Friday, August 27, 2010
Thursday, August 26, 2010
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
Thursday, May 27, 2010
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Saturday, April 17, 2010
Monday, April 12, 2010
Sunday, January 17, 2010
Tuesday, January 5, 2010
Monday, July 27, 2009
Monday, July 6, 2009
Sunday, July 5, 2009
Saturday, July 4, 2009
Sunday, June 14, 2009
Sunday, June 7, 2009
Saturday, April 4, 2009
Chief Thomas Little Shell
“We are a scattered tribe. We weren’t claimed by the whites. We weren’t claimed by the full bloods,” Lavenger said. “They used to call us persons with no souls. Now at least we have an identity.”
The problems began in 1892 when an Indian agent came to the tribe’s home, North Dakota’s Turtle Mountain Reservation. Chief Thomas Little Shell was away in Montana with 112 other families on a hunting trip. In their absence, tribal rolls were cut and a million acres of the tribe’s land was sold for $90,000. When he returned, Little Shell refused to take part in the deal, said Ed Lavenger, an elder with the Little Shell Tribe who lives in Billings. “He was protesting the dropping of so many names from the rolls,” Lavenger said. “It was all or none.”
With no land, the tribe scattered. In 1896, 600 of the landless Indians were captured by soldiers, put into boxcars and dropped off at the Canadian border. That winter, they walked back, living in squalid shacks in “Moccassin Flats” areas outside of towns along the Hi-Line and the eastern front of the Rocky Mountains, Lavenger said. “We are a scattered tribe. We weren’t claimed by the whites. We weren’t claimed by the full bloods,” Lavenger said. “They used to call us persons with no souls. Now at least we have an identity.”
A people without land
Not counting the Little Shell Tribe, Montana has 11 federally recognized tribes and seven reservations. Adjusting to life with the whites was tough enough, Lavenger said, but at least the other tribes in the state had their own land. Lavenger and his five siblings, including Gloria Williams, of Billings, grew up in the 1940s and 50s near Chinook in a 12-foot by 15-foot tarpaper shack. Lavenger’s father found seasonal work on cattle ranches. This meant the children were pulled from school in April and didn’t return until after the hoar frost. “We just traveled from place to place, living in shacks and tents,” Williams said. “It was really tough. I can remember going to school and having the kids tease me because I was Indian. If they brushed against me or something, they’d say ‘watch out now, you’re going to get fleas.’ They never trusted the Indians.” Families in the tribe continued to scatter. Divided, the tribe’s language and culture began to be conquered. But the tribe held on, Lavenger said. Tribal Chairman Joe Dussome held the tribe together for four decades. Members continued to hope that they would regain their status as a tribe. “We used to hold basket socials, dances and bingo games to raise money for (Dussome) to go to Washington to try and get to see somebody to help us with our cause,” Williams said. Other tribal leaders continued to fight for recognition, notably former Chairman John Gilbert. Petitions were filed. Lineages were traced. The tribe had to prove there was continuity over its 109 years without land. Federal officials kept postponing the decision. Burdened with a legacy of racism and a lack of jobs, the Little Shell struggled to find access to health care and higher education, Williams said. “I don’t have teeth,” said Williams, 59. “I couldn’t afford to get teeth. These other tribes get teeth, eyeglasses, medication, housing, all of that, and we get nothing.” The Crow Tribe made it a bit easier by donating medical treatment to the Little Shell, said Diana Grantham, of Billings. “The local tribes here have been wonderful. In fact we’ve been receiving health benefits at Crow Agency,” Grantham said. “If it weren’t for the Crow extending their hand, we would have had real problems,” Lavenger said. Williams said she was stunned when she learned that the government gave preliminary approval Friday for recognition of the Little Shell. “Thanks be to God,” Williams said. “We’ve been waiting for this for a long time. This is just a godsend. It is a dream come true. I can’t begin to tell you what this means to me. I’ve had so many people pass away waiting for this day. It means that now I can say I am a part of the Little Shell Tribe and my grandchildren can get help with schooling. We can probably get some medical help, too.” Williams said the ruling finally allows her people to rest their feet. “We’re somebody,” Williams said. “We’re not just this body floating around out there.”
Zimmerman said the federal recognition is important, but it is merely a confirmation of something that’s always been there. “I always said we shouldn’t be getting recognized, we should be getting re-recognized,” Zimmerman said. “We were always a tribe.”
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Thursday, March 5, 2009
Sunday, February 22, 2009
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Gabriel Dumont
Gabriel Dumont is best known as the man who led the small Métis military forces during the Northwest Resistance of 1885. He was born in the Red River area in 1837, the son of Isidore Dumont, a Métis hunter, and Louise Laframboise.
Although unable to read or write, Dumont could speak six languages and was highly adept at the essential skills of the plains: horseback riding and marksmanship. These abilities made Dumont a natural leader in the large annual Buffalo hunts that were an important part of Métis culture. At the age of fourteen Dumont received his initiation in plains warfare when he took part in a Métis skirmish with a large group of Sioux at the Grand Coteau of the Missouri River.
By the 1860s, Dumont was the leader of a group of hunters living in the Fort Carlton area. In 1872, he took advantage of the growing traffic on the Carlton trail and opened a ferry across the South Saskatchewan River and a small store upstream from Batoche. In 1873, his position as a leader was formalized when he was elected as president of the short-lived local government created by the Métis; living on the south branch of the Saskatchewan.
His leadership role in the South Branch community continued. In 1877 and 1878, Dumont chaired meetings which drew up petitions to the federal government asking for representation on the Territorial Council, farming assistance, schools, land grants, and title to already occupied lands. Dumont was also a member of the delegation which convinced Louis Riel to return to Canada and plead the Métis case to the federal government.
When a provisional government was declared in 1885, Dumont was named "adjutant general of the Métis people." He proved himself an able commander and his tiny army experienced some success against government forces at Duck Lake and Fish Creek. The Canadian militia, however, proved too large and too well equipped for Dumont's army, which collapsed on 12 May 1885 after a four day battle near Batoche.
Dumont avoided capture by escaping to the United States where, in 1886, he accepted an offer to demonstrate his marksmanship by performing in Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West Show. After visits to Quebec (where he dictated his memoires in 1889) Dumont returned to his old homestead near Batoche. He lived there quietly until his death in 1906.
http://library2.usask.ca/northwest/background/dumont.htm
Thursday, January 29, 2009
Saturday, January 17, 2009
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