Meskwaki Bibliography
SELECTED SOURCES
ON THE MESKWAKI
(Based on bibliographies
compiled by Sara Behrman, Johnathan L. Buffalo, David Hudson, and others.)
Abele, Charles A. "The
Grand Indian Council and Treaty at Prairie du Chien, 1825." Phd. dissertation,
Loyola University, 1969.
Able, Annie H. "The
History of Events Resulting in Indian Consolidation West of the
Mississippi." Annual Report, 1906, vol. 1. Washington, D.C.: American
Historical Association, 1908.
Ahmad, Iqbal Dr. “The
Dilemma of the Mesquakie Education.” Midland Schools, Fall Issue
(1971): 24-25, 26-37.
Aldrich, C. "The
Acquisition of Iowa Lands from the Indians." Annals of Iowa 7
(1906): 283-290.
Allen, Arthur Francis, ed. Northwestern
Iowa, Its History and Traditions 1804-1926. Chicago: 1927.
Allinson, MacBurnie. "Education and the Mesquakie."
Phd. dissertation. Ames: Iowa State University, 1974.
Almquist, Rex B. "Educational
History of the Iowa Sac and Fox, Present Problems in School and Community:
Implications for Social Work." M.S. thesis. Iowa City: State University
of Iowa, 1972.
American
Antiquity Notes and News. 1960: 630; 1961: 586.
"Ames Stoddard, letter
to Henry Dearborn, St. Louis, June 22, 1804" in Glimpses of the Past,
vol. 2, pp. 114-115. St. Louis: Missouri Historical Society, 1933-1943.
Anderson, Carol. “Mesquakie
School Offers Unique Education.” Times Republican, November
23, 1995.
Anderson, Duane C.
“Iowa Ethnohistory: A Review, Part 1.” Annals of Iowa, 41
(1973): 1228-1241.
“Iowa Ethnohistory: A Review, Part II.” Annals of
Iowa, 42 (1975): 41-59.
Eastern Iowa Prehistory. Ames: Iowa State University
Press, 1981.
“Mesquakie Chief Poweshiek’s Feathered Cape.” Plains
Anthropologist. 30 (1985): 161-164.
Anderson, Melville B., ed. Relation
of the Discoveries and Voyages of Cavelier De La Salle from 1679-1681.
Chicago: The Caxton Club, 1901.
Anderson, Ray. "New Form
of Tribal Management Proposed by Indians on Sac and Fox Reservation." Cedar
Rapids Gazette, May 17, 1936.
An
Anthropological Report on the Sac, Fox and Iowa Indians. American Indian
Ethnohistory: North Central and Northeastern Indians, vol. 1. New York:
Garland, 1974.
Annuities Of the Sac and Fox
Of the Mississippi. House Document 1st Sess. 57th
Congress Document 34, 4322.
Arends, John. “64th
Mesquakie Pow-Wow; Part of a Way of Life.” Digest, Iowa
Development Commission, 1979.
Armstrong, Perry A. The
Sauks and the Black Hawk War, with Biographical Sketches etc. Springfield,
Ill.: Rokker, 1887.
"At Last Mesquakie Indians
Have What Looks Like Promising Plan of Help from Whites Who Begin to Understand."
Tama New Herald, June 18, 1953.
Atwater, Caleb. Remarks
Made on a Tour to Prairie du Chien, Thence to Washington City, in 1829.
Columbus, Ohio: Jenkins and Glover, 1831.
The
Indians of the Northwest. Columbus, 1850.
Audet, F. Emile. Les
Premiers Establissements Francais au Pays des Illinois: La Guerre des Renards.
Paris: Sorlot, 1938.
Auge, Thomas. "The Life
and Times of Julien Dubuque." Palimpsest 57 (1976): 2-13.
Aumann, Francis R.
"Dispossession of the Tribes." Palimpsest 50 (1969): 234-239.
"Keokuk, the Watchful Fox." Palimpsest 46
(1965): 225-236.
