In Completing the Circle, Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve says "so little is known about the women." In history textbooks, and in children's books, Native women and girls are largely absent. When they are present, they're anonymous figures and beasts of burden who prepare food, haul wood, tan hides, and take care of children. They are usually nameless and called "squaw," even by others in their tribe. Does that make sense? Would the Native peoples of the southwest or northeast use the same word for woman? Not likely, but as a society, we've come to think that all Native peoples call their women squaws (or "princess" --- but I'll save that discussion for another time). When we read "squaw" in Elizabeth George Speare's 1957 book Calico Captive, or her 1983 Sign of the Beaver, or Dalgliesh's 1954 The Courage of Sarah Noble, we don't even pause. It fits with our flawed ideas about Native culture and Native women.
In reality, each tribe has its own word for woman. And, women in Native societies past and present were not marginalized in the ways that history textbooks and childrens books suggest. Some books by Native authors give us a different picture, and that's what today's post is about. Instead of Calico Captive, Sign of the Beaver, or The Courage of Sarah Noble, read the books listed below. These authors provide readers with well-rounded female Native characters whose lives more accurately reflects the lives of Native women and girls.
For readers in elementary school:
Birchbark House, by Louise Erdrich
Daughter of Suqua by Diane Johnston Hamm
Children of the Longhouse, by Joseph Bruchac
Sees Behind Trees, by Michael Dorris
For readers in middle and high school:
Waterlily, by Ella C. Deloria
Night Flying Woman, An Ojibway Narrative, by Ignatia Broker
Halfbreed, by Maria Campbell
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Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Calico Captive. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Calico Captive. Sort by date Show all posts
Tuesday, August 01, 2006
Friday, November 16, 2018
Debbie--have you seen THE RANSOM OF MERCY CARTER by Caroline Cooney?
A reader wrote to ask if I've reviewed The Ransom of Mercy Carter by Caroline Cooney. It was published in 2001 by Random House. Here's the overview:
It'd be interesting to do a chart of plot points across these three books. Cooney's opens with the place (Deerfield, Massachusetts), the date (February 28, 1704) and the temperature (10 degrees below zero). The first page is about Mercy's family settling into bed for the night, and praying:
Skimming what I can see online, I see there's a scene where the captive kids watch a Native man who had "taken four scalps" earlier. The description of his actions is very detailed as he scrapes flesh away. Pretty gross, isn't it? So, I have a hunch that The Ransom of Mercy Carter will end up with a not recommended tag.
Deerfield, Massachusetts is one of the most remote, and therefore dangerous, settlements in the English colonies. In 1704 an Indian tribe attacks the town, and Mercy Carter becomes separated from the rest of her family, some of whom do not survive. Mercy and hundreds of other settlers are herded together and ordered by the Indians to start walking. The grueling journey — three hundred miles north to a Kahnawake Indian village in Canada — takes more than 40 days. At first Mercy's only hope is that the English government in Boston will send ransom for her and the other white settlers. But days turn into months and Mercy, who has become a Kahnawake daughter, thinks less and less of ransom, of Deerfield, and even of her "English" family. She slowly discovers that the "savages" have traditions and family life that soon become her own, and Mercy begins to wonder: If ransom comes, will she take it?The Ransom of Mercy Carter is a captivity story. These kinds of story started with Mary Rowlandson's account of her captivity in 1676. There have been many since then, including
- Lois Lenski's Indian Captive: The Story of Mary Jemison, published in 1941. Like Cooney's book, it also won a Newbery Honor Medal.
- Elizabeth George Speare's Calico Captive, published in 1957, and based on the capture of James Johnson and his family in 1754.
It'd be interesting to do a chart of plot points across these three books. Cooney's opens with the place (Deerfield, Massachusetts), the date (February 28, 1704) and the temperature (10 degrees below zero). The first page is about Mercy's family settling into bed for the night, and praying:
Dear Lord, prayed Mercy Carter, do not let us be murdered in our beds tonight.I'll see if I can get a copy of the book, but some things I see (like that first line) suggest that the book is a sensational telling--more of a thriller than anything else. The word "savage" appears in it 29 times.
Skimming what I can see online, I see there's a scene where the captive kids watch a Native man who had "taken four scalps" earlier. The description of his actions is very detailed as he scrapes flesh away. Pretty gross, isn't it? So, I have a hunch that The Ransom of Mercy Carter will end up with a not recommended tag.
Monday, August 13, 2012
"In any war between the civilized man and the savage..."
Have you seen this ad? It is, or has been, on buses in New York City and San Francisco. (See an ABC San Francisco news story on the ad: "Pro-Israel ads on Muni buses spark criticism.")
The ad uses "civilized man" and "savage." It doesn't say "savage man"--it simply says "savage."
I'm wondering if the roots of the "savage" idea used by the American Freedom Defense Initiative go back to children's books? One children's book after another uses "savage" or "savages" to describe Indigenous peoples.
Want some examples?
In Carol Ryrie Brink's Caddie Woodlawn, published in 1935, Mrs. Woodlawn says "those frightful savages will eat us out of house and home" (p. 7).
In Lois Lenski's Indian Captive, published in 1941, Captain Morgan says "An untamed savage, growing up like a wild beast in the forest" (p. 264).
In Elizabeth George Speare's Calico Captive, published in 1957, the narrative reads "Two of the savages came from the bedroom, dragging a shrinking and almost naked Susana between them" (p. 16).
In Speare's The Witch of Blackbird Pond, published in 1958, John says to Kit "How did you learn to read when you say you just ran wild like a savage and never did any work? (p. 27).
In her Sign of the Beaver, published in 1983, Matt thinks "How could he possibly teach a savage to read?" (p. 32).
These books are miseducating the young people who read them.
Words are powerful weapons that are used to socialize---to teach---that certain peoples are "other" to be feared, defeated, killed, colonized. Not using nouns that make it clear that Indigenous peoples are human beings, or men, women, children, and babies, helped, and helps, to justify wars and aggression by the "civilized man" on American Indians and anyone else deemed as "enemy." With 'savage' ideology firmly embedded in that "civilized man," all manner of aggression and war are possible.
I think children's books are part of the socialization that creates an attitude like the one on display in the ad, and I will continue to use American Indians in Children's Literature to point out destructive biases that hurt all of us. I hope you will, too.
The ad uses "civilized man" and "savage." It doesn't say "savage man"--it simply says "savage."
I'm wondering if the roots of the "savage" idea used by the American Freedom Defense Initiative go back to children's books? One children's book after another uses "savage" or "savages" to describe Indigenous peoples.
Want some examples?
In Carol Ryrie Brink's Caddie Woodlawn, published in 1935, Mrs. Woodlawn says "those frightful savages will eat us out of house and home" (p. 7).
In Lois Lenski's Indian Captive, published in 1941, Captain Morgan says "An untamed savage, growing up like a wild beast in the forest" (p. 264).
In Elizabeth George Speare's Calico Captive, published in 1957, the narrative reads "Two of the savages came from the bedroom, dragging a shrinking and almost naked Susana between them" (p. 16).
In Speare's The Witch of Blackbird Pond, published in 1958, John says to Kit "How did you learn to read when you say you just ran wild like a savage and never did any work? (p. 27).
In her Sign of the Beaver, published in 1983, Matt thinks "How could he possibly teach a savage to read?" (p. 32).
These books are miseducating the young people who read them.
Words are powerful weapons that are used to socialize---to teach---that certain peoples are "other" to be feared, defeated, killed, colonized. Not using nouns that make it clear that Indigenous peoples are human beings, or men, women, children, and babies, helped, and helps, to justify wars and aggression by the "civilized man" on American Indians and anyone else deemed as "enemy." With 'savage' ideology firmly embedded in that "civilized man," all manner of aggression and war are possible.
I think children's books are part of the socialization that creates an attitude like the one on display in the ad, and I will continue to use American Indians in Children's Literature to point out destructive biases that hurt all of us. I hope you will, too.
Monday, January 26, 2015
"Injun" in Chris Kyle's AMERICAN SNIPER
When American Sniper opened in theaters last week, I started to see reviews that pointed out Kyle's use of the word savage to describe Iraqis. That word has been used to describe American Indians. I wondered if Kyle made any connections between "savage" and American Indians in his book. The answer? Yes.
In his autobiography, Kyle uses "Injun" in two places. Here's what he said on page 267:
And, anyone who has paid attention to the use of "savage" or "Injun" in children's literature will be able to list several books that use either word to dehumanize American Indians. Here's a few examples:
When we share books with the dehumanization of American Indians, do we inadvertently put people on that road to being able to dehumanize "other" in conflicts, be the conflict that takes place in war or on the streets of any country?
__________________
Update, 5:03 PM, January 26, 2015
In addition to the article I linked to above, please see the conclusion of Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz's Indigenous Peoples History of the United States. Irony abounds within military activity. At one point in time, US soldiers dehumanized Native peoples so they could destroy us, our homelands, and our ways of life. Kyle's framing of Iraqis as savages is a present-day manifestation of that.
