Waheenee

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Waheenee

An Indian Girl's Story

Gilbert L. Wilson

189 pages
Illus.

Paperback

November 1981

978-0-8032-9703-6

$16.95 Add to Cart
eBook (EPUB)
Ebook purchases delivered via Leaf e-Reader

April 2014

978-0-8032-9888-0

$16.95 Add to Cart

About the Book

"I was born in an earth lodge by the mouth of the Knife River, in what is now North Dakota, three years after the smallpox winter." So begins the story of Waheenee, a Hidatsa Indian woman, born in 1839 amid a devastated tribe.

In 1906 Gilbert L. Wilson first visited the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation and began to study the remnants of the Hidatsa tribe. He returned in 1908, sponsored by the American Museum of Natural History, and for every summer of the next ten years he worked among the Hidatsas, making notes of all he saw. One of his chief informants was Waheenee-wea, or Buffalo-Bird Woman, who told him this, her life story.

Praise

"Wilson was well served by this lively old woman and her keen memory. . .she describes her life as a strong-willed, curious child, a spirited adolescent, and a skilled, hardworking young mother. She conveys a clear sense of her people's traditions, and, in particular, a woman's responsibilities, expectations, pleasures, and sorrows."—Kliatt Young Adult Paperback Book Guide

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