"Poweshiek." Palimpsest 8 (1927): 297-305.
"Wapello." Palimpsest 9 (1928): 1-7.
Aydelotte, Ballinger.
"The Great Indian Scare." In Past and Present of Jasper County,
Iowa. Edited by James B. Weaver. Indianapolis: B. F. Bower and Co.,
1912.
Backman, Aaron. "A
Glimpse at Colonel George Davenport's Trade with the Sauk, Mesquakie and
Kickapoo." EN. 225 Native American Literature. April 27, 1979.
Bacqueville de la Potherie,
Claude C. Le Roy. "History of Savage Peoples Who Are Allies of New
France." In The Indian Tribes of the Upper Mississippi Valley and
Region of the Great Lakes, pp. 11-136 and pp. 273-372. Edited by Emma H.
Blair. Cleveland: Arthur H. Clark, 1911-1912.
Baker, Paul E. A. Study of
the Presbyterian Mission among the Mesquakie Indians in Tama, Iowa. New
York: Board of National Missions, 1960.
Balware, Jane. "Mesquakie Indian Mission: Tama, Iowa." The Women's Missionary Magazine. 12 (September 1958): 790-792.
Barlowe, Raleigh. "Appraisal of Sac and Fox
and Iowa Indian Lands of Cession 262." University of Iowa, Iowa City.
Manuscript.
Barrows, Willard. “In
the Neutral Ground.” Palimpsest 3 (1922): 106-124.
Barry, Louise. The
Beginnings of the West; Annals of the Kansas Gateway to the American West,
1540-1854. Topeka: Kansas State Historical Society, 1972.
Bataille, Gretchen M.;
Gradwohl, David M.; and Silet, Charles L. P.; eds. The Worlds between Two
Rivers: Perspectives on American Indians in Iowa. Ames: Iowa State
University Press, 1978.
Beach, John. "Indian
Agency in Wapello County." In History of Wapello County, Iowa, I,
pp. 23-43. Edited by Harrison Waterman. Chicago: 1914.
“Sac and Fox Indian Council of 1842." Annals of Iowa 12 (1920):
331-345.
Beals, Frank L. Chief
Black Hawk. Chicago: Wheeler Publishing Co., 1943.
Beckwith, H. W. The Illinois
and Indiana Indians. Fergus Historical Series, vol. 27. Chicago:
1884.
Beech, Mervy W.H. The
Sauk, Their Language and Folklore. Oxford: The Clarendon Press,
1911.
Behm, Jeffery A. "A Meskwaki Visit to the Bell Site in 1773." Fox Valley Archeology 28 (April 1999).
"Archaeological
Investigations at the Bell Site. The Grand Village of the Mesquaki. The
Magazine of the Midwest Open Air Museums Coordinating Council 14 (1993):
26-35.
"Changes in the Fox Socio-political Structure Following European Contact." Seminar
paper for Anthropology 914-4, Ethnological Problems in North America: American
Indian EthnoHistory, Fall, 1978, University of Wisconsin.
"Excavations of 'Fox' village at
Buttle des Morts. Confirm French Bombardement and Burnings." Voyageur
9 (1992): 40-45.
"More on the Reconstructed Bell Type I Vessels from the Bell
site." Fox Valley Archeology 19 (1992): 51-55.
"Recent Excavations at the Bell Site (47-W-9), Winnebago County, Wisconsin."
Paper presented at the 36th Midwest Archaeological Conference,
La Crosse, Wisconsin, 1991.
"State Archeology Regional Center Number 7 Activities in 1991-1992." Fox Valley Archeology 20 (1992): 19-23.
The
1993 and 1993 Archaeological Survey and Evaluation of the Bellhaven Estates
Property, Section 7, Town of Algoma, Winnebago County, Wisconsin." University
of Wisconsin-Oshkosh. Archaeology Lab. Reports of Investigations, No.
4 (1993).
"Two Middle Historic Native American Pottery Vessels from the
Bell Site. (47-Wn-9) Winnebago County, Wisconsin." Fox Valley Archeology
19 (1992): 10-22.