Dunbar-Ortiz documents the flip side of that stance, quoting Robert D. Kaplan, a military analyst who Foreign Policy magazine named as one of the top 100 global thinkers in 2011:
In his autobiography, Kyle uses "Injun" in two places. Here's what he said on page 267:
Or we would bump out 500 yards, six or eight hundred yards, going deep into Injun territory to look and wait for the bad guys.And here's what he said on page 291:
Our missions would last for an overnight or two in Injun country.See? He made connections between "savage" Iraqis and "savage" Indians. In his book, he used the word "savage" several times. Here's page 4 (the book uses caps as shown):
SAVAGE, DESPICABLE EVIL. THAT'S WHAT WE WERE FIGHTING in Iraq. That's why a lot of people, myself included, called the enemy "savages."Later on that same page, he says that when people asked him how many he's killed:
The number is not important to me. I only wish I had killed more. Not for bragging rights, but because I believe the world is a better place without savages out there taking American lives.On page 147:
THE BAD GUYS THE ENEMIES WE WERE FIGHTING WERE SAVAGE AND WELL-armedOn page 173:
It was near a hospital the insurgents had converted into a headquarters before our assault, and even now the area seemed to be a magnet for savages.On page 219:
I hated the damn savages I'd been fighting.On page 228:
They turned around and saw a savage with a rocket launcher lying dead on the ground.On page 244:
They had heard we were out there slaying a huge number of savages.On page 284:
There was a savage on the roof of the house next door, looking down at the window from the roof there.On page 316:
"...after we killed enough of the savages out there," I told him.On page 338:
I'd have to wait until the savage who put him up to it appeared on the street.Of course, Kyle is not the first person to equate American Indians with Iraqis. In 2008, Professor Steven Silliman of the University of Massachusetts did a study of the use of "Indian Country." His article, The "Old West" in the Middle East: U.S. Military Metaphors in Real and Imagined Indian Country includes a chart of how it was used in the Middle East, by media and soldiers.
And, anyone who has paid attention to the use of "savage" or "Injun" in children's literature will be able to list several books that use either word to dehumanize American Indians. Here's a few examples:
- Laura Ingalls Wilder used "savages" in her Little House on the Prairie.
- Carol Ryrie Brink used "savages" in Caddie Woodlawn.
- Lois Lenski used "savage" in Indian Captive.
- Elizabeth George Speare used "savages" in Calico Captive and "savage" in Sign of the Beaver.
- Eoin Colfer used "savage Injun" in The Reluctant Assassin.
When we share books with the dehumanization of American Indians, do we inadvertently put people on that road to being able to dehumanize "other" in conflicts, be the conflict that takes place in war or on the streets of any country?
__________________
Update, 5:03 PM, January 26, 2015
In addition to the article I linked to above, please see the conclusion of Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz's Indigenous Peoples History of the United States. Irony abounds within military activity. At one point in time, US soldiers dehumanized Native peoples so they could destroy us, our homelands, and our ways of life. Kyle's framing of Iraqis as savages is a present-day manifestation of that.
Dunbar-Ortiz documents the flip side of that stance, quoting Robert D. Kaplan, a military analyst who Foreign Policy magazine named as one of the top 100 global thinkers in 2011:
"It is a small but interesting fact that members of the 101st Airborne Division, in preparation for their parachute drop on D-Day, shaved themselves in Mohawk style and applied war paint on their faces."She cites other instances of that sort of thing. Get her book, if you can from Teaching for Change.
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
Michael Steele, "Honest Injun," and, "Injun" in children's books
When Harry Reid's remarks about Obama hit the news yesterday, Michael Steele (head of the Republican Party) said Reid ought to resign. When called out on his own language (Steele said "Honest Injun" on January 4), he said, at first, that he did not to apologize or step down from his own position. Now, he's issuing the classic "IF" I offended anyone..... (not)apology.
There's been a lot of spin about both men and what they said. With this post, I focus on the terms "Injun" and "Honest Injun."
Steel says his use of the phrase was not intended as a racial slur. I imagine a lot of people were surprised to learn that "injun" is derogatory.
Surprised, because, it is, after all, quite common. You can find "Injun" and "Honest Injun" in older books that are widely read today, like:
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer - published in 1876, where "evil is embodied in the treacherous figure of Injun Joe," (p. x of the intro to The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, a Signet Classic book published in 2002) and in the oath used several times by characters.
Seems to me, in my cursory study of the phrase, that it may have been coined by Twain. In the entry on "Injun," the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) lists Twain as the first person to use "Injun." It also lists several other noted writers who used "Honest Injun." Some are George Bernard Shaw in 1896 and James Joyce (in Ulysses) in 1922.
And you can find "Injun" in new books, like The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate, by Jacqueline Kelly, published in 2009. It appears twice in Kelly's book, on page 135 and 251. In both instances, it is used as an oath. Here's the relevant excerpt on page 135?
Kelly used it again on page 251:
Given that attention, I hope that teachers are taking the opportunity to talk with students about that word, "Injun." I wonder if Steele's schoolteachers used Holling C. Holling's Paddle-to-the-Sea? Published in 1941, it was awarded a Caldecott Honor Medal. In Holling's book, a toy Indian in a toy canoe is put into the water. It makes its way downriver, and ends up in Lake Superior, where a fisherman catches it (page 23):
I've also come across the word "Injun" in The Little House Cookbook: Frontier Foods from Laura Ingalls Wilder's Classic Stories compiled by Barbara M. Walker, published in 1989. It includes a recipe for "Rye'N'Injun, a kind of bread. "Rye'N'Injun" appears several times in Farmer Boy, published in 1953. Walker says that bread is known today as Boston Brown Bread. On page 86, she writes
It's in Elizabeth George Speare's Calico Captive, and Lois Lenski's Indian Captiv, The Story of Mary Jemison. I understand it being used in historical fiction. It was a phrase used in the past, but not today, and it'd be terrific if, when they come across it, teachers would point out that "Injun" is a derogatory word.
It's in Bobbsey Twins, Nancy Drew, and the Hardy Boys. You can find it in Lynne Reid Banks's The Key to the Indian. But, did Benjamin Franklin use the phrase, "Honest Injun," as suggested by Augusta Stevenson in her biography, Benjamin Franklin: Young Printer?
Another children's book author uses it... Joseph Bruchac. In his The Heart of a Chief, you'll find him pushing back on the use of it and other words. His protagonist, Chris, and his friends are at a football game. His friend is Anthony, or Tony, or Pizza. Here's the excerpt (p. 55):
In his book, Bruchac calls attention to a lot of words and to the mascot issue. For that reason alone, I encourage teachers and librarians to get and use his book, especially right now, in the wake ofWilliam Michael Steele's remarks. You might also want to talk with students about Native response to Steele. See "GOP leader uses racist term" by Rob Capriccioso in Indian Country Today on January 12, 2010 and "Michael Steele's 'honest injun' comment sparks backlash", in the Chicago Tribune on January 7, 2010.
There's been a lot of spin about both men and what they said. With this post, I focus on the terms "Injun" and "Honest Injun."
Steel says his use of the phrase was not intended as a racial slur. I imagine a lot of people were surprised to learn that "injun" is derogatory.
Surprised, because, it is, after all, quite common. You can find "Injun" and "Honest Injun" in older books that are widely read today, like:
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer - published in 1876, where "evil is embodied in the treacherous figure of Injun Joe," (p. x of the intro to The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, a Signet Classic book published in 2002) and in the oath used several times by characters.
Seems to me, in my cursory study of the phrase, that it may have been coined by Twain. In the entry on "Injun," the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) lists Twain as the first person to use "Injun." It also lists several other noted writers who used "Honest Injun." Some are George Bernard Shaw in 1896 and James Joyce (in Ulysses) in 1922.
And you can find "Injun" in new books, like The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate, by Jacqueline Kelly, published in 2009. It appears twice in Kelly's book, on page 135 and 251. In both instances, it is used as an oath. Here's the relevant excerpt on page 135?
"Double-Injun-blood-brothers-swear-to-die-promise?"
"Double Injun."
"It doesn't count unless you say the whole thing," he said.
"Saaaam."
"Okay, okay, okay. But say it, huh?"
"Double Injun blood brothers swear to die," I said. "Now leave me alone."
Kelly used it again on page 251:
She swore the deepest double-Injun-blood-brothers oath for me.I have not read Kelly's book, so I have no idea what the two characters in the exchange are talking about. The novel is set in 1899 and the oath was in use by then. The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate is getting a lot of buzz this year. There's a lot of people hoping it'll get one of the top prizes (the Newberry Medal).
Given that attention, I hope that teachers are taking the opportunity to talk with students about that word, "Injun." I wonder if Steele's schoolteachers used Holling C. Holling's Paddle-to-the-Sea? Published in 1941, it was awarded a Caldecott Honor Medal. In Holling's book, a toy Indian in a toy canoe is put into the water. It makes its way downriver, and ends up in Lake Superior, where a fisherman catches it (page 23):
'Best catch in weeks!" one man was saying. 'And that's not all---look! we're even netting red Injuns in canoes!
I've also come across the word "Injun" in The Little House Cookbook: Frontier Foods from Laura Ingalls Wilder's Classic Stories compiled by Barbara M. Walker, published in 1989. It includes a recipe for "Rye'N'Injun, a kind of bread. "Rye'N'Injun" appears several times in Farmer Boy, published in 1953. Walker says that bread is known today as Boston Brown Bread. On page 86, she writes
"Its history reaches back to the first New England colonists, whose only grains were the rye they brought from Europe and the corn they got from the Indians (hence "injun" for cornmeal).Was "Injun" a word for cornmeal? I don't know, and I'm not going to take time right now to find out... Staying on point with "Injun"...
It's in Elizabeth George Speare's Calico Captive, and Lois Lenski's Indian Captiv, The Story of Mary Jemison. I understand it being used in historical fiction. It was a phrase used in the past, but not today, and it'd be terrific if, when they come across it, teachers would point out that "Injun" is a derogatory word.
It's in Bobbsey Twins, Nancy Drew, and the Hardy Boys. You can find it in Lynne Reid Banks's The Key to the Indian. But, did Benjamin Franklin use the phrase, "Honest Injun," as suggested by Augusta Stevenson in her biography, Benjamin Franklin: Young Printer?
Another children's book author uses it... Joseph Bruchac. In his The Heart of a Chief, you'll find him pushing back on the use of it and other words. His protagonist, Chris, and his friends are at a football game. His friend is Anthony, or Tony, or Pizza. Here's the excerpt (p. 55):
People are going crazy on our side of the field. A bunch of kids are doing the tomahawk chop while others are patting their hands against their mouths to do phony war whoops.
