates, in fact these two well-known tribes are members of the Miami family. The Miami and Illini did speak a mutually intelligible language, albeit with dialectical differences. Early French commentators believed that the Illini and Miami came from a common ancestral tribe that split in the late prehistoric period

    71. Native American Ancestry And Indian Genealogy
    Echota Historic Site. Etowah Indian Mounds. Etowah Mounds Historic Site. Georgiaindians. native americans in North Georgia. Oglethorpe and The Georgia indians.
    http://www.censusdiggins.com/native_american_ancestry.html
      CensusDiggins.com Native American Ancestry Native American Ancestry Just about every family has a story about a ggggrandma or gggrandpa who was a full blooded Choctaw, Cherokee, Apache or some other tribe of American Indian. Is there any truth in it? In many cases, yes. In some, it is a romantic tale. I have found that tracing this heritage is most difficult at best. It is a terrible shame, that so many of our Native American ancestors had to hide their heritage to survive. After the trail of tears, they had much to lose by admitting the truth of their forebears..... so for many, the stories and heritage was taboo, never to be spoken of. In this fashion, the records became scarce and thus, that much more difficult for genealogists to follow the footsteps of these proud peoples. I have attempted to round up some links to sites and articles on the subject to help those of you who are searching for your Native American ancestry and heritage.

    72. Oklahoma Web Resources: American Indians
    potawatomi Information includes link to history, art Association Association of NativeAmerican journalists Affiliated Tribes of Northwest indians Site includes
    http://www.cas.okstate.edu/jb/faculty/ketterer/native.htm
    American Indians
    General Reference Government Agencies Languages Oklahoma ... Tribes
    Oklahoma links
    Native American Times
    Site includes, stories, opinion, events, links, tribal news, events and jobs.
    Oklahoma Indian Affairs Commission
    Information about the board, tribal nations and trival relations in the state.
    Oklahoma Tribal Officials and Links
    Names and the phone numbers of the top tribal officials, along with links to the tribes, from the Oklahoma Indian Affairs Commission.
    Oklahoma Enrollment
    Enrollment figures for Oklahoma tribes from the Oklahoma Indian Affairs Commission.
    Oklahoma Indian Health Service
    IHS's district office with information about other offices in the state and medical programs.
    Native American Cultural and Education Authority
    Board promotes American Indian culture and education..
    Native Americans and Public Policy
    Guide to the Carl Albert Congressional Archives at the University of Oklahoma.
    Oklahoma Indian Legal Services
    Not-for-profit group provides legal assistance to low-income Native Americans.
    Cherokee
    Site includes history, culture, election results, health, community development, tribal constitution, government and court system.

    73. Interesting Cultures
    raise awareness about the importance of preserving the potawatomi Language and AccessGenealogy native americans Return to AccessGenealogy For all of us who
    http://members.ll.net/morpheus/family/ethnic.html

    74. IPL Ready Reference Collection: Native Americans
    and Racial Issuesnative American Keywords potawatomi. Ronky (Times)/ The ChicoraIndians (Pride Net)// Resources Pride Net native American Resources
    http://www.ipl.org.ar/ref/RR/static/hum3086.html
    the Internet Public Library
    Native Americans Reference
    History United States No further Subcategories
    Resources in this category are:
    Alaskan Native Knowledge Network
    http://www.ankn.uaf.edu/
    "The Alaskan Native Knowledge Network is designed to serve as a resource for compiling and exchanging information related to Alaska Native knowledge systems and ways of knowing. It has been established to assist Native people, government agencies, educators and the general public in gaining access to the knowledge base that Alaaska Natives have aquired through cumulative experience over millennia."
    Author: Alaskan Native Knowledge Network (fyankn@uaf.edu)
    Subjects:
    Social SciencesEthnic, Cultural, Immigration, and Racial IssuesNative American
    Education
    The Arapaho Tribe
    http://www.omaha.lib.ne.us/transmiss/congress/arapaho.html
    This page has historical information on the Arapaho Tribe and their allies.
    Author: Omaha Public Library
    Subjects:
    Social SciencesEthnic, Cultural, Immigration, and Racial IssuesNative American
    Keywords: Arapaho
    Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma
    http://www.choctawnation.com/

