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         Delaware Indians Native Americans:     more books (69)
  1. Grammar of the Language of the Lenni Lenape, or Delaware Indians by David Zeisberg, 1976-06
  2. The White Deer by John Bierhorst, 1995-05-19
  3. Native Americans of Nazareth, 8000 B.C.-1742 A.D (Keepsakes) by Ian R Burley, 2001
  4. Folk Medicine of the Delaware & Related Algonkian Indians by Gladys Tantaquidgeon, 2000-04
  5. Native American Power in the United States, 1783-1795 by Celia Barnes, 2003-05
  6. Voices from the Delaware Big House Ceremony (Civilization of the American Indian)
  7. David Zeisberger: A Life Among the Indians by Earl P. Olmstead, David Zeisberger, 1997-10
  8. At the Crossroads: Indians and Empires on a Mid-Atlantic Frontier, 1700-1763 by Jane T. Merritt, 2003-03-24
  9. Strange Journey: The Vision Life of a Psychic Indian Woman by Louise Lone Dog, Patricia Powell, 1990-08
  10. King of the Delawares: Teedyuscung, 1700-1763 (Iroquois and Their Neighbors) by Anthony F. C. Wallace, 1990-12
  11. The Delaware People (Native Peoples) by Allison Lassieur, 2002-01
  12. The Nanticoke Indians: Past and Present by C. A. Weslager, 1983-12
  13. The Archaeology of Native-Lived Colonialism: Challenging History in the Great Lakes by Neal Ferris, 2009-01-15
  14. The Lenape Indians (Junior Library of American Indians) by Josh Wilker, 1994-01

41. Philadelphia Yearly Meeting Library Booklist: Native Americans - History And Cus
Henry J. Cadbury Library Booklist. native americans History and Customs for Children. Bleeker,Sonia. THE delaware indians EASTERN FISHERMEN AND FARMERS
http://www.pym.org/library/lists/natamehi.htm
Henry J. Cadbury Library Booklist
Native Americans:
History and Customs for Children
RELATED PAGES:
About the PYM Library
Index of Booklists Distant Borrowing
  • Akweks, Aren. MIGRATION OF THE IROQUOIS. White Roots of Peace, 1972. 32p., illus. Amon, Aline. TALKING HANDS: INDIAN SIGN LANGUAGE. Doubleday, 1968. 80p., illus. Bealer, Alex W. ONLY THE NAMES REMAIN: THE CHEROKEES AND THE TRAIL OF TEARS. Little, Brown, 1972. 88p., illus. Bleeker, Sonia. THE DELAWARE INDIANS: EASTERN FISHERMEN AND FARMERS... Morrow, 1953. 160p., illus. Brandon, William. THE AMERICAN INDIAN. Adapted for young readers by Anne Terry White from the text by Brandon. American Heritage, 1963, 1961. 200p., illus., ports. Clark, Ann Nolan. ALONG SANDY TRAILS. viking, 1969. 31p., illus. ports. Navajo Indians Clark, Ann Nolan. IN MY MOTHER'S HOUSE. Illustrated be Velino Herrera. Viking, 1941. 56p., illus. Pueblo Indians. Cory, David Munroe. WITHIN TWO WORLDS. Friendship Press, 1955. 177p., illus. Dobrin, Norma. DELAWARES. Melmont, 1963. 31p., illus. Elting, Mary. THE HOPI WAY. Illustrated by Louis Mofsie. Lippincott, 1969. 63p., illus.