The cheerleaders are doing cartwheels. They hold up their pom-poms and sing out together, "TONY, TONY, HE'S OUR MAN. IF HE CAN'T DO IT, NO ONE CAN!"
Just as I realize they are talking about Pizza--Anthony is his given name, which no one at Penacook ever uses--the big man in the New England Patriots jersey stands up, "Scalp 'em, Injun, scalp 'em!" he bellows. Other people take up his chant.
"SCALP 'EM, INJUN, SCALP 'EM"
I realize for the first time what it is like to be excited and depressed all at once. I look at my friends and see the same look on their faces that must be on mine. Should we laugh or cry?
In his book, Bruchac calls attention to a lot of words and to the mascot issue. For that reason alone, I encourage teachers and librarians to get and use his book, especially right now, in the wake of
Labels:
Honest Injun,
Injun,
Joseph Bruchac
Thursday, January 31, 2013
A Peek at American Indians in Children's Fiction Published from 1955-1965
Nancy Larrick's article, The All White World of Children's Book, was published in 1965. I wondered what I might find if I did a search in the Children's Literature Comprehensive Database, using "Indian" as the search term and limiting the search for fiction published from 1955 to 1965. What, I wondered, were her options for books about American Indians? She was, for those who don't know, looking particularly at depictions of African Americans and was very troubled by what she found. Hence the title of her article "all white."
I ran the search and got 337 titles. I am pasting the results below. As you scroll through the list, you'll see duplicates and you'll see books that obviously don't belong on the list (for example, The Elephant that Galumphed).
Some observations:
There aren't any authors on the list that I recognize as being Native.
I see that James Fenimore Cooper is on it several times. I'm thinking we can likely credit him with being responsible for a wide range of stereotyping. Good Indians, bad ones, ones who disappear into the mists of time...
Looks like there are several stories of whites who befriend Indians, and, stories of whites who are captured by Indians...
And how 'bout that Bread and Butter Indian by Anne Colver? Interesting title, don't you agree? Wondering what that one is about, I did a quick look-see at Google Books, learned that the illustrations are by Garth Williams! Here's the cover:
And here's the summary of the book:
Some books on the list make me shudder because they are over-the-top in how they present Native characters (borrowing Rudine Sims Bishop's words about early books about African Americans) as objects of ridicule. Let's take a look at a few of them.
Check out Syd Hoff's Little Chief, the lonely Indian boy with an upside-down feather who finds friends among a wagon load of white kids:
Little Chief was/is an early reader. I don't think its still being published. Thank goodness for that, but believe it or not, Benchley's Red Fox and his Canoe, illustrated by Arnold Lobel, is still being marketed and used as an early reader. Here's an illustration from Red Fox and his Canoe:
Another one still in publication is Good Hunting, Little Indian by Peggy Parrish. But wait! The title is now Good Hunting, Blue Sky! I'll have to see if I can find the older copy so I can compare text and illustrations. For now, here's the covers. The original publication was in 1962, illustrated by Leonard Weisgard. The one with a new title has new illustrations, by James Watts.
Here's a page from inside Good Hunting, Blue Sky:
I'll wrap this up for now and do more analytical work with the list. One thing I'll probably do for a more closely aligned comparison, is limit the search to the specific years of Larrick's study. She looked at books published in 1962, 1963, and 1964.
Before I close, though, I'm going to suggest that no child in your classroom or library gains anything useful by reading Little Chief or Good Hunting, Blue Sky. Please consider setting them aside.
Sources cited:
Bishop, Rudine Sims. (2012). "Reflections on the Development of African American Children's Literature," Journal of Children's Literature, 38(2), pp. 5-13.
Larrick, Nancy. "The All White World of Children's Books," Saturday Review, September 11, 1965, pp. 63-65+
Use your browser's save and print functions to save or print this report.
Use the Back button to return to your search results.Search was for: The word Indian (All Fields).
Singular and plural forms were searched.
Search restricted to books published between 1955 and 1965.
Only works of fiction were retrieved.
I ran the search and got 337 titles. I am pasting the results below. As you scroll through the list, you'll see duplicates and you'll see books that obviously don't belong on the list (for example, The Elephant that Galumphed).
Some observations:
There aren't any authors on the list that I recognize as being Native.
I see that James Fenimore Cooper is on it several times. I'm thinking we can likely credit him with being responsible for a wide range of stereotyping. Good Indians, bad ones, ones who disappear into the mists of time...
Looks like there are several stories of whites who befriend Indians, and, stories of whites who are captured by Indians...
And how 'bout that Bread and Butter Indian by Anne Colver? Interesting title, don't you agree? Wondering what that one is about, I did a quick look-see at Google Books, learned that the illustrations are by Garth Williams! Here's the cover:
And here's the summary of the book:
A little girl named Barbara befriends a hungry Indian, offering him the bread and butter. Later she is kidnaped by a strange Indian. The story describes how the "bread-and-butter" Indian comes to her rescue.What do you think? Is that Indian on the cover the hungry one? Or the strange one!
Some books on the list make me shudder because they are over-the-top in how they present Native characters (borrowing Rudine Sims Bishop's words about early books about African Americans) as objects of ridicule. Let's take a look at a few of them.
Check out Syd Hoff's Little Chief, the lonely Indian boy with an upside-down feather who finds friends among a wagon load of white kids:
Little Chief was/is an early reader. I don't think its still being published. Thank goodness for that, but believe it or not, Benchley's Red Fox and his Canoe, illustrated by Arnold Lobel, is still being marketed and used as an early reader. Here's an illustration from Red Fox and his Canoe:
Another one still in publication is Good Hunting, Little Indian by Peggy Parrish. But wait! The title is now Good Hunting, Blue Sky! I'll have to see if I can find the older copy so I can compare text and illustrations. For now, here's the covers. The original publication was in 1962, illustrated by Leonard Weisgard. The one with a new title has new illustrations, by James Watts.
Here's a page from inside Good Hunting, Blue Sky:
I'll wrap this up for now and do more analytical work with the list. One thing I'll probably do for a more closely aligned comparison, is limit the search to the specific years of Larrick's study. She looked at books published in 1962, 1963, and 1964.
Before I close, though, I'm going to suggest that no child in your classroom or library gains anything useful by reading Little Chief or Good Hunting, Blue Sky. Please consider setting them aside.
Sources cited:
Bishop, Rudine Sims. (2012). "Reflections on the Development of African American Children's Literature," Journal of Children's Literature, 38(2), pp. 5-13.
Larrick, Nancy. "The All White World of Children's Books," Saturday Review, September 11, 1965, pp. 63-65+
________________________________________________
CLCD Search
Use the Back button to return to your search results.Search was for: The word Indian (All Fields).
Singular and plural forms were searched.
Search restricted to books published between 1955 and 1965.
Only works of fiction were retrieved.
| AUTHOR | TITLE | YEAR | PUBLISHER | ISBN | ANNOTATIONS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Harrington, M. R. | The Indians of New Jersey; Dickon among the Lenapes, | 1963 | Rutgers University Press | First ed. published in 1938 under title: Dickon among the Lenape Indians.; | |
| Cooper, James Fenimore | The deerslayer : or, The first war-path | 1962 | Collier Books | ||
| Stoutenburg, Adrien. | The mud ponies : based on a Pawnee Indian myth | 1963 | Coward-McCann | ||
| Kendall, Lace. | The mud ponies : based on a pawnee Indian myth | 1963 | Coward-McCann | ||
| Ward, Nanda Weedon. | The elephant that ga-lumphed, | 1959 | Ariel Books. | After a series of misadventures a noisy baby Indian elephant learns to walk quietly. Grades 1-3.; | |
| Adams, Audrey | Karankawa boy. | 1965 | Naylor Co. | ||
| Adams, Audrey. | Karankawa boy. | 1965 | Naylor | ||
| Allen, T. D. | Tall as great standing rock. | 1963 | Westminster Press | ||
| Allen, Terry. | Tall as great standing rock | 1963 | Westminster | ||
