Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The name "Dahinda" comes from the 1855 edition of The Song of Hiawatha. by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. "All the air was white with moonlight, All the water black with shadow, And around him the Suggema, The mosquito, sang his war-song, And the fire-flies, Wah-wah-taysee, Waved their torches to mislead him; And the bull-frog, the Dahinda, thrust his head into the moonlight, Fixed his yellow ...
The tribal jurisdiction area is west of White Cloud, Kansas and northeast of Hiawatha, Kansas. [1] It was created as a consequence of the Platte Purchase of 1836. Other reservations associated with the Sac and Fox Nation: Sac and Fox/Meskwaki Settlement-- located in central Iowa
Marion Eleanor Gridley was born in White Plains, New York, on 16 November 1906.She married Robinson Johnson on 15 May 1932, but they divorced in either 1947 or 1948. Gridley published Indians of Today in 1936 and edited Indian Legends of American Scenes three years
Painted hide with geometric motifs, attributed to the Illinois Confederacy by the French, pre-1800. Collections of the Musée du quai Branly.. The Illinois Confederation, also referred to as the Illiniwek or Illini, were made up of a loosely organized group of 12 to 13 tribes who lived in the Mississippi River Valley.
Nick Chiles, a prominent Black Topeka newspaper editor in the early 1900s, is buried at Topeka's Mount Auburn Cemetery. So are Negro Leagues baseball player and manager "Topeka Jack" Johnson and ...
Topeka is located in northern Mason County. It is 9 miles (14 km) northeast of Havana, the county seat, and 7 miles (11 km) southwest of Forest City.. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Topeka has a total area of 0.14 square miles (0.36 km 2), all land. [2]
Here's how 21 incorporated cities in Kansas — including Topeka, Grenola, Argonia, Council Grove and Gas — got their interesting and unique names.
Hiawatha and the Iroquois league. ISBN 0-382-09568-5 ISBN 9780382095689 ISBN 0-382-09757-2 ISBN 9780382097577; Malkus, Alida (1963). There really was a Hiawatha. St. John, Natalie and Mildred Mellor Bateson (1928). Romans of the West: untold but true story of Hiawatha. Taylor, C. J. (2004). Peace walker: the legend of Hiawatha and Tekanawita.