Beitz, Ruth S. "Old Fort
Madison: Where We Fled from Indians." Iowan Magazine 10 (1961?):
32-35, 53.
Beltrami, J. C. A
Pilgrimage in Europe and America. London: 1828.
Benesh, Dr. Richard L.
Jr. “A Comprehensive Socio-Economic Survey – Sac and Fox of the
Mississippi In Iowa.” Sac and Fox Tribal Council, 1977.
Bennett, Mary. An Iowa
Album: A Photographic History, 1850-1920. Chapter I, Indians and the Land.
Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 1990.
"Meskwaki
Code Talkers." Iowa Heritage Illustrated 84 (Winter 2003):
154-156.
Bennett, Mary, Johnathan L.
Buffalo, and Dawn Suzanne Wanatee. Meskwaki History. Iowa City: State
Historical Society of Iowa, 2004.
(interactive CD-ROM)
Benning, Victoria. “Impoverished
Indians Lose Welfare After Bingo Payment.” Des Moines Register,
February 17, 1988.
Berg, Richard E. A Phase I
Archaeological Reconnaissance of Fee Lands on the Sac and Fox Tribe of the
Mississippi in Tama County, Iowa. 2 vols. Bureau of Indian Affairs,
Minneapolis, Minnesota. Submitted to Sac and Fox Tribe, Meskwaki Housing
Program, Tama, Iowa. Copy on file, Office of the State Archaeologist,
University of Iowa, Iowa City. 1998.
A
Phase I Archaeological Survey of Fee Lands of the Former Doash Everhart, Moore
and Tesar Properties Proposed for Trust Acquisition for the Sac and Fox Tribe
of the Mississippi in Tama County, Iowa. Bureau of Indian Affairs,
Fort Snelling, Minnesota. Submitted to Sac and Fox Tribe, Meskwaki
Housing Program, Tama Iowa. Copy on file, Office of the State
Archaeologist, University of Iowa, Iowa City. 2002.
Berthrong, J. D. "John Beach and the Removal of the Sauk and
Fox Indians from Iowa." Iowa Journal of History and Politics 54
(1956): 313-334.
Best, Agnes. "A
Study of Games and Rhythms of the Indians of North America Which May Be Correlated
With Social Studies In the Second Grade." M.A. thesis. Iowa City:
State University of Iowa, 1938.
A
Bibliography of American Indian Materials. Tama, Iowa: Community School
District of South Tama County, 1974.
Bicknell, A. D. "The
Tama County Indians." Annals of Iowa 4 (1899): 196-208.
Biensen, Nina List.
"Language Called Keg to Keeping Tribes Culture." Times-Republican.
May 5, 1977.
Biggs, Uriah. "Sketches
of the Sac and Fox Indians, and the Early Settlement of Wapello County." Annals
of Iowa 3 (1865): 481-498, 529-537.
Bizzett, Irma J. Mesquakie
Tutoring Project. U.N.A.S.A., Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa:
1988.
Bizzett, Irma J. and Judean
Sullivan. Mesquakie Indian Youth Tutoring Experience.
U.N.A.S.A., Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa: 1988.
Black Hawk. Life of
Blackhawk. Translated by Antoine Le Claire and J. B. Patterson. Rock
Island, Ill.: 1834; reprint edition, Iowa City: State Historical Society of
Iowa, 1932.
Black Hawk
War 1831-1832. Vol. I and II, Collections of Illinois State Historical
Library, Illinois State Historical Library: 1975.
Blair, Emma Helen. The
Indian Tribes of the Upper Mississippi Valley and Region of the Great Lakes.
Cleveland: Arthur H. Clark, 1912.
Blake, Leonard W. and Cutler,
Hugh C. "Plant Materials from the Bell Site, Wn9, Wisconsin." Wisconsin
Archeologist 44 (1963): 70-71.
Bloom, Elizabeth.
"Singers Soul of the Matter During Mesquakie Pow-Wow." Waterloo
Courier. Aug 13, 1989.