| Cooper, James Fenimore | The last of the Mohicans : a narrative of 1757 | 1956 | Scribner | While guiding a small party of English settlers to the protection of a fort during the French and Indian War, Hawkeye, a frontier scout, and his two Indian friends, the remaining braves of the Mohican tribe, struggle against the evils of Uncas who desires a white maiden for his wife.; | |
| Cooper, James Fenimore. | The deerslayer, or, The first warpath | 1963 | New American Library | ||
| Cooper, James Fenimore | The last of the Mohicans | 1957 | Washington Square Press | ||
| Annixter, Jane. | Buffalo chief | 1958 | Holiday | ||
| Annixter, Jane. | Buffalo chief | 1958 | Holiday | ||
| Annixter, Jane. | Buffalo chief | 1958 | Holiday | ||
| Annixter, Jane. | Buffalo chief | 1958 | Holiday | ||
| Annixter, Jane. | Buffalo chief | 1963 | E. M. Hale | ||
| Annixter, Jane. | Windigo | 1963 | Holiday House | ||
| Armer, Laura (Adams) | Waterless mountain | 1963 | D. McKay Co. | ||
| Armer, Laura Adams. | Waterless mountain | 1959 | David McKay | ||
| Armer, Laura Adams. | Waterless mountain | 1959 | McKay | ||
| Arnold, Elliott. | White Falcon | 1958 | Knopf | ||
| Arntson, Herbert E. | Two guns in old Oregon | 1964 | Watts, F. | ||
| Whipple, Mary Anne | The first Californians | 1962 | Shinozaki Shorin | Title on cover: The first Californian.; | |
| Overholser, Wayne D. | The Meeker Massacre, | 1964 | Cowles | 0402141016 ; 9780402141013 | Two boys, one Indian and one white, become involved in the growing conflict between an inflexible Indian agent and a Ute tribe.; |
| Baker, Betty. | Killer-of-death | 1963 | Harper & Row | ||
| Baker, Betty. | Killer-of-Death. | 1963 | Harper & Row | ||
| Baker, Betty. | Little Runner of the longhouse | 1962 | Harper & Row | 0005091829 ; 9780005091821 | |
| Baker, Betty. | Little Runner of the longhouse. | 1962 | Harper | 0060203412 (lib. bdg.) ; 9780060203412 | A young Indian boy, too young to join the older boys in part of the New Year celebration, celebrates his own way with his family.; Reading Counts-Scholastic; Interest Level K-2; Reading Level 2; Title Point Value 2; Lexile Measure 430; 0430; 00 01 02; 020; 002; |
| Baker, Betty. | Little Runner of the longhouse. | 1962 | Harper | ||
| Baker, Betty | Walk the world's rim. | 1965 | Harper & Row | 0060203811 (lib. bdg.) ; 9780060203818 | Bibliog; As they journey to Mexico, Chakoh, a young Indian boy, and Esteban, a Spanish Negro slave, become friends and teach each other their ways; |
| Baker, Betty. | Walk the world's rim | 1965 | Harper & Row | 0064400263 ; 9780064400268 | Bibliography: p. [169]; |
| Balch, Glenn | Little Hawk and the free horses. | 1957 | Crowell | ||
| Balch, Glenn | Spotted horse. | 1961 | Crowell | ||
| Baldwin, Clara. | Little Tuck. | 1959 | Doubleday | An undersized frontier lad, anxious to grow up and share the chores and fun of his big brothers, catches his own turkey, helps shear sheep, finds honey, befriends an Indian, and kills a bobcat.; | |
| Baldwin, Clara. | Little Tuck. | 1959 | Doubleday | An undersized frontier lad, anxious to grow up and share the chores and fun of his big brothers, catches his own turkey, helps shear sheep, finds honey, befriends an Indian, and kills a bobcat.; | |
| Ball, Zachary | Joe Panther | 1961 | E. M. Hale | In an endeavor to earn money for school, an industrious Seminole becomes a deck hand on a tourist boat and accidently is involved in a smuggling ring.; | |
| Bannon, Laura. | Hop-High, the goat. | 1960 | Bobbs-Merrill | A Navajo Indian family comes back from town with a new stove and a naughty, spoiled goat that causes many troubles before he becomes useful as leader of the flock of sheep.; | |
| Bannon, Laura. | Hop-High, the goat. | 1960 | Bobbs-Merrill | A Navajo Indian family comes back from town with a new stove and a naughty, spoiled goat that causes many troubles before he becomes useful as leader of the flock of sheep.; | |
| Bealer, Alex W. | Picture-skin story | 1957 | Holiday | ||
| Beatty, Patricia | Indian canoe-maker | 1960 | Caxton Printers | ||
| Beckhard, Arthur J. | Black Hawk. | 1957 | J. Messner | Includes bibliography.; A biography of Black Hawk, the Sauk Indian who became chief of his tribe in 1788 and whose refusal to yield his tribal lands to the white man resulted in the Black Hawk War.; | |
| Beckhard, Arthur J. | Black Hawk. | 1957 | J. Messner | Includes bibliography.; A biography of Black Hawk, the Sauk Indian who became chief of his tribe in 1788 and whose refusal to yield his tribal lands to the white man resulted in the Black Hawk War.; | |
| Beebe, B. F. | Coyote, come home. | 1963 | D. McKay Co. | A coyote, orphaned as a pup, is rescued and befriended by an old Apache seeking companionship, and provides the aged Indian with loyalty and affection which protects them both.; | |
| Beebe, Burdetta Faye. | Chestnut cub | 1963 | McKay | ||
| Benchley, Nathaniel. | Red fox and his canoe / (paper) | 1964 | Harper & Row | 0064440753 ; 9780064440752 | A young Indian boy receives a larger canoe along with some unforseen complications.; Accelerated Reader; Interest Level Lower Grade; Book Level 2.2; Accelerated Reader Points 0.5; Accelerated Vocabulary, Recorded Voice Quizzes; 00 01 02 03; 022; 000; Lexile, MetaMetrics, Inc.; Lexile Measure 260; 0260; Reading Counts-Scholastic; Interest Level K-2; Reading Level 3; Title Point Value 2; Lexile Measure 260; 0260; 00 01 02; 030; 002; |
| Benchley, Nathaniel. | Red fox and his canoe | 1964 | Harper & Row | 0060204761 ; 9780060204761 | A young Indian boy receives a larger canoe along with some unforeseen complications.; |
| Benchley, Nathaniel | Red fox and his canoe. | 1964 | Harper & Row | A young Indian boy receives a larger canoe along with some unforseen complications.; | |
| Benchley, Nathaniel | Red fox and his canoe. | 1964 | Harper & Row | A young Indian boy receives a larger canoe along with some unforseen complications.; | |
| Benchley, Nathaniel | Red fox and his canoe | 1964 | Scholastic Book Services | A young Indian boy receives a larger canoe along with some unforseen complications.; | |
| Berry, Erick. | Valiant captive ... | 1962 | Chilton Co. | ||
| Berry, Erick | Valiant captive; a story of Margaret Eames, captured in 1676 by the Indians from the New Settlement, which later became Framingham, Massachusetts | 1963 | Chilton | ||
| Booker, Jim. | Trail to Oklahoma | 1959 | Broadman Press | ||
| Borland, Hal Glen | When the legends die. (paper) | 1963 | Lippincott | 0553113380 ; 9780553113389 | |
| Borland, Hal Glen. | When the legends die | 1963 | Lippincott | 039700303X: ; 9780397003037 | |
| Borland, Hal, Glen | When the legends die | 1963 | Lippincott | 0553257382 (pbk.) ; 0881030570 (Econo-clad) ; 9780553257380 ; 9780881030570 | Cover: A Bantam starfire book.; Accelerated Reader; Interest Level Upper Grade; Book Level 5.2; Accelerated Reader Points 13; Accelerated Vocabulary, Literacy Skills; 09 10 11 12; 052; 013; Lexile, MetaMetrics, Inc.; Lexile Measure 850; 0850; Reading Counts-Scholastic; Interest Level 6-8; Reading Level 6; Title Point Value 20; Lexile Measure 850; 0850; 06 07 08; 060; 020; |
| Borland, Hal | When the legends die | 1963 | Bantam Books | ||
| Borland, Hal | When the legends die. | 1963 | Lippincott | ||
| Borland, Hal | When the legends die. | 1963 | Lippincott | An orphaned Ute Indian boy wins stardom on the rodeo circuit, but becomes disillusioned by the new ways and searches for his identity in the old ways of his ancestors.; | |
| Borland, Hal | When the legends die | 1964 | Bantam Books | 0553257382 (pbk.) ; 0553226428 (pbk.) ; 9780553257380 ; 9780553226423 | "A Bantam Starfire book."; An orphaned Ute Indian boy wins stardom on the rodeo circuit, but becomes disillusioned by the new ways and searches for his identity in the old ways of his ancestors.; Accelerated Reader; Interest Level Upper Grade; Book Level 5.2; Accelerated Reader Points 13; Accelerated Vocabulary, Literacy Skills; 09 10 11 12; 052; 013; Lexile, MetaMetrics, Inc.; Lexile Measure 850; 0850; Reading Counts-Scholastic; Interest Level 6-8; Reading Level 6; Title Point Value 20; Lexile Measure 850; 0850; 06 07 08; 060; 020; |
| Borland, Hal | When the legends die | 1964 | Bantam Books | 0812416945 (Cover Craft) ; 0553257382 (pbk.) ; 0881030570 (Econo-clad) ; 0881030570 (Econoclad) ; 9780812416947 ; 9780553257380 ; 9780881030570 ; 9780881030570 | Cover: A Bantam starfire book.; Accelerated Reader; Interest Level Upper Grade; Book Level 5.2; Accelerated Reader Points 13; Accelerated Vocabulary, Literacy Skills; 09 10 11 12; 052; 013; Lexile, MetaMetrics, Inc.; Lexile Measure 850; 0850; Reading Counts-Scholastic; Interest Level 6-8; Reading Level 6; Title Point Value 20; Lexile Measure 850; 0850; 06 07 08; 060; 020; |
| Borland, Hal | When the legends die | 1965 | Bantam Books | An orphaned Ute Indian boy wins stardom on the rodeo circuit, but becomes disillusioned by the new ways and searches for his identity in the old ways of his ancestors.; | |
