OMAHA INDIANS handwritten manuscript book native RARE!
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Description
kirstiealley store Francis Waring Robinson THE OMAHA INDIANS, Their Environment, History and Culture. Princeton, NJ 1926 8.5 x 7, cloth covered blank book w/lined pp, approx 150 leaves, written by hand on rectos w/notes on versos, covers sunned and rubbed, pasted-on cover label chipped and lightly stained, hinges loose, shaken else good, with later bookplate of author. Written for an undergraduate course at Princeton, with professor's blue-pencil note ("Excellent, the return of this essay was delayed in order that it might be shown to President Hibben") signed in initials by Joseph Coy Green. Nicely researched study, neatly written by the future curator of European Art at the Detroit Institute of Arts.See my other great items in my eBay storeThe Omaha tribe is a Native American tribe that currently reside in northeastern Nebraska and western Iowa, United States. The Omaha Indian Reservation lies primarily in the southern part of Thurston County and northeastern Cuming County, Nebraska, but small parts extend into the northeast corner of Burt County and across the Missouri River into Monona County, Iowa. Its total land area is 796.355 km² (307.474 sq mi) and a population of 5,194 was recorded in the 2000 census. Its largest community is Macy.During the late 1700s and early 1800s, the Omaha were briefly the most powerful Indians on the Great Plains. The tribe was the first in that region to master equestrianism, and developed an extensive trade network with early white explorers and voyageurs. Never known to take up arms against the U.S., members of the tribe assisted the U.S. during the American Civil War.Omaha, Nebraska, the largest city in Nebraska, is named after them.The Omaha speak a Siouan language which is very similar to that spoken by the Ponca, who were once a part of the Omaha before splitting off into a separate tribe in the mid 1700s. HistoryThe Omaha tribe began as a larger woodland tribe comprising both the Omaha and Quapaw tribes. This original tribe inhabited the area near the Ohio and Wabash rivers around the year 1600.[citation needed] As the tribe migrated west it split into what became the Omaha tribe and the Quapaw tribe. The Quapaw settled in what is now Arkansas and the Omaha tribe, known as U-Mo'n-Ho'n ("Dwellers on the Bluff").[1] settled near the Missouri River in what is now northwestern Iowa. The first European journal reference to the Omaha tribe was made by Pierre Charles le Sueur in 1700. Informed by a number of reports he described an Omaha village with 400 dwellings and a population of about 4000 people. It was located on the Big Sioux River near its confluence with the Missouri River near Sioux City, Iowa. This river was once called "The River of the Mahas."In 1718 French cartographer Guillaume Delisle mapped tribe as “The Maha, a wandering nation” along the northern stretch of the Missouri River. French fur trappers found the Omaha on the eastern side of the Missouri River in the mid-1700s. The Omaha were believed to have ranged from the Cheyenne River in South Dakota to the Platte River in Nebraska. Around 1734 the first Omaha village west of the Missouri River was established on Bow Creek in present-day Cedar County, Nebraska. Around 1755 a new village was located probably near Homer, Nebraska. "Ton won tonga", also called the "Big Village," was the village of Chief Blackbird.Around 1800 a smallpox epidemic introduced by Europeans swept the area, decimating the tribe's population by kill approximately two-thirds of its members. Chief Blackbird was killed that year. Blackbird had established trade with the Spanish and French and used trade as a security measure to protect his people. The Omaha became the first tribe to master equestrianism on the Great Plains, which gave them a temporary superiority over the Sioux and other larger tribes as far as hunting and movement. Aware they traditionally had a lack of a large population to protect themselves from neighboring tribes, Chief Blackbird believed that fostering good relations with white explorers and trading were the keys to their survival. The village of Tonwantongo was home to Chief Blackbird and another 1,100 people around the year 1795. The Spanish built a fort nearby and traded regularly with the Omaha during this period.[2]When Lewis and Clark visited Tonwantongo in 1804, most of the inhabitants were gone on a buffalo hunt and they ended up meeting with the Oto Indians instead, however they were led to Chief Blackbird's gravesite before they continued on their expedition west. In 1815 the first treaty between the United States and the tribe, called a "treaty of friendship and peace," was signed. No land was relinquished by the tribe.[3]Omaha villages were established and lasted from 8 to 15 years. Eventually, disease and Sioux aggression forced the tribe to move south. Villages were established near what is now Bellevue, Nebraska and along Papillion Creek between 1819 and 1856. Loss of landThe Treaty of Prairie du Chien of 1830 took the Omahas claims to their lands in Iowa, east of the Missouri River, with the understanding the tribe still had hunting rights there. In 1836 a treaty took their remaining hunting lands in northwest Missouri.[4] In 1856, Logan Fontenelle translated the negotiations which led the Omaha to sell their lands to the United States. During the same negotiations the tribe agreed to move to their present reservation to the north in Thurston County, Nebraska. Soon after Fontenelle was killed in a skirmish with the Brule and Arapaho. By the 1870s, bison were quickly disappearing from the plains and the Omaha had to increasingly rely upon the United States Government and its new culture.The Omaha never took up arms against the U.S., and several members of the tribe fought for the Union during the American Civil War, as well as each subsequent war through today. CultureIn pre-settlement times, the Omaha had a very intricately developed social structure that was closely tied to the people's concept of an inseparable union between sky and earth. This union was viewed as critical to perpetuation of all living forms and pervaded Omaha culture. The tribe was divided into two moieties, Sky and Earth people. Sky people were responsible for the tribe's spiritual needs and Earth people for the tribe's physical welfare. Each moiety was composed of five clans. Earth LodgesOmaha beliefs were symbolized in their dwelling structures. During most of the year Omaha Indians lived in earth lodges, ingenious structures with a timber frame and a thick soil covering. At the center of the lodge was a fireplace that recalled their creation myth. The earthlodge entrance faced east, to catch the rising sun and remind the people of their origin and migration upriver. The circular layout of tribal villages reflected the tribe's beliefs. Sky people lived in the north half of the village, the area that symbolized the heavens. Earth people lived in the south half which represented the earth. Within each half of the village, individual clans were carefully located based on their member's tribal duties and relationship to other clans. Earth lodges were as large as 60 feet (18 m) in diameter and might hold several families, even their horses.As the tribe migrated westward from the Ohio River region, the woodland custom of bark lodges was replaced with tipis (borrowed from the Sioux) and earth lodges (borrowed from the Pawnee). Tipis were used primarily during buffalo hunts and when relocating from one village area to another. They would sleep in lodges during the winter.each relocated in different areas. Communities * Bancroft (part, population 3) * Macy * Pender * Rosalie * Walthill Chiefs * Blackbird * Big Elk * Logan Fontenelle * Iron Eye
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