42. Native Americans Links
Translate this page Cheyenne, Cheyenne Genealogy Research. delaware Tribe, delaware (Lenape) Tribeof indians. indians.org, Indianer-Verwaltung. native Web, Die Indianer dieser Welt.
http://www.indianer-web.de/links.htm
Last Update: 27. Juni 2002 First Nations Links Arrow Space Arrow Space - eine Lakota Rock Band von der Pine Ridge Reservation Arrow Space Arrow Space und ihre Songs AIM American Indian Movement American Indian Page Menschenrechts-Organisation Annie Mae Aquash Blackfeet Blackfeet-Nation Cherokee.Net Home of the Cherokee Archival Projekt Cherokee - Trail of Tears Cherokee Cherokee - Trail of Tears Cherokee in North Georgia Cheyenne Cheyenne Genealogy Research Delaware Tribe Delaware (Lenape) Tribe of Indians First Nations Index Page First Nations Index Fort Laramie Chronol. List of Ft. Laramie History 1812-1890 Fort Laramie National Historic Site Ohwejagehka: Ha`idegaenage Sprache, Songs (zum Downloaden), Dancer der Irokesen, Six Nations Links Indians.org Indianer-Verwaltung Jamestown History Die erste (engl.) Siedlung in der Neuen Welt Chief Joseph meome-Guide Deutsche Kulturanthtropologie-Seite Dakota Youth Project Lakota Black Hills und Lakota Sioux Nation Lakota-Kalender Lakota Fund Chief Arvol Looking Horse 19th Generation Keeper of the Original Sacred White Buffalo Calf Pipe of the Lakota Bericht aus einer Lakota-Reservation Die Wirklichkeit der Situation in einer Lakota-Reservation Freundschaftskreis Lakota Freundschaftskreis der Lakota Lakota-Language Die Sprache der Sioux The Muh-he-ka-ne-ok Nicht die letzten Mohikaner Native Web Die Indianer dieser Welt Oglala Lakota Sioux Historik, Kultur und Chiefs

43. Native Americans - US Embassy, Budapest
among the general public about Indian and native governments, people and NationCheyenneArapaho Tribes Northern Cheyenne indians The delaware Tribe of
http://www.usembassy.hu/indians.htm
NATIVE AMERICANS
http://www.usembassy.hu

The Wyaatch Cultural Group - Native American Dancers and Drummers in Hungary
(May 6-11, 2001)
U.S. FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
Bureau of Indian Affairs (Department of the Interior)
The Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) is the principal bureau within the federal government responsible for the administration of federal programs for federally recognized Indian tribes, and for promoting Indian self-determination. In addition, the Bureau has a trust responsibility emanating from treaties and other agreements with Native groups. The mission of the Bureau is to enhance the quality of life, to promote economic opportunity, and to carry out the responsibility to protect and improve the trust assets of Indian tribes and Alaska Natives.
MUSEUMS
National Museum of the American Indian (Smithsonian Institution)
The Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian is dedicated to the preservation, study, and exhibition of the life, languages, literature, history, and arts of Native Americans. Established by an Act of Congress in 1989, the museum works in collaboration with the Native peoples of the Western Hemisphere to protect and foster their cultures by reaffirming traditions and beliefs, encouraging contemporary artistic expression, and empowering the Indian voice.
The Southwest Museum
The Southwest Museum holds one of the nation's most important museum, library, and archive collections related to the American Indian. For eighty years it has supported research, publications, exhibitions, and other educational activities to advance the public's understanding and appreciation of the Americas, with particular emphasis on the Western United States and Mesoamerica.

44. American Indians, Native Americans, History Of A Proud People
present a generalized image of native American people by the Shawnee as Humaskogi,by the delaware as Masquachki British as the Ochese Creek indians, hence the
http://www.americanindians.com/
Indian Nations are sovereign governments, recognized in the U.S. Constitution and hundreds of treaties with the U.S. President. The history of this continent's original inhabitants encompasses a broad range of cultures and experiences. American Indians varied greatly from region to region, as did their reactions to European settlement. This website will delve into the vast and storied background of most tribes and seek to supply the visitors with as much knowledge as possible about the proud history of Native Americans . Please join us on this journey into the past, experience the present and dream about the future of the American Indian. When Columbus landed on the island of San Salvador in 1492 he was welcomed by a brown-skinned people whose physical appearance confirmed him in his opinion that he had at last reached India, and whom, therefore, he called Indios , Indians, a name which, however mistaken in its first application continued to hold its own, and has long since won general acceptance, except in strictly scientific writing, where the more exact term American is commonly used. As exploration was extended north and south it was found that the same race was spread over the whole continent, from the Arctic shores to Cape Horn, everywhere alike in the main physical characteristics, with the exception of the Eskimo in the extreme North, whose features suggest the Mongolian...