| Bowers, Gwendolyn. | Journey for Jemima. | 1960 | Walck, H.Z. | ||
| Breedlove, Caroline H. | Billy Black Lamb | 1958 | U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs | "Developed in the Workshop in Navajo Education, Arizona State College, Flagstaff, Arizona, May 26-June 6, 1958."; | |
| Brick, John. | Captive of the Senecas. | 1964 | Duell | ||
| Brick, John. | Captives of the Senecas. | 1964 | Duell, Sloan and Pearce | ||
| Brick, John. | Captives of the Senecas. | 1964 | Duell | ||
| Brick, John. | Eagle of Niagara; the story of David Harper and his Indian captivity. | 1955 | Doubleday | ||
| Brick, John. | Tomahawk trail. | 1962 | Duell | ||
| Buff, Mary (Marsh) | Dancing Cloud : the Navajo boy | 1957 | Viking | ||
| Buff, Mary (Marsh) | Dancing Cloud, the Navajo boy. | 1957 | Viking Press | ||
| Buff, Mary | Dancing Cloud, the Navajo boy. | 1957 | Viking Press | ||
| Buff, Mary. | Hah-Nee of the Cliff Dwellers [by] Mary and Conrad Buff. | 1956 | Houghton Mifflin | ||
| Bulla, Clyde Robert. | Indian Hill | 1963 | Crowell | ||
| Bulla, Clyde Robert. | John Billington, friend of Squanto. | 1956 | Crowell | A young Pilgrim boy is always causing trouble for Plymouth Colony until one day his mischief results in more friendly relations with the Indians.; | |
| Bulla, Clyde Robert. | John Billington, friend of Squanto. | 1956 | Crowell | A young Pilgrim boy is always causing trouble for Plymouth Colony until one day his mischief results in more friendly relations with the Indians.; | |
| Bulla, Clyde Robert. | John Billington, friend of Squanto | 1956 | Crowell | A young Pilgrim boy is always causing trouble for Plymouth Colony until one day his mischief results in more friendly relations with the Indians.; | |
| Butterfield, Marguerite Antoinette | Little Wind | 1963 | Lyons & Carnahan | ||
| Butterfield, Marguerite Antoinette | Morning Star, | 1963 | Lyons & Carnahan | ||
| Carroll, Ruth | Tough Enough's Indians, | 1960 | H. Z. Walck | While Pa is off fighting a forest fire, Beanie and his brothers and sisters go off to hunt fire-wood, find refuge from the fire under a waterfall, and seek help from a Cherokee Indian family.; | |
| Carroll, Ruth | Tough Enough's Indians, | 1960 | H. Z. Walck | While Pa is off fighting a forest fire, Beanie and his brothers and sisters go off to hunt fire-wood, find refuge from the fire under a waterfall, and seek help from a Cherokee Indian family.; | |
| Carse, Robert | Friends of the wolf; a novel. | 1961 | Putnam | ||
| Chandler, Edna Walker. | Charley Brave. | 1962 | A. Whitman | ||
| Chandler, Edna Walker. | Cowboy Sam and the Indians | 1962 | Beckley-Cardy | ||
| Chandler, Edna Walker. | Cowboy Sam and the Indians | 1962 | Benefic Press | ||
| Chandler, Edna Walker. | Cowboy Sam and the Indians | 1962 | Benefic Press | ||
| Christensen, Gardell Dano. | Buffalo Horse | 1961 | Nelson | ||
| Christensen, Gardell Dano. | Buffalo kill | 1959 | Nelson | ||
| Christie, Caroline. | Silver Heels : a story of Blackfeet Indians at Glacier National Park | 1958 | Winston | ||
| Clark, Ann (Nolan). | Little Indian basket maker | 1957 | Melmont Pubs. | ||
| Clark, Ann Nolan | Little Indian pottery | 1955 | Melmont | ||
| Clark, Ann Nolan. | Medicine man's daughter | 1963 | Farrar, Straus | ||
| Clark, Electa. | Osceola, young Seminole Indian. | 1965 | Bobbs-Merrill | Bibliography: p. 198.; | |
| Clymer, Eleanor | Chipmunk in the forest | 1965 | Atheneum Pubs. | ||
| Coatsworth, Elizabeth, | Indian encounters : an anthology of stories and poem/ | 1960 | Macmillan, | ||
| Coatsworth, Elizabeth. | Indian encounters : an anthology of stories and poems | 1960 | Macmillan | ||
| Colver, Anne. | Bread-and-butter Indian | 1964 | Holt | ||
| Conrader, Constance. | Blue wampum. | 1958 | Duell, Sloan and Pearce | ||
| Cooper, James Feinmore. | The last of the Mohicans | 1964 | Parents' Magazine | ||
| Culp, John H. | The bright feathers. | 1965 | Holt, Rinehart and Winston | ||
| Nevin, Evelyn C. | The river spirit and the mountain demons | 1965 | Van Nostrand | ||
| Davis, Russell G. | Chief Joseph, war chief of the Nez Percâe | 1962 | McGraw-Hill | ||
| De Leeuw, Cateua | Fear in the forest | 1960 | T. Nelson | A young orphan boy, whose father was killed by marauding Indians, manages to overcome his morbid fear of the forest when he joins a pack-horse train which travels through the dense forests of Ohio. ; | |
| Dick, Trella Lamson. | Bridger's boy | 1965 | Follett | ||
| Dolch, Edward W. | Once there was a dog | 1962 | DLM Teaching Resources | Short tales about dogs from the folklore of Poland, Africa, Korea, Yucatan, China, and the American Indian.; | |
| Dolch, Edward W. | Once there was a dog, | 1962 | Garrard Pub. Co. | Short tales about dogs from the folklore of Poland, Africa, Korea, Yucatan, China, and the American Indian.; | |
| Dolch, Edward W. | Stories from Alaska | 1961 | DLM Teaching Resources | Folk tales representative of the northernmost state of the United States, from its two native peoples, the Indians and the Eskimos.; | |
| Downey, Fairfax Davis | General Crook: Indian fighter. | 1957 | Westminster Press | ||
| DuBois, Theodora. | Tiger burning bright. | 1964 | Ariel Bks. | ||
| Dwight, Allan. | Guns at Quebec. | 1962 | Macmillan | ||
| Simms, William Gilmore | The Yemassee; a romance of Carolina. | 1964 | Twayne Publishers | ||
| Edmonds, Walter Dumaux. | Wilderness clearing | 1963 | Dodd | In a wilderness clearing in Western New York State when Indian attack threatened and the British attack was expected, sixteen year old Dick Mount proved to Maggie Gordon that he could meet peril.; | |
| Emmons, Della Gould. | Leschi of the Nisquallies. | 1965 | T. S. Denison | ||
| Wood, Kerry | The great chief, Maskepetoon : warrior of the Crees | 1959 | Canadiana Co. Ltd. | ||
| Evans, Katherine | One good deed deserves another. | 1964 | A. Whitman | A story of a robber who plans to repay a good deed with evil, but who is tricked by a small boy, based on a theme that is common in animal tales told by Indians of the Southwest and Mexico.; | |
| Evans, Katherine | One good deed deserves another. | 1964 | A. Whitman | A story of a robber who plans to repay a good deed with evil, but who is tricked by a small boy, based on a theme that is common in animal tales told by Indians of the Southwest and Mexico.; | |
| Evans, Katherine | One good deed deserves another. | 1964 | A. Whitman | A story of a robber who plans to repay a good deed with evil, but who is tricked by a small boy, based on a theme that is common in animal tales told by Indians of the Southwest and Mexico.; | |
| Fall, Thomas | Edge of manhood | 1964 | Dial Press | ||
| Fall, Thomas. | Edge of manhood | 1964 | Dial Press | ||
| Fernald, Helen Clark. | The shadow of the Crooked Tree. | 1965 | McKay | ||
| Fiedler, Arkady | Orinoko. | 1961 | Iskry | ||
| Firethunder, Billy. | Mother Meadowlark and Brother Snake : an Indian legend | 1963 | Holt | ||
| Fisher, Clay. | Valley of the Bear : a novel of the North Plains Sioux | 1964 | Houghton | ||
| Foltz, Mary Jane. | Awani | 1964 | Morrow | ||
| Franklin, George Cory. | Indian uprising | 1962 | Houghton | ||
| Franklin, George Cory. | Indian uprising | 1962 | Houghton | ||
| Franklin, George Cory | Pioneer horse | 1960 | Houghton | ||
| Franklin, George Cory | Pioneer horse | 1960 | Houghton | ||
| Friskey, Margaret Richards | Indian Two Feet and his horse | 1959 | Children's | LOCATED IN PICTURE BOOK SECTION; | |
| Friskey, Margaret | Indian Two Feet and his horse | 1959 | Childrens Press | 0516035010 ; 0590424297 (Scholastic : pbk.) ; 9780516035017 ; 9780590424295 | |
| Furman, A. L. | Young readers nature stories. | 1959 | Lantern Press | Nine short stories about animals, like coyotes and raccoons, or men in encounters with them, as an Indian boy in a buffalo hunt, a ranch boy seeking to separate the ranch's horses from a band of wild horses, or a boy who cared for an injured sea gull.; | |
| Gage, Wilson. | Secret of the Indian mound | 1958 | World Pub. | ||
| Garst, Shannon | James Bowie and his famous knife. | 1955 | J. Messner | A biography of a famous Indian fighter and reputed inventor of the defensive Bowie knife, from his childhood on the Louisiana bayou to his death defending the Alamo.; | |
| Garst, Shannon | John Jewitt's adventure. | 1955 | Houghton Mifflin | Based on the journal of John Jewitt, published in 1807.; | |
| Garst, Shannon | John Jewitt's adventure. | 1955 | Houghton Mifflin | Based on the journal of John Jewitt, published in 1807.; | |
| Garst, Shannon | Red eagle | 1959 | Hasting House | ||
| Garst, Shannon. | Red Eagle | 1959 | Hastings House | ||
| Gendron, Val. | Behind the Zuni masks | 1958 | Longmans | ||
| George, Jean Craighead. | La tierra que habla / (paper) | 1959 | Ediciones, Alfaguara | 084410728X ; 9780844107288 | |
| Giles, Janice Holt. | Johnny Osage / by Janice Holt Giles. -- | 1960 | Houghton Mifflin | 0395077354 : ; 9780395077351 | |