Bloomfield, L. "Notes on
the Fox Languages." International Journal of American Linguistics 3
(1925): 219-232.
"Notes
on the Fox Languages." International Journal of American Linguistics
4 (1927): 181-219.
Bodmer, Karl. "Watercolor
of a Sauk and Mesquakie." Palimpsest 60 (1979): cover.
Bonney, Margaret Atherton.
"Indians of Iowa." The Goldfinch 3 (1982): 1-16.
Bonvillian, Nancy. The Sac
and Fox Indians of North America. New York: Chelsea House Publishers, 1995.
Borkowski, Kathryn. The 1712 Siege of Detroit, the French and Fox
Indians. St Joseph Valley Record. Spring 1990. 1-5.
Boston, Massachusetts. Massachusetts
Historical Society. Jacob Brown Papers, "Indians of Upper Mississippi."
Manuscript.
Boyd, G. D. R. "Sketches
of History and Incidents Connected with the Settlement of Wapello County, from
1843-1859, Inclusive." Annals of Iowa 5 (1867): 940-947.
"Sketches
of History and Incidents Connected with the Settlement of Wapello County, from
1843-1859, Inclusive." Annals of Iowa 6 (1868): 184-191.
Breinich, Dan, Kathy Hoyt, Judy
Hupfield, Susan Knauer, Vicki La Brie, Nancy Rowley, Louis Sharzer, Beverly
Singleman, Janet Zupek. “The American, The Sauk and Fox Indian of Tama, Iowa.”
Teaching the Educationally Disadvantaged. 7U: 133. December 15, 1970.
Briggs, John Ely. "The Council on the Iowa." Palimpsest
46 (1965): 237-250.
"Implacable
Foes." Palimpsest 8 (1927): 306-314.
"Indian
Affairs in 1845." Palimpsest 26 (1945): 225-238.
“Indian
Affairs.” Palimpsest 21 (1940): 261-277.
"The
Indian Cession of 1842." Palimpsest 9 (1928): 45-48.
“No
Sale." Palimpsest 22 (1941): 193-212.
"The
Sacs and Foxes." Palimpsest 50 (1969): 222-226.
“When
Iowa Was Young.” Palimpsest 6 (1925): 117-127.
Brigham, Johnson. Iowa;
Its History and Its Foremost Citizens. Chicago: The S.J. Clarke
Publishing Company, 1916.
Brigham,
William. "The Arrowsmith Battlefield." Transactions of the McLean
County, Historical Society 4 (33-43) 1936.
Bro, John. "A
Report and Overview of the Meskwaki (Sac & Fox) Day School of Tama,
Iowa." Underdevelopment, Development and Change 99:165, Professor
Jeffrey Ehrenreich, University of Northern Iowa, Spring 1987.
Brown, Alison K. “Beads, Beats
and Bands: The Mesquakie Collection of Mary Alicia Owen.” Journal of Missouri
Folklore 18-19 (1996-97).
Brown, Dorothy
M. "Wisconsin Indians Corn Origin Myth." Wisconsin Archeologist
21 (1940): 19-27.
Brown, Duane. “Report
of the Career Goals and Enrichment Program Project of the Sac and Fox Indian
Students.” Assistant Professor Duane Brown, Department of Education,
Iowa State University, Ames. August 1967.
Brown, Joni. "Mesquakies
Come Together for 74th annual Pow-Wow." Tama News-Herald, August
10, 1989.
"Pow-Wow Dance Winners." Tama News-Herald, August
18, 1988.
"Pow-Wow Winners." Toledo Chronicle, August
23, 1988.
Brown, R. F. "A Social
History of the Mesquakie Indians, 1800-1963." M.A. thesis. Ames: Iowa
State University, 1964.
Bruce, H. E. Potawatomie
Ten Year Program Report. Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Indian Affairs, 1944.
Buffalo, Johnathan Lantz.
"Mesquakie Exodus." Paper, University of Iowa, 1977. Special Collections,
State Historical Society of Iowa, Iowa City.