45. Native American Protests Against 1992 Celebrations Of 1492 By Theodore Walker, J
native americans also were upset when Philadelphia's City Council changed waterfrontoriginally was named after the delaware indians. * *Prodigy interactive
http://faculty.smu.edu/twalker/protest4.htm
Return to previous screen
Native American Protests
Against 1992 Celebrations of 1492:
a Sage-like Meaning of Solidarity
by Theodore Walker, Jr.
During the Columbus Day weekend of 1992 (October 10-12), hyphenated-American and other modern non-tribal peoples celebrated the 500th anniversary of Christopher Columbus's inauguration of "The Age of Discovery."
Simultaneously, Native American and other indigenous tribal peoples were protesting against modern doctrines of discovery by celebrating "500 Years of Resistance."
Reports of Native American protests against Euro-American and European celebrations of Columbus and of the Age of Discovery include the following seven:
7 reports of protest against celebrating 1492 in 1992:
On Saturday, 10 October 1992 in Denver, Coloraodo, Native Americans were joined by African-Americans, Hispanic-Americans, Korean-Americans and others in protesting against the annual Columbus Day parade.
The Native American lead protest included dancing, drumming, prayers to the Great Spirit, and repeated assurances that this was the beginning of revolution.
The Columbus Day parade in Denver was cancelled on account of the protest.*

46. Maryland Native Americans
Indian Ancestry; Nanticoke Tribe; native American Indian Pocomoke Indian Nation;Shawnee indians Michael Cresap. of tribes in Maryland, delaware, Virginia area);
http://www.sailor.lib.md.us/MD_topics/his/_nat.html
You are here: Native Americans Home Cruise the Internet About Sailor Contact Us ... Help Maryland Native Americans
Native American Indian Events in Maryland
document.write(" Last Modified " + document.lastModified)

47. History Books : History Of Native Americans
Editor) ; The Wisdom of the native americans; Britton Davis The Untold Story of nativeAmerican Peoples; Clinton A. Weslager ; The delaware indians A History;
http://www.crimsonbird.com/history/nativ.htm
Books about the history of Native Americans
Link to the main index : Book Reviews - All Categories
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  • Dee Brown ; Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee : An Indian History of the American West James Wilson ; The Earth Shall Weep : A History of Native America John G. Neihardt ; Black Elk Speaks : Being the Life Story of a Holy Man of the Oglala Sioux John Gneisenau Neihardt ; Black Elk Speaks (unabridged) ... Arthur Caswell Parker ; The Indian How Book
  • 48. Native Americans
    used by the Minsis, use the native American Ethnobotany Database and search for delaware or a of Hudson's River by EM Ruttenberger; indians of the
    http://albertwisnerlibrary.org/~wisner/Factsandhistory/History/Nativeamericans.h
    Native Americans
    in the Warwick Valley
    Early ResidentsThe Paleo-Indians

    The Warwick Valley has long been known as a rich source for Native American artifacts such as arrowheads and the stone tools used by these peoples. Walking the ploughed fields of the area or even strolling local hiking paths will often yield one of these treasures from the past. The area known as the "Drowned Lands", the large wetlands now providing rich soil to farmers in the Pine Island area, would have been attractive to a succession of visitors and residents for its abundant game.
    Identifying these first people is problematic, however, as the only evidence most of them left was their stone tools. For more information about our earliest residents, we must turn to the archaeological record.
    The earliest trace of human activity in the Warwick Valley is that of the nomadic peoples arriving in the area following the retreat of the glaciers. These Paleo-Indians are known by the distinctive shape of their projectile points, the Clovis Point. Some locally found points found near the border of Goshen and Warwick at the Dutchess Quarry Cave site have been dated to around 10,600 B.C. They were found in association with (extinct) caribou and giant beaver bones that could be radio-carbon dated. (see book sources listed below). Clovis Point