| Giles, Janice Holt. | Johnny Osage / by Janice Holt Giles. | 1960 | Houghton Mifflin | ||
| Giles, Janice Holt. | Johnny Osage | 1960 | Houghton | ||
| Gipson, Fred | Savage Sam | 1962 | Harper & Row Publishers | The son of Old Yeller helps his owners escape from the Apaches in East Texas during the 1870's; | |
| Gipson, Fred. | Savage Sam. | 1963 | Pocket Books | ||
| Grant, Bruce | Pancho : a dog of the plains | 1958 | World Pub | ||
| Gringhuis, Dirk. | Young voyageur | 1955 | McGraw | ||
| Haines, Francis. | Red Eagle and the Absaroka. | 1960 | Caxton Printers | ||
| Hall, Gordon Langley. | Peter Jumping Horse at the stampede | 1961 | Holt | ||
| Hall, Gordon Langley. | Peter Jumping Horse at the stampede | 1961 | Holt | ||
| Hall, Gordon Langley. | Peter Jumping Horse | 1961 | Holt | ||
| Harris, Christie. | West with the White Chiefs | 1965 | Atheneum Pubs | ||
| Hayes, John F. | Buckskin colonist | 1960 | Copp Clark | ||
| Hays, Wilma Pitchford. | Easter fires | 1959 | Coward-McCann | 069830067X ; 9780698300675 | A fictional account of the first Indian tribes to hear and accept Christianity and of the great fires they lit to celebrate Easter.; |
| Hays, Wilma Pitchford. | Easter fires | 1959 | Coward-McCann. | ||
| Hays, Wilma Pitchford | Easter fires | 1959 | Coward-McCann | ||
| Hazletine, Alice Isabel | Red man, white man; legends, tales and true accounts of the American Indians, | 1957 | Lothrop, Lee & Shepard | ||
| Heiderstadt, Dorothy. | Marie Tanglehair | 1965 | McKay | ||
| Heiderstadt, Dorothy. | Marie Tanglehair | 1965 | McKay | ||
| Heinzman, George. | Only the earth and the mountains, a novel of the Cheyenne Nationa. -- | 1964 | Macmillan | ||
| Henderson, Le Grand | How baseball began in Brooklyn | 1958 | Abingdon | A humorous story giving one version "of how baseball was started. It all happened when Pieter Denbooms and his nine brothers met up with nine Canarsie Indians." McClurg. Book News.; | |
| Henty, G. A. | With Wolfe in Canada. | 1961 | Walker | When young James Walsham leaves England unexpectedly in 1755 and finds himself in America fighting in the French and Indian War, he discovers that he must still contend with the treachery of his old rival.; | |
| Hill, Monica | Rin Tin Tin and the lost Indian | 1956 | Simon and Schuster | ||
| Hoff, Syd. | Little Chief | 1961 | Harper | 0004292669 ; 9780004292663 | An Indian boy's kindness encourages a group of frontiersmen to settle in the same green valley as the Indians.; |
| Hoff, Syd | Little Chief, | 1961 | Harper | An Indian boy's kindness encourages a group of frontiersmen to settle in the same green valley as the Indians.; | |
| Hoffine, Lyla. | Jennie's Mandan bowl | 1960 | McKay | ||
| Hood, Flora Mae. | Something for the medicine man. | 1962 | Melmont Publishers | ||
| Hood, Flora Mae. | Something for the medicine man | 1962 | Melmont Pubs. | ||
| Howells, Anne Molloy | Captain Waymouth's Indians. | 1956 | Hastings House | Published in 1968 under title: Five kidnapped Indians.; | |
| Hurley, William. | Dan Frontier goes exploring. | 1963 | Benefic Press | Dan Frontier helps Ranger Jack Finley explore the wooded land inhabited by Indians near the Ohio River.; | |
| Hurley, William. | Dan Frontier goes exploring. | 1963 | Benefic Press | Dan Frontier helps Ranger Jack Finley explore the wooded land inhabited by Indians near the Ohio River.; | |
| Hurley, William. | Dan Frontier scouts with the Army. | 1962 | Benefic Press | Dan Frontier becomes an army scout when Indians threaten to attack Fort Detroit.; | |
| Hurley, William. | Dan Frontier scouts with the Army. | 1962 | Benefic Press | Dan Frontier becomes an army scout when Indians threaten to attack Fort Detroit.; | |
| Icaza, Jorge | Huasipungo. The villagers, a novel. | 1964 | Southern Illinois University Press | ||
| Icaza, Jorge | Huasipungo | 1960 | Editorial Losada | ||
| Furman, A. L. | Young readers nature stories. | 1959 | Lantern Press | Nine short stories about animals, like coyotes and raccoons, or men in encounters with them, as an Indian boy in a buffalo hunt, a ranch boy seeking to separate the ranch's horses from a band of wild horses, or a boy who cared for an injured sea gull.; | |
| Saurel, Louis. | Le Hardouin chez les Hurons | 1960 | âEditions Fleurus | Pour enfants.; | |
| Jackson, Helen Hunt | Ramona, a story. | 1959 | Printed for the members of the Limited Editions Club at the Plantin Press | ||
| James, Harry Clebourne | Hopi Indian butterfly dance | 1959 | Melmont Pubs. | ||
| Karney, Beulah. | The listening one. | 1962 | Day | ||
| Keith, Harold | Komantcia. -- | 1965 | Crowell | ||
| Keith, Harold | Komantcia. -- | 1965 | Crowell | ||
| Keith, Harold | Komantcia. -- | 1965 | Crowell | ||
| Keith, Harold | Komantcia | 1965 | Crowell | ||
| Keith, Harold | Komantcia. | 1965 | Crowell | ||
| Keith, Harold | Komantcia | 1965 | Thomas Y. Crowell | Captured by Comanches at fifteen, a sensitive Spaniard learns to accept their way of life and becomes a leader among them.; | |
| Kjelgaard, Jim | Wolf Brother | 1957 | Holiday House | An Apache brave who has been educated among the white men returns to his tribe, now confined to the reservation, and is forced, by an unfortunate meeting with an American Army sergeant, to take refuge with an infamous renegade band.; | |
| Kjelgaard, Jim | Wolf Brother. | 1957 | Holiday House | An Apache brave who has been educated among the white men returns to his tribe, now confined to the reservation, and is forced, by an unfortunate meeting with an American Army sergeant, to take refuge with an infamous renegade band.; | |
| Kjelgaard, Jim | Wolf Brother | 1962 | E. M. Hale | An Apache brave who has been educated among the white men returns to his tribe, now confined to the reservation, and is forced, by an unfortunate meeting with an American Army sergeant, to take refuge with an infamous renegade band.; | |
| Kubaésta, Vojtéech | The Day of the bison hunt. | 1962 | Bancroft & Co. | Caption title.; Ill. signed: V. Kubasta.; Lower cover is a double-page which opens into a pop-up color illustration of an Indian village with tepees, a totem, and men in ceremonial costumes.; | |
| La Farge, Oliver | Laughing Boy | 1957 | Houghton Mifflin | 00812416031 (Covercraft) ; 9780081241608 | |
| Lampman, Evelyn (Sibley) | Navaho sister | 1956 | Doubleday | ||
| Lane, Neola Tracy. | Secret of the silver spoons. | 1963 | Bobbs-Merrill | Paul tries to establish his grandmother's true identity by locating the silver spoons she remembers hiding when she was a little girl.; | |
| Lauritzen, Elizabeth M. | Shush'ma, | 1964 | Caxton Printers | Bibliography: p. 188.; The life and habits of a bear reflect her sensitivity to the loss of peace and harmony on the land that is home for her and the Navajo. Based on documented information.; | |
| Hoffmann, Eleanor | The charmstone | 1964 | McNally and Loftin | Shuku, son of Chief Islay of Helo, fights the plots of his wicked stepmother, Ojai, and her equally wicked son, Mogi.; | |
| Leckie, Robert | Danger at Mormon Crossing | 1959 | Simon and Schuster | While on a camping and hunting trip in the Idaho mountains, Sandy Steele and his friends become involved in a mystery concerning their Indian guide.; | |
| Lenski, Lois | Little Sioux girl, | 1958 | Lippincott | ||
| Lomask, Milton. | Cross among the tomahawks | 1961 | Douleday | ||
| Longstreet, Stephen. | War in the golden weather | 1965 | Doubleday | ||
| James, Harry Clebourne | A day in Oraibi, a Hopi Indian village | 1959 | Melmont Pubs. | ||
| Stinetorf, Louise A. | A charm for Paco's mother | 1965 | Day | ||
| James, Harry Clebourne | A day with Honau, a Hopi Indian boy. | 1957 | Melmont Publishers | ||
| MacLeod, Robert. | The medicine bull. | 1963 | Day | ||
| Marriott, Alice Lee. | The black stone knife. Illustrated by Harvey Weiss. | 1957 | Crowell | ||
| Marriott, Alice Lee | Black stone knife | 1957 | Crowell | ||
| Marriott, Alice Lee | Black stone knife | 1957 | Crowell | ||
| Marriott, Alice Lee | Indian Annie : Kiowa captive. | 1965 | McKay | ||
| Marriott, Alice Lee | Indian Annie, Kiowa captive. | 1965 | McKay | ||
| Marriott, Alice Lee | Indian Annie: Kiowa captive | 1965 | McKay | ||
| McGaw, Jessie Brewer. | Little Elk hunts buffalo : as Little Elk tells it in Indian picture writing | 1961 | T. Nelson | ||
| McGiffin, Lee | Pony soldier. | 1961 | Dutton | ||
| McNamee, James. | My Uncle Joe | 1963 | Viking | ||
| Molloy, Anne Stearns Baker | Captain Waymouth's Indians. | 1956 | Hastings House | Published in 1968 under title: Five kidnapped Indians.; | |
| Montgomery, Rutherford George | The capture of West Wind. -- | 1962 | Duell, Sloan and Pearce | ||
| O'Dell, Scott | Island of the blue dolphins [sound recording] | 1960 | Recorded Books | 1556904673 ; 9781556904677 | Unabridged.; Narrated by Christina Moore; Tells the true story of an American Indian girl who lived alone on an island for eighteen years.; |