"Mesquakie
Family." Paper, University of Iowa, 1976. Special Collections, State
Historical Society of Iowa, Iowa City.
"Pow-Wow History."
Discover Tama County. Tama News-Herald, August 11, 1988.
Bullifin, Raymond. “The
Mesquakie Indians of Iowa.” Paper for Introduction to History, Dr. Sanseri,
University of Northern Iowa, September 2, 1987.
Burford, C. C. "Sauk and
Fox Indian Ceremonials Attract Large Audiences and Widespread Interest." Journal
of the Illinois State Archaeology Society 5 (1947): 24-30.
Busby, Allie B. Two
Summers among the Musquakies, Relating to the Early History of the Sac and Fox
Tribe, Incidents of Their Noted Chiefs, Location of the Foxes, or Musquakies,
in Iowa, with a. Full Account of Their Traditions, Rites and Ceremonies.
Vinton, Iowa: Herald Book and Job Rooms, 1886.
Bushnell, David I., Jr.
"Native Villages and Village Sites East of the Mississippi." Bureau
of American Ethnology Bulletin 69. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution,
1919.
"Villages
of the Algonquian, Siouan and Caddoan Tribes." Bureau of American
Ethnology Bulletin 77: 37-41. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution,
1922.
Byrd, John M. "Educational
Policies of the Federal Government toward the Sac and Fox Indians of Iowa,
1928-1937, with Resulting Changes in Indian Educational Attitude: A Study
in the Process of Assimilation." M.S. thesis. Iowa City: State University
of Iowa, 1938.
Caldwell, Dorothy J.
"The Big Neck Affair: Tragedy and Farce on the Missouri Frontier." Missouri
Historical Review 64 (1970): 391-412.
Caldwell, Joseph R. History
of Tama County, Iowa. Chicago: Lewis Publishing Company, 1910.
"Trend
and Tradition in the Prehistory of the Eastern United States." Memoir
88, American Anthropological Association, 1958.
Call, Ambrose, A. “Indians Repelled in Kossuth.” Annals of Iowa. 31 (1951): 81-90.
Callendar, Charles. A Preliminary Investigation of Fox Exogamy. MA thesis. Chicago: University of Chicago, 1955.
"Central Algonquian Kinship Terminology." Manuscript. 1957.
"Changes
in Fox Culture between 1820 and 1955." University of Chicago, Department
of Anthropology (Manuscript prepared for Tama Indian Program), 1956.
"Fox
Genealogies: Charts and Commentaries." Material in University of Chicago,
Department of Anthropology, Chicago, 1955.
“Fox”
Handbook of North American Indians, Northeast Volume 15, volume Editor
Bruce G. Trigger, Washington D.C. Smithsonian Institution, 1978. pp.
636-647.
Social
Organization of the Central Algonkian Indians. Milwaukee Public Museum Publications
in Anthropology, No. 7. Milwaukee: Milwaukee Public Museum, 1962.
Canfield, David. “A Tama
Indian’s Own Tribal Customs Help Keep Him Down.” Des Moines Register.
March 4, 1968.
“Federal
Aid Makes Indian Housing Situation Hopeful.” Des Moines Register.
March 5, 1968.
“Iowa’s Troubled Indians.” Des Moines Register.
March 3, 1968.
Carlson, Duaine. “Indians
Perform Dances For Dual Purpose.” Rock Island Argus, September
4, 1982.
“Rock Island Still Thought of by Ancestors of Black Hawk.” Rock
Island Argus, September 2, 1982.
Carlson, Victoria.
“Mesquakie Student Art.” The Goldfinch 10 (1989): 7-10.
Carman, J. N. and Pond, K. S.
"The Replacement of the Indian Languages of Kansas by English." Transactions
of the Kansas Academy of Science 58 (1955): 131-150.
Carver, Jonathan. Three
Years Travels. Philadelphia, 1796.
Travels
through the Interior Parts of North America in the Years 1766, 1767 and 1768.