    49. Native Americans Trivia And Quizzes Quiz
    4, American indians Ever since I was a little boy I was interested in the Americanindians and here is my 9, native americans - The delaware The delaware
    http://www.funtrivia.com/dir/3335.html
    Home Members People Historical Figures : Native Americans Native American History Special Lists: Newest Quizzes - Top Ranked Overall Easy Average Hard ... Most Popular
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    Quiz Title Difficulty Played Online Author Legendary American Indians
    A look at some of the legendary American Indians of bygone days. All choices are actual Indians. Average Mar 22 02 Crazy Horse
    How much do you know about the famous Native American Chief? Average Feb 26 02 blondangel American Indians
    Ever since I was a little boy I was interested in the American Indians- and here is my first quiz on them. Tough Aug 13 00 IndianPainter Sequoyah: American Indian Leader Sequoyah was a great American Indian leader, do you know much about him? Now you will... Average Sep 13 00 thejazzkickazz Native Americans The Dakotas Average Jun 18 01 Explorador A Quiz on Tecumseh This quiz is about the Native American Indian, Tecumseh, who represented a challenge to the whites during the 18th century.

    50. Henry Hudson, The Half Moon, And The Exploration Of The Hudson River Valley
    The native americans were the first people to enter The Lenni Lenape indians werethe inhabitants of tribes the Wappingers (or Wappani), delaware, and Mahicans
    http://www.ulster.net/~hrmm/halfmoon/halfmoon.htm
    HRMM HOME Lighthouses Rondout Steamboats ... Robert Fulton Henry Hudson Links Henry Hudson's Voyages of Exploration Native Americans
    in the Hudson Valley
    ...
    the Hudson Valley

    Half Moon Manual for Historic Interpretation Half Moon News Rate this Page
    Henry Hudson and Early Hudson River History
    Henry Hudson was already a famous explorer of Arctic waters when in 1608 he was hired by the Dutch East India Company to find a Northeast, all-water route to Asia. The Dutch East India Company had a monopoly on trade with the Orient and which wanted to shorten the lengthy and expensive voyage around the Cape of Good Hope. They provided him with an 80-ton ship, the Half Moon, and a crew consisting of 20 Dutch and English sailors. The original Half Moon (Halve Maen was commissioned on March 25, 1609, for the Dutch East India Company. She was a ship of exploration designed to take a crew of twenty into unknown and uncharted waters. The Half Moon sailed out of Amsterdam on April 4 or 6, 1609 heading northeast along the coast of Norway. After encountering ice and cold off the coast of Norway, Hudson turned west and headed for warmer weather. Hudson first landed on the coast of Maine where members of the crew went ashore and cut timber to replace the mast of the Half Moon.

    51. Jay's Native Americans And Indigenous Peoples Links
    delaware (Lenape) Tribe of indians; Denise Osted's Dusters native American; Easterndelaware Nations; Fight for Government Resources for native americans on the
    http://www.neravt.com/left/directory/subjects/native.htm
    Native Americans and Indigenous Peoples Links