| O'Dell, Scott. | Island of the blue dolphins [sound recording] | 1960 | Recorded Books | Unabridged.; Tells the true story of an American Indian girl who lived alone on an island for eighteen years.; | |
| O'Dell, Scott | La Isla de los Delfines Azules | 1964 | Noguer | 8427931085 (pbk.) ; 9788427931084 | Translation of: Island of the Blue Dolphins.; Left alone on a beautiful but isolated island off the coast of California, a young Indian girl spends eighteen years, not only merely surviving through her enormous courage and self-reliance, but also finding a measure of happiness in her solitary life.; Accelerated Reader; Interest Level Middle Grade; Book Level 5.4; Accelerated Reader Points 6; Accelerated Vocabulary, Literacy Skills; 04 05 06 07 08; 054; 006; Lexile, MetaMetrics, Inc.; Lexile Measure 1090; 1090; |
| O'Dell, Scott | La Isla de los Delfines Azules | 1964 | Noguer | 8427931085 ; 9788427931084 | Translation of: Island of the Blue Dolphins.; Left alone on a beautiful but isolated island off the coast of California, a young Indian girl spends eighteen years, not only merely surviving through her enormous courage and self-reliance, but also finding a measure of happiness in her solitary life.; Accelerated Reader; Interest Level Middle Grade; Book Level 5.4; Accelerated Reader Points 6; Accelerated Vocabulary, Literacy Skills; 04 05 06 07 08; 054; 006; Lexile, MetaMetrics, Inc.; Lexile Measure 1090; 1090; |
| O'Dell, Scott | Island of the Blue Dolphins. | 1960 | Dell | ||
| O'Dell, Scott | Island of the Blue Dolphins. | 1960 | Houghton Mifflin | 0395069629 ; 9780395069622 | Records the courage and self-reliance of an Indian girl who lived alone for eighteen years on an isolated island off the California coast when her tribe emigrated and she was left behind.; Reading Counts-Scholastic; Interest Level 6-8; Reading Level 6; Title Point Value 12; Lexile Measure 1000; 1000; 06 07 08; 060; 012; |
| O'Dell, Scott | Island of the Blue Dolphins. | 1960 | Houghton Mifflin | ||
| O'Dell, Scott | Island of the Blue Dolphins. | 1960 | Houghton Mifflin | ||
| Nicholson, John D. | The white buffalo, | 1965 | Platt & Munk | ||
| Rhoads, Dorothy. | The corn grows ripe | 1956 | Viking | Tigre, a twelve-year-old Mayan boy living in a modern-day village in Yucatâan, must learn to be a man when his father is injured.; | |
| Conrad, Joseph | The nigger of the "Narcissus" | 1965 | Printed by the Ward Ritchie Press for the members of the Limited Editions Club | Limited ed. of 1,500 copies, signed by the artist.; Issued in slipcase.; Newman & Wiche. Great and good books,; 372; Limited Editions Club. Bibliography of the fine books published by the Limited Editions Club, 1929-1985,; no. 372; | |
| Allsopp, Joy. | The tale of Teddy the toucan : a story for children | 1960 | Govt. Information Services | "This story is one of a series of stories based on some of the legends of the Amerindian tribes of British Guiana."; | |
| Parish, Peggy. | Good hunting, Little Indian | 1962 | Young Scott Bks. | ||
| Patrick, Pearl Haley | O'po of the Omaha. Illustrated by Dan Jacobson. | 1957 | Caxton Printers | ||
| Provan, Eldoris Angel. | Drummer for the Americans. | 1965 | Chilton Bks. | ||
| Provan, Eldoris Angel. | Drummer for the Americans. | 1965 | Chilton Books | ||
| Radau, Hanns. | Illampu : adventure in the Andes | 1961 | Abelard-Schuman | ||
| Radau, Hanns. | Illampu : adventure in the Andes | 1961 | Abelard-Schuman | ||
| Rainbow, Elizabeth. | Concha and the silver star | 1965 | Duell | ||
| Ramâirez, Pablo. | Wa O'Ka, | 1961 | Bobbs-Merrill | A young Indian brave accomplishes three seemingly impossible tasks to win the chief's daughter for his bride.; | |
| Ranney, Agnes V. | Flash of Phantom Canyon. | 1963 | Criterion Bks | ||
| Ray, Ophelia. | Daughter of Tejas. | 1965 | New York Graphic Society Pubs. | ||
| Ray, Ophelia. | Daughter of the Tejas. | 1965 | New York Graphic Societ Pubs. | ||
| Reilly, Robert T. | Massacre at Ash Hollow | 1960 | Bruce Pub. Co. | ||
| Ressler, Theodore Whitson. | Treasury of American Indian tales | 1957 | Association | ||
| Richter, Conrad. | The light in the forest. | 1963 | Bantam Books | ||
| Roberts, Helen M. | Mission tales, | 1963 | Pacific Books | ||
| Roberts, Kenneth Lewis | Northwest passage | 1961 | Doubleday | ||
| Roberts, Kenneth Lewis | Northwest passage | 1963 | Fawcett Crest/Ballantine, | 0449213838 (pbk.) ; 9780449213834 | Saga of French and Indian war heroics in which Major Robert Rogers is the leader of the Rogers' Rangers.; Lexile, MetaMetrics, Inc.; Lexile Measure 1010; 1010; |
| Robinson, Barbara. | Across from Indian Shore | 1962 | Lothrop | ||
| Robinson, Barbara. | Trace through the forest. | 1965 | Lothrop | ||
| Rowland, Florence Wightman. | Pasquala of Santa Ynez Mission | 1961 | Walck, H.Z. | ||
| Davis, Russell. | The Choctaw code | 1961 | Whittlesey House | ||
| Cooper, James Fenimore | The last of the Mohicans | 1961 | Scribner | 0553213296 (Bantam : pbk. : 1981) ; 0808519735 (Econoclad) ; 9780808519737 | While guiding a small party of English settlers to the protection of a fort during the French and Indian War, Hawkeye, a frontier scout, and his two Indian friends, the remaining braves of the Mohican tribe, struggle against the evils of Uncas who desires a white maiden for his wife.; |
| Cooper, James Fenimore | The Pathfinder | 1964 | Airmont Publishing Co., Inc. | ||
| Nelson, May. | The Redbirds are flying | 1963 | Criterion Bks. | ||
| Steele, William O. | The Year of the Bloody Sevens | 1963 | Harcourt | ||
| Steele, William Owen. | The year of the Bloody Sevens | 1963 | Harcourt | ||
| Capron, Louis. | The red war pole | 1963 | Bobbs | ||
| Tavo, Gus. | The buffalo are running | 1960 | Knopf | ||
| Lauritzen, Jonreed. | The legend of Billy Bluesage | 1961 | Little, Brown | ||
| Sandoz, Mari. | The Story Catcher | 1963 | Westminster Press | ||
| Oberreich, Robert. | The blood red belt | 1961 | Doubleday | ||
| Jones, Weyman. | The talking leaf | 1965 | Dial Press | ||
| Clark, Margaret Goff. | The mystery of the buried Indian mask | 1962 | Watts, F. | ||
| Surany, Anico. | The golden frong | 1963 | Putnam | ||
| Lobdell, Helen. | The fort in the forest | 1963 | Houghton | ||
| Lobdell, Helen. | The fort in the forest | 1963 | Houghton | ||
| Haig-Brown, Roderick Langmere Haig | The whale people | 1963 | Morrow | ||
| Haig-Brown, Roderick Langmere Haig | The whale people | 1963 | Morrow | ||
| Hollmann, Clide. | The eagle feather | 1963 | Hastings House | ||
| Hollmann, Clide. | The eagle feather | 1963 | Hstings House | ||
| Sandoz, Mari | The horsecatcher. | 1957 | Westminster Press | Unable to kill, a young Cheyenne is scorned by his tribe when he chooses to become a horse catcher rather than a warrior.; | |
| Sandoz, Mari | The horsecatcher. | 1957 | Westminster Press | Unable to kill, a young Cheyenne is scorned by his tribe when he chooses to become a horse catcher rather than a warrior.; | |
| Sandoz, Mari | The horsecatcher. | 1957 | Westminster Press | Unable to kill, a young Cheyenne is scorned by his tribe when he chooses to become a horse catcher rather than a warrior.; | |
| Sandoz, Mari | The horsecatcher. | 1957 | Westminster Press | Unable to kill, a young Cheyenne is scorned by his tribe when he chooses to become a horse catcher rather than a warrior.; | |
| Sandoz, Mari | The horsecatcher. | 1957 | Westminster Press | Unable to kill, a young Cheyenne is scorned by his tribe when he chooses to become a horse catcher rather than a warrior.; | |
| Sandoz, Mari | The horsecatcher. | 1957 | Westminster Press | Unable to kill, a young Cheyenne is scorned by his tribe when he chooses to become a horse catcher rather than a warrior.; | |
| Schultz, James Willard | With the Indians in the Rockies. | 1960 | Houghton Mifflin | The adventures of Thomas Fox and Pitamakan, a Blackfoot Indian boy.; | |
| Scott, Paul | Eliza and the Indian war pony, | 1961 | Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Co. | ||
| Scull, Florence D. | Bear teeth for courage | 1964 | Van Nostrand | ||
| Scull, Florence D. | Bear teeth for courage. | 1964 | Van Nostrand | ||
| Shannon, Terry. | Tyee's totem pole | 1955 | Whitman | ||
| Shannon, Terry. | Wakapoo and the flying arrows. | 1963 | A. Whitman | ||
| Shannon, Terry. | Wakapoo and the flying arrows | 1963 | Whitman | Wakapoo, a Chumash Indian boy, finds the secret of courage when his peace loving people are attacked on their island home off the coast of Southern California.; | |
| Sharp, Edith Lambert. | Nkwala. | 1958 | Little, Brown | ||
| Sharp, Edith Lambert. | Nkwala. | 1958 | Little, Brown | ||
| Sharp, Edith Lambert. | Nkwala. | 1958 | Little, Brown | ||
| Sharp, Edith Lambert. | Nkwala | 1958 | McClelland and Stewart | 0771081243 : ; 9780771081248 | |
| Simmons, Dawn Langley. | Peter Jumping Horse | 1961 | Holt | ||
| Snedden, Genevra Sisson | Docas, Indian of Santa Clara. | 1958 | Heath | Bibliography: p. 187-189.; Through the eyes of Docas and his playmates one sees the coming of the white man to California and the establishment of one of its famous chain of missions.; | |
| Sorensen, Edna Jennings. | Felipe's long journey : a story of the Andes ; pictures by Ezra Jack Keats. | 1961 | Watts F. | ||
| Sorensen, Edna Jennings. | Felipe's long journey : a story of the Andes ; pictures by Ezra Jack Keats. | 1961 | Watts F. | ||
| Speare, Elizabeth George. | Calico Captive | 1957 | Houghton Mifflin | During the French and Indian War, young Miriam is captured by Indians and taken to Montreal; | |
| Steele, William O. | Flaming arrows | 1957 | Harcourt, Brace | An Indian attack on a fort in the Tennessee wilderness makes young Chad Rabun realize that it is wrong to condemn one person for the misdeed of another. ; | |
| Steele, William O. | Wayah of the Real People | 1964 | Colonial Williamsburg : distributed by Holt | ||
| Steele, William O. | Wayah of the Real People | 1964 | Colonial Williamsburg: distributed by Holt | ||
| Steffan, Jack. | Mountain of fire : a novel. | 1959 | Day | ||
| Stevenson, Augusta. | George Custer, boy of action. | 1963 | Bobbs-Merrill | The boyhood of the great Indian fighter who died in the controversial Battle of Little Big Horn.; | |
| Stevenson, Augusta. | Israel Putnam, fearless boy. | 1959 | Bobbs-Merrill | A biography of an American patriot who fought in both the French and Indian and Revolutionary Wars, describing his boyhood and youth on the Massachusetts frontier.; | |
| Stevenson, Augusta. | Israel Putnam, fearless boy. | 1959 | Bobbs-Merrill | A biography of an American patriot who fought in both the French and Indian and Revolutionary Wars, describing his boyhood and youth on the Massachusetts frontier.; | |
| Stevenson, Augusta. | Kit Carson, boy trapper. | 1962 | Bobbs-Merrill | The boyhood of the frontier trapper, hunter, Indian fighter, scout, and soldier.; | |
| Stevenson, Augusta. | Kit Carson, boy trapper. | 1962 | Bobbs-Merrill | The boyhood of the frontier trapper, hunter, Indian fighter, scout, and soldier.; | |
| Stevenson, Augusta. | Sam Houston, boy chieftain. | 1962 | Bobbs-Merrill | A biography of the man who helped make Texas a part of the United States, emphasizing his boyhood in Virginia and his friendship with the Cherokee Indians.; | |
| Stevenson, Augusta. | Sam Houston, boy chieftain. | 1962 | Bobbs-Merrill | A biography of the man who helped make Texas a part of the United States, emphasizing his boyhood in Virginia and his friendship with the Cherokee Indians.; | |
| Stevenson, Augusta. | Squanto, young Indian hunter. | 1962 | Bobbs-Merrill | The boyhood of the Wampanoag Indian who lived for a time in England and then returned to New England where he helped the Pilgrim settlers in Plymouth.; | |
| Stevenson, Augusta. | Squanto, young Indian hunter. | 1962 | Bobbs-Merrill | The boyhood of the Wampanoag Indian who lived for a time in England and then returned to New England where he helped the Pilgrim settlers in Plymouth.; | |
| Strachan, Margaret Pitcairn. | Cabins with window boxes | 1964 | I. Washburn | ||
| Steele, William O. | The year of the bloody sevens. | 1963 | Harcourt, Brace & World | ||
| Cooper, James Fenimore | The last of the Mohicans : a narrative of 1757 | 1957 | World | ||
| Haig-Brown, Roderick Langmere | The whale people. | 1963 | Morrow | ||
| Barbary, James. | The fort in the wilderness; an adventure in history. | 1965 | Norton | First published in England under title: The fort in the forest.; An English officer, in command of a fort on the Canadian frontier during Pontiac's uprising, is captured by the Indians, returned to the English as a hostage, but comes back later to convince Pontiac of French betrayal.; | |
| Barbary, James. | The fort in the wilderness; an adventure in history. | 1965 | Norton | First published in England under title: The fort in the forest.; An English officer, in command of a fort on the Canadian frontier during Pontiac's uprising, is captured by the Indians, returned to the English as a hostage, but comes back later to convince Pontiac of French betrayal.; | |
| Surany, Anico. | The golden frog : illus. by Leonard Everett Fisher. | 1963 | Putnam | ||
| Tilghman, Zoe Agnes Stratton | Maiom, the Cheyenne girl; | 1956 | Harlow Pub. Corp. | ||
| Tomerlin, John. | Prisoner of the Iroquois. | 1965 | Dutton | ||
| O'Dell, Scott | La isla de los delfines azules | 1964 | Noguer | 8427931085 ; 9788427931084 | Medalla Newbery.; Tâitulo original: Island of the Blue Dolphins.; Left alone on a beautiful but isolated island off the coast of California, a young Indian girl spends eighteen years, not only merely surviving through her enormous courage and self-reliance, but also finding a measure of happiness in her solitary life.; Accelerated Reader; Interest Level Middle Grade; Book Level 5.4; Accelerated Reader Points 6; Accelerated Vocabulary, Literacy Skills; 04 05 06 07 08; 054; 006; Lexile, MetaMetrics, Inc.; Lexile Measure 1090; 1090; |
| O'Dell, Scott | La isla de los delfines azules | 1964 | Editorial noguer | 8427931085 (pbk.) ; 9788427931084 | "Tâitulo original: Island of the blue dolphins"--t.p. verso.; Stranded on a beautiful isolated island off the coast of California, a young 19th century Indian girl spends 18 years, not only surviving through her courage and self-reliance, but also finding happiness in her solitary life.; Accelerated Reader; Interest Level Middle Grade; Book Level 5.4; Accelerated Reader Points 6; Accelerated Vocabulary, Literacy Skills; 04 05 06 07 08; 054; 006; Lexile, MetaMetrics, Inc.; Lexile Measure 1090; 1090; |
| Underhill, Ruth M. | Antelope Singer | 1961 | Coward-McCann | ||
| Baker, Betty. | The shaman's last raid | 1963 | Harper & Row | ||
| Carlson, Natalie Savage. | The Tomahawk family. | 1960 | Harper | An Indian girl is anxious to do everything her teacher at school tells her, in order to be a good American, but her stubborn brother and her old fashioned grandmother present problems.; | |
| Carlson, Natalie Savage. | The Tomahawk family. | 1960 | Harper | An Indian girl is anxious to do everything her teacher at school tells her, in order to be a good American, but her stubborn brother and her old fashioned grandmother present problems.; | |
| Van Riper, Guernsey | Jim Thorpe, Indian athlete. | 1956 | Bobbs-Merrill | ||
| Vance, Marguerite. | Esther Wheelwright, Indian captive. | 1964 | Dutton | ||
| Vestal, Stanley | Happy hunting grounds. | 1963 | Lyons and Carnahan | ||
| Waltrip, Lela. | Quiet boy | 1961 | Longmans | ||
| Waltrip, Lela. | Quiet boy | 1961 | Longmans | ||
| Webb, Nancy | Makema of the rain forest, | 1964 | Prentice-Hall | Bibliographical references included in "Acknowledgments" (p. [3]); | |
| Welch, Ronald C. | Mohawk Valley. | 1958 | Criterion Books | ||
| Welch, Ronald | Mohawk Valley | 1958 | Criterion Bks. | ||
| Welch, Ronald | Mohawk Valley | 1958 | Oxford University Press | 0192710788 : ; 9780192710789 | |
| Wheeler, Arville | White Squaw : the true story of Jennie Wiley. | 1958 | Heath | A fictionalized account of the life of Jennie Sellards Wiley, who spent a year as an Indian captive in Kentucky and eventually escaped and returned to her husband in Virginia.; | |
| Wilcox, Eleanor Reindollar. | Cornhusk doll | 1956 | Dodd | ||
| Wilson, Charles Morrow. | Crown Point : the destiny road | 1965 | McKay | ||
| Wilson, Hazel (Hutchins) | His Indian brother | 1955 | E. M. Hale | When his father's return from Boston with the family is delayed, young Brad, left to care for their new wilderness home in Maine, must depend on the Indians for survival.; | |
| Wilson, Hazel Hutchins | His Indian brother | 1955 | Houghton Mifflin | When his father's return from Boston with the family is delayed, young Brad, left to care for their new wilderness home in Maine, must depend on the Indians for survival.; | |
| Wilson, Holly. | Snowbound in Hidden Valley | 1957 | Messner | ||
| Witten, Herbert. | Escape from the Shawnees | 1958 | Follett | The author: p189.; The great hunter, Gabe Stoner, asked eleven year old Whit Martin to go hunting with him. When he and Gabe ran into a party of Indians, Gabe was wounded and he and Whit were captured by the Indians and taken across the Ohio into Shawnee country. Whit and Gabe escaped from their captors and young Whit managed to survive and to help save the wounded hunter. (Publisher); | |
| Witten, Herbert. | Escape from the Shawnees | 1958 | Follett | ||
| Worcester, Donald Emmet | Lone Hunter and the wild horses | 1959 | Walck, H.Z. | ||
| Worthylake, Mary M. | Children of the seed gatherers. | 1964 | Melmont Publishers | ||
| Leiser, Harry W. | The lost canyon of the Navajos | 1960 | Criterion Books | ||
| Lampman, Evelyn Sibley. | The shy stegosaurus of Indian Springs | 1962 | Junior Literary guild : Doubleday | ||
| Ziner, Feenie. | Dark pilgrim : the story of Squanto. | 1965 | Chilton Co. |