London: By the Author, 1778; reprint edition, Minneapolis: Toss and Hart, 1956.
Catlin, George C. Manners,
Customs and Conditions of the North American Indians. London: 1841.
My
Life among the Indians. New York: C. Scribner's Sons, n.d.
North American Indians. London: 1844.
"The
Course of Empire.” Palimpsest 7 (1926):366-76.
Cha Ka Ta Ko Si. A Collection of Meskwaki
Manuscripts. Iowa City: State Historical Society of Iowa, 1907.
Chamberlain, A. F.
"Tales of the Mississaquas." Journal of American Folklore 2
(1889): 142-143.
Chapin, Earl V. “How the U.S.
Humiliated Proud Chief Black Hawk.” Western Magazine, date unknown.
Chapman, Samuel D. History of Tama County, Iowa. Toledo,
Iowa: Toledo Times Office, 1879.
Charlevoix, S. J. Pierre F.
X. de. History and General Description of New France. 6 vols. Translated
with notes by John G. Shea. New York: John G. Shea, 1866-72.
Chaussegros de Lery, Gaspard
Joseph. "Carte du Pays des Sauvages Renards Depuis la Baye du Lac Michigan
Jusques a Leur Dernier Village. Quebec, November 10, 1730." Reproduction
of a manuscript map presented by J. F. Steward to the Ayer Collection, Newberry
Library. (blueprint) .
Chicago, Illinois. Newberry
Library. Ayer Collection. Indian Documents, vol. 3, 1834-1848. "Report in
Relation to the Difficulties Which Took Place at the Payment of the Sac and Fox
Annuities, 1848."
Chicago, Illinois. University
of Chicago. Joseph Regenstein Library. Frederick Starr Papers.
"Chicago U. Studies Life
and Problems of Iowa Indians." Des Moines Tribune, 19 February
1953, p. 6.
Christensen, Thomas
Peter. The Iowa Indians: A Brief History. Iowa City: Athens
Press, 1954.
Clark, Charles A.
“Indians of Iowa.” Annals of Iowa, 6 (1903): 81-106.
Clark, Dan E. "Frontier
Defense in Iowa 1850-1865." Iowa Journal of History and Politics 16
(1918): 315-386.
Cole, Cyrenus. History of
the People of Iowa. Cedar Rapids: Torch Press, 1921.
I
Am a Man—The Indian Black Hawk. Iowa City: State Historical
Society, 1938.
Colgrove, Kenneth W.
"The Attitude of Congress toward the Pioneers of the West, 1820-1850, I.
The Relations between the Pioneers and the Indians." Iowa Journal of
History and Politics 9 (1911): 197-302.
Collection of Wisconsin State
Historical Society. 1 (1854): 21-23.
Collins, James M. “A Meskwaki Mine in the Upper Mississippi River
Lead District,” Paper presented at the 2004 Joint Meeting of the
Midwest Archaeological Conference and the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, St. Louis, Missouri, October 22,
2004.
Conard,
Rebecca, and Leah D. Rogers. American Indians in Sac County: An Examination
of Archival and Field Evidence. PHR Associates, Lake View, Iowa.
Submitted to The Sac County Historic Preservation Commission and the Sac County
Economic and Tourism Development. 1993.
Connelly, Karin. "Stately Grace in Mesquakie Work." Grinnell
Herald-Register, March 9, 1989.
“Mesquakie Artisans:
Tradition and Change.” Exhibition information, Grinnell Community Art Gallery,
January 26-February16, 1990.
Cook, Duane. “Dancing As Their Forefathers
Did.” Cedar Rapids Gazette, August 10, 1975.
Cooper, Joseph N. "Some
Early History." In Past and Present of Marshall County, Iowa, p.
72. Edited by William Battin and F. A. Moscrip. Indianapolis: B. F. Bowen,
1912.
Corkran, D.H. “Pemoussa.” Dictionary
of Canadian Biography 2 (1969): 515-516.