    52. American Indians
    delaware indians. Lenape Village. Who were the Lenape? The World of the Lenape (Oradellschool). native americans of New Jersey. Library Tips. Web Tips / Internet.
    http://www.ctsd.k12.nj.us/2002iditarod/american_indians.html
    Eskimo, Indian, and Aleut People Come to Live in Alaska Alaska's native people are descended from nomadic hunters and gatherers who crossed from Siberia to North America. These early Alaskans adapted well to a unique, often harsh environment. The three broad Native groups are the Eskimo, Indian, and Aleut. Essential Question How did the American Indians adapt and survive in their environments? Instructions / Directions At the end of the month of November, use this link for answer page - Sample Answers. Vocabulary: kayak harpoon caribou salmon igloo dugout canoe wigwam longhouse Pictures for Alaska Lenape or Delaware ...People Come to Live in New Jersey Pictures for New Jersey Links: Alaskan Native Language Map Early History (includes Indian groups) School Packet page Activities - Alaskan Natives ... Site for Indian Groups - Women Peoples of Alaska Virtual Museum These cultures are represented by four groups: the Aleut, the most maritime-adapted of all North Pacific peoples; Eskimos, whose earliest culture in this region dates from 8,000 years ago; Athapaskans, a forest-dwelling culture of hunters and trappers; and Northwest Coast Indians, represented by the Tlingit. ATHABASACAN ALEUT THE PEOPLE ESKIMO Brief Description of Alaskan Athabascan Culture Art of the People of Alaska Athabascan Indians Athabascan Indians ... THE TLINGIT WAY: HOW TO TREAT SALMON story to reached by scrolling down site.

    53. Page Not Found
    History native americans Other Tribes and Forced Relocation, 11.1. published inhis book, indians of the concerning fragments of Shawnee, delaware and Creek
    http://www.watersheds.org/blue/history/forced.htm
    We're sorry, the page you are looking for could not be found. Due to the restructuring of our site, it may have moved to a new location. If you typed in the url, be sure the address is typed correctly. Search for the page with keywords. Use the search box in the navigation bar above. The navigation bar has links to the main areas on our site. View our site map to find a listing of the topics we have to offer. If you are unable to find what you're looking for, e-mail webkeeper@watersheds.org

    54. Native American Indian Tribe Resources
    Tribe Pages Adena Indian Artifacts; The Adena indians; delaware indians; Mingoindians; A Guide to the Great Sioux Nation; native americans of North Georgia;
    http://www.lkwdpl.org/madison/native.html
    Native American Indian Tribe Resources
    General Native American Sites Specific Tribe Pages

    55. Chemung Valley History Museum.
    Mahikans see also native americans. Montour Genealogy. native American - Correspondence.native American - delaware indians. native American - delaware indians.
    http://www.chemungvalleymuseum.org/archive2.asp?ID=Native Americans

    56. Native Americans
    Cherokee Trails Black indians THE AFRICAN-native AMERICAN HISTORY The Creek Nation- North Georgia's American indians delaware (LENAPE) delaware
    http://www.teacheroz.com/Native_Americans.htm
    Updated February 14, 2002
    PRIMARY DOCUMENTS

    Treaties Between the United States and Native Americans

    The Avalon Project : Statutes of the United States Concerning Native Americans

    World History Archives: Indigenous Peoples of the Americas

    KAPPLER'S INDIAN AFFAIRS: LAWS AND TREATIES
    ...
    IMAGES: The Illustrating Traveler: Customs of the Country

    More primary documents are available within some of the sites listed below.
    Alphabetical Listing of Reservations

    THIS WEEK IN NORTH "AMERICAN INDIAN" HISTORY by PHIL KONSTANTIN

    Native Ways..A journey through modern Native America
    Encyclopedia Smithsonian: Native American Resources ... Linkpage: Native Web Pages Listings For info on the Maya, Inca, Aztec and other Central and South American native cultures, please visit my Meso and Latin America page. NATIVE AMERICANS - LEGISLATION - ISSUES - AGENCIES CODETALK: Code Talk is the official website of HUD's ONAP Legislation Affecting the American Indian Community Legislation Impacting American Indians American Indian Liaison Office ... American Indian Gambling and Casino Information Center TIMELINES TIMELINE: Native American History Native American Timeline TIMELINE: Canadian St. Lawrence River Valley Native Tribes