    75. IPL General/Reference Collection: Native Americans
    Culture, and Racenative American Keywords potawatomi. Ronky (Times)/ The ChicoraIndians (Pride Net)// Resources Pride Net native American Resources
    http://www.ipl.org.ar/ref/RR/static/hum30.55.85.50.html
    the Internet Public Library
    Native Americans Resources
    History North America United States Show Me Associations Serials in this category. No further Subcategories
    Resources in this category are:
    Alaskan Native Knowledge Network
    http://www.ankn.uaf.edu/
    "The Alaskan Native Knowledge Network is designed to serve as a resource for compiling and exchanging information related to Alaska Native knowledge systems and ways of knowing. It has been established to assist Native people, government agencies, educators and the general public in gaining access to the knowledge base that Alaaska Natives have aquired through cumulative experience over millennia."
    Author: Alaskan Native Knowledge Network (fyankn@uaf.edu)
    Subjects:
    Social SciencesEthnicity, Culture, and RaceNative American
    American Indians of the Pacific Northwest Digital Collection (AIPNW)
    http://content.lib.washington.edu/aipnw/index.html
    "This site provides an extensive digital collection of original photographs and documents about the Northwest Coast and Plateau Indian cultures, complemented by essays written by anthropologists, historians, and teachers about both particular tribes and cross-cultural topics. These cultures have occupied, and in some cases still live in parts of Alaska, British Columbia, Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Montana. Maps are available that show traditional territories or reservation boundaries. The essays include bibliographies and links to related text and images as well as study questions that K-12 teachers may use as they develop curricula in their schools."

    76. General Native American Links
    added 20 July 1996) Alliance For native American Indian Prairie Band potawatomi WyandotNation of Kansas Hawai Tribe HomePage Delaware Tribe of indians The Hopi
    http://members.aol.com/bbbenge/Links.html
    General Native American Links
    There are a lot of great sites out on the Internet these days, so I thought that I would get up a general index for everyone. In some cases I have linked to a specific page on a site. Some of these sites will move to individual pages as we develope but you will know ahead of time. Enjoy These are some of my favorite general sites on the Net for Native Americans Paula Gliese Native Amercan Resources
    (this is one of my personal top ten sites)
    Gameswood's link page

    NativeTech
    (link site added 20 July 1996)
    This site deals with Native American crafts, it is an excellent site to visit.
    First Nations Tribal history
    This is an excellent site, Lee already has lots of information up with more on the way (link site added 20 July 1996)
    The History Page (Early America dealing with Native Americans)
    (link site added 20 July 1996)
    Special Paths by cris.com
    (link site added 20 July 1996)
    Code Talk Page

    Bureau of Indian Affairs

    National Indian Law Library
    Native American Bar Association ... Native American Cutlure Links (link site added 20 July 1996) Alliance For Native American Indian Rights Home Page (link site added 20 July 1996) Here are some sites of the different Nations Prairie Band Potawatomi Wyandot Nation of Kansas Hawai`i Nation Nez Perce Tribe HomePage ... Akwesasne Mohawk Information Service (link site added 20 July 1996) The Stockbridge Munsee Tribe of Mohican Indians (link site added 20 July 1996) Woodlands Cultural Centre (link site added 20 July 1996) A Home Page with Apache information (link site added 20 July 1996)

    77. Native American Genealogy Links
    Perce/Onieda/Pacific Coast/ Pawnee/Pima/Pomo/potawatomi/ Pueblo/Sac Fox MassachusettsIndians. State Archives microfilm card index of native americans (link site
    http://members.aol.com/bbbenge/newlinks.html
    To make it easier to search for information we have added local page references. By Tribes
    A
    B C D ... Z
    by States Alabama Georgia North Carolina Oklahoma ... United States Government
    general adoptions politics myths crafts ... resources
    By Tribes
    Apache Blackfeet Catawaba Cherokee ... Wampampoag This website last updated 5 May 2002 Treaties of the Five Tribes
    For this week in Native American history
    (link site added 22 September 1997)
    American Truths
    (link site added 21 January 1999)
    American Indian Genealogy Help Center and Message Board

    Bulletin Board for Native American Postings
    (new link site added 6 November 1999
    Native American Libraries
    (link site added 6 November 1999)
    AXIOM Financial Management
    for Native Americans (link site added 28 January 2000)
    Wickiup's Treaty grids
    , interesting graphs of the results of early treaties (link site added 10 February 2000) Woihanble Yuwita Habitat for Humanity (link site added 10 February 2000) Turtle tracks (link site added 15 March 2000 Multicultural Grant Guides
    Tribes, States and Government Agency
    Abenaki Indians
    The Abenaki Webpage (link updated 5 May 2002) Traditional Abenaki of Mazaipskwik and related bands (link site added 25 May 1998)
    Culture
    Abenaki Culture
    History
    Abenaki History by Lee Sultzman,First Nations Historian

    78. The Genealogy Forum: Native American Resource Center: Ottawa Research
    treaties and speeches made by native americans and government with, and treaties withIndians, and mention Fox, Kickapoo, Osage, Ottawa, potawatomi, Sauk, and
    http://www.genealogyforum.com/gfaol/resource/NA/ottorese.htm
    Welcome to the Genealogy Forum
    Native American Resource Center!
    Ottawa Research
      Ottowa
      Here is a brief listing of reliable genealogy resources:
      Pyramid Lake - Paiute Indians:
      Quapaw - Eastern Shawnee, Miami, Modoc, Ottawa, Peoria, Quapaw, Seneca, and Wyandot Indians:
      Eastern Shawnee, Ottawa, Quapaw, Seneca, and Wyandot Indians:
      Eastern Shawnee, Miami, Ottawa, Peoria, Quapaw, Seneca, and Wyandot Indians
      Seneca - Eastern Shawnee, Miami, Modoc, Ottawa, Peoria, Quapaw, Seneca, and Wyandot Indians:
      Census 1885-1892 - microfilm FHL581405
      Census 1893-1910 - microfilm FHL5814056 United States, Bureau of Indian Affairs. A Census Register of All the Men, Women and Children Coming Within the Sixth Article of the Treaty Made With the Ottawa and Chippewa Nations of Indiana on the 28th of March 1836 . Washington, D.C.: U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs, 1836. (FHL Book Q/970.1 A1/no.4 or microfilm 982330, item 4.) Blackbird, Andrew J. History of the Ottawa and Chippewa Indians of Michigan. Ypsilanti, Mich.: n.pub., 1887. (FHL# 970.1/B562h or microfilm 924102, item 9, or 1011853.) Most National Archives microfilms are available, using the FHL numbering system. See the LDS FHL Catalog for specifics.

    79. Cultures Of North America
    native North America. US Cultures. Choctaw Chumash Comanche Coos CreeCreek indians. Papago Paiute Pawnee Pequot Pomo potawatomi Pueblo.
    http://emuseum.mnsu.edu/cultural/northamerica/index.shtml
    Native North America
    U.S. Cultures Aleuts Anasazi Apache Arapaho ... Zuni Canadian Cultures Chipewyan Copper Eskimo Haida Huron ... Slavey Links

    80. USGenExchange - Native American Battles
    1876 The Lakota and Cheyenne indians under Crazy November 4, 1791 British and NativeAmericans vs. Delaware, Ottawa, Iroquois, Chippewa, Miami, and potawatomi.
    http://www.genexchange.org/native.cfm
    Search the Web.
    Type it and go! GenExchange USGenExchange GESR Newsletter Mailing Lists ... Stamps.com USGenExchange
    US Battles Fought by Native Americans
    Submitted by Suzanne Horner
    State Coordinator of the MTGenExchange
    • APACHE PASS: FEBRUARY 1861
      US Army hangs six apache warriors, three Chiricahua band, three Coyoteros. APACHE WARS: 1881-1900
      Took place in Arizona. BAD AXE: 1832
      Part of the Black Hawk War, in Wisconsin. Sauk Indians led by Black Hawk vs. Illinois Militia led by General Henry Atkinson. BATTLE OF HORSESHOE BEND: MARCH 27, 1814
      Took place in Alabama. European Americans vs. Native Americans BIG HOLE BATTLE: AUGUST 9, 1877
      Also called Nez Perce War. US Army vs. Five Non Treaty bands of Nez Perce. Came from Idaho and Oregon to Montana to fight here then escaped to Bear Paw Battle Field. The final battle of Chief Joseph of the Nez Perce, in Chinook, MT. BLACK HAWK WAR: 1832
      BLACK HAWK WAR: 1832
      BROWNSTOWN CREEK: 1812
      Took place in Michigan. CANYON DE CHELLY: January 1, 1864 Took place in Arizona. Kit Carson and Militia vs. Navajo’s.

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