Cortesi, Lawrence. “Showdown at Bad Axe.” Western Magazine,
date unknown.
"Cosmogony of the Saukee and Musquawkee Indians." Chronicles
of the North American Savages, Vol. 1, Nos. 1-5 (May-September 1835).
"Council with the Sac
and Fox Indians in 1840." Iowa Journal of History and Politics 15
(1917): 429-436.
Craig, Frances. "Indians
Stress Own Culture in Day Care Center." Des Moines Sunday Register.
Home-Family Section E, November 26, 1972.
Crawford, Nelson Antrim. “The Golden Dawn of Time.” The Midland (February 1917): 34-50.
Crichton, Robin. A Brave New World, film. Edinburgh Film & Video Production, 1999.
Indian
Summer, film for BBC. Edinburgh Film Productions, 1964
Crock, Duane. "Dancing
as their Forefathers did." Cedar Rapids Gazette, August 10, 1975.
Crump, Jayson. “Nagle
Requests $4.27 Million For Mesquakie School.” Tama News-Herald,
April 27, 1989.
“$50,000 Grant
Awarded to Sac and Fox.” Toledo Chronicle, July 4, 1989.
Culin, Steward. "Games
of the North American Indians" in 24th Annual Report of the Bureau
of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution.
Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1907.
Cummings, J. E. “The Burning
of Sauk-E-Nuk: The Westernmost Battle of the Revolution.” Journal of the
Illinois State Historical Society, 20 (1927): 49-62.
Cummins, Albert Baird. A. B.
Cummins Papers, Special Collections, State Historical Society of Iowa, Des
Moines.
Cypret, Randy. “Indian Pow Wow Preserves Culture." Dispatch, Moline, Illinois, September 9, 1982.
Dahlstrom, Amy. "An Analog to Tough Movement in Fox Syntax." Papers of the Twenty-fifth Algonquian Conference, 1994.
"Owls and Cannibals Revisited: Traces of Winigigo Features in Meskwaki Text." Papers of the Thirty-Fourth Algonquian Conference, October 2002.
Danziger, Edmund J. Jr.
“The Office of Indian Affairs and the Problem of Civil War Indians at the Sac
& Fox Reservation.” Kansas Historical Quarterly 35
(1969).
Daubenmier, Judith M. "Meskwaki Remember Action Anthropology." Annals of Iowa 62 (2003): 427-464.
The
Meskwaki and Sol Tax: Reconsidering the Actors in Action Anthropology.
Phd dissertation. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan, 2003.
Davenport, Iowa. Putnam
Museum. Antoine LeClaire Collection. Document 915, Folder 80. "Letter to
Governor Chambers by Fox Indians," 30 August 1841.
Davidson, Mary Ann. "An
Autobiography and Reminiscence." Annals of Iowa 37 (1964): 241-261.
Davidson, J.N. In
Unnamed Wisconsin. Milwaukee, 1895.
Davis, Garry W. and Thomas L.
Markey. Meskwaki Atowtake, Mesquakie Primer, An Elementary School Text
of Mesquakie Language. Sac & Fox of the Mississippi In Iowa. Ann
Arbor: Karoma Publishers, Inc., 1983.
Davis, Terry and Russell H.
Lord. “Tama's Sauk and Fox Indians,” paper. Cultural Anthropology,
Prof. Simmons, William Penn College. May 8, 1970.
Dearborn, F. R. Problems
of North American Indian. Iowa City: State University of Iowa, 1927.
Decree of Partition of the
Half-Breed Tract. Special Collections, State Historical Society of Iowa, Iowa
City.
Denig, Edwin Thompson.
"Indian Tribes of the Upper Missouri" in 46th Annual Report of the
Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution.
Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1930.
Deom. “Mesquakie Particpation.” Politics of the Budgetary Process; term Paper, January 12, 1975.
Des Moines, Iowa. State Historical Society of Iowa, State Archives, Des Moines. Miscellaneous Correspondence from the Governor's Office on Indian Affairs.
DeWelle, Jessie M. "The Mesquakie Indians at Tama." In Iowa Beautiful Land: A History of Iowa, 1950, pp. 214-216.
De Vore, Steven and others.
The Dubuque Lead Mining Sidtrict: The Archaeological Investigations and Management
Concerns for the Frontier Lead Mining Industry, 1788-1865. Paper presented
at the 24th Annual Society for Historical Archaeology Conference
on Historical and Underwater Archaeology, Richmond, Virginia. 1991.
Dictionary
Catalog of the Edward E. Ayer Collection of Americana and American Indians in
the Newberry Library. S.v. "Fox Indians." Boston: G. K. Hall, 1961.
Dixon, R. B. "The
Mythology of the Central and Eastern Algongins." Journal of American
Folklore 22 (1909): l-9.
Dockstader, Frederick.
“Youngbear (ca. 1868-1933?)” Great North American Indians.
Van Nostrand Reinhold Co. 1977. pp. 350-351.
Dockstader, Frederick J. The
American Indian in Graduate Studies: A. Bibliography of Theses and
Dissertations. New York: Museum of the American Indian, 1957.
Documentary and Judicial Opinions
in Relation to the title to the Sac and Fox Half Breed Reservation in the
State of Iowa. Keokuk.
Whig and Rebook Job Office. 1850.
Doe, John. "The
Musquakas of Tama County." Annals of Iowa 8 (1870): 363-366.
Doershuk, John F.
Additional Phase I Archaeological Survey of a Proposed Facility Improvement
Area Near 13TM366, Sac and Fox Tribe of the Mississippi in Iowa, Section 18,
T83N-R15W, Tama County, Iowa. Contract Completion Report 646. Office
of the State Archaeologist, University of Iowa, Iowa City. 1999.
Donaldson, Thomas. "The
George Catlin Indian Gallery in the U.S. National Museum" in Annual
Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution. Washington,
D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1885.
Douglas, John M. The Indians
in Wisconsin's History. Milwaukee Public Museum Popular Science Handbook
Series, No. 6. Milwaukee: Milwaukee Public Museum, 1954.
Drake, Benjamin. The
Great Indian Chief of the West: The Life and Adventures of Black Hawk.
7th ed. Cincinnati: G. Conclin 1849.
The
Life and Adventures of Black Hawk: With Sketches of Keokuk, the Sac and Fox
Indians, and the Late Black Hawk War. 7th ed. Cincinnati: 1844.
Draper, Lyman and Thwaites,
Reuben G., eds. Collections of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin.
27 vols. Madison: The Society, 1855-1911.
Dueser, Carl. "Tama Indian
School is Different." Cedar Rapids Gazette, November 27, 1938.
Dundon, Don. “Audit
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
A major portion of this bibliography was compiled in 1982 by Sara Behrman of the Office of the State Archaeologist, in conjunction with application to the National Endowment for the Humanities entitled "The Mesquakie Indians in 1845: Refugees During the Reservation Period." Sara Behrman would like to thank the staffs at the State Historical Society of Iowa Library, University of Iowa Libraries and the State Library of Iowa for their assistance. Thanks also for the efforts of Deb Zieglowsky, Betty Horner, and Robert Burchfield, all formerly on the Office of the State Archaeologist staff.
Additional entries came from the work of David Hudson who created a bibliography of pre-1952 imprints. Hudson and Patricia Dawson's extensive Bibliography on Iowa History and Culture was also useful. Johnathan L. Buffalo provided additional references to newspaper articles and other sources. The clippings file at the State Historical Society of Iowa's library in Iowa City contains numerous articles not listed here.
This revised version was prepared in 2004 by Mary Bennett, Philip Bergman, Robert Henning, Char Hixon, Molly Kotval, and Danielle Mahmens of the State Historical Society of Iowa and Dawn Suzanne Wanatee and Johnathan L. Buffalo as part of the Meskwaki History project sponsered by Humanities Iowa. Please contact the State Historical Society of Iowa if you have additions or corrections to offer.