    57. George Rogers Clark NHP: Native Americans On The Trans-Appalachian Frontier
    map of native American Tribes in region (Click The indians' major tactic was surprise;this, combined THE delaware, already pushed westward from the Atlantic
    http://www.nps.gov/gero/indians.htm
    George Rogers Clark
    National Historical Park
    Indiana

    (Click to enlarge map)
    Indians on the Trans-Appalachian Frontier
    THE MIAMI had their main villages at present-day Fort Wayne, Indiana. Two important sub-groups of the Miami were the Wea, located at present-day Lafayette, Indiana and the Piankashaw, centered further south on the Wabash River in the Vincennes area. Only the Miami gave substantial support to the British during the Revolution; the Wea seemed to prefer remaining neutral and most of the Piankashaw openly favored the Americans. THE DELAWARE , already pushed westward from the Atlantic coast by pressure from the white advance, had taken up residence in present-day Ohio and Indiana by the start of the Revolution. During the conflict, the tribe divided into pro-British, pro-American, and neutral factions. Those Delawares favoring the English gained in numbers and became increasingly active during the latter part of the conflict. THE SHAWNEE were among the most active and relentless tribes in raiding the American frontier settlements in what is now West Virginia and Kentucky. In retaliation, their villages in present-day southern Ohio were attacked by forces under George Rogers Clark in 1780 and 1782.

    58. NATIVE NORTH AMERICANS
    Jennings, Jesse D. 1983 Ancient North americans. Sullivan, Lawrence 1989 native AmericanReligions of North America. Weslager, CA 1972 The delaware indians.
    http://chss2.montclair.edu/anthropology/120boylan.htm
    NATIVE NORTH AMERICANS
    (ANTH 120)
    DR. BOYLAN
    boylanj@mail.montclair.edu
    COURSE OBJECTIVES
    By the end of the course students should be able to: Understand the origins and possible migration routes of the native Americans. Evaluate the merits of the pre-projectile point theory in North America. Understand the concept of levels of social complexity. Understand the concept of culture areas. Understand the history and the traditional culture of the Pomo of California and the impact of the Europeans on their society. Understand the history and the traditional culture of the Hopi of the Southwest and the impact of the Europeans on their society. Understand the history and the traditional culture of the Cheyenne and the impact of the Europeans on their society. Understand the history and the traditional culture of the Nootka of the Northwest Coast and the impact of the Europeans on their society. Appreciate the consequences of the history of Federal legislation and the resulting impact on native societies over the last 200 years.

    59. NJCH - Horizon Speakers Bureau - Topic List
    For thousands of years, native americans have been producing created by mostly anonymousnative American women The Lenape or delaware indians This presentation
    http://www.njch.org/speakers_listcategory.php?CategoryName=Native American Herit

    60. Native_ American
    native americans IN THE MIDDLE COLONIES LenniLenape delaware indians is the Englishname for a tribe that lived in what is now delaware, New Jersey, New York
    http://www.asw.waw.pl/elementary/student_work/fifth/colonies/middle/native__amer
    NATIVE AMERICANS IN THE MIDDLE COLONIES Lenni-Lenape: Delaware Indians is the English name for a tribe that lived in what is now Delaware, New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania. They called themselves the Lenni-Lenape. It means genuine people. They survived by farming, hunting, and fishing. The Lenni-Lenape was divided into three major groups: Mursee, Unalachtigo, and Unami. They all spoke a different languages that belonged to the Algonquian language family. In 1682, the Delaware signed a treaty with an English colonial leader, William Penn. But the Europeans began to take the Indians' land. They pushed them westward. During the 1760's, a religious leader known as the Delaware Prophet told the Indians to stop making firearms, steel, and other European inventions. Iroquois: The Iroquois formed a federation of tribes that ones occupied upper New York state. They called themselves Ongwanonhsioni. The Iroquois became famous as the Five Nations or the Iroquois Long House. Scientists believe the tribe was formed in about 1400, but nobody knows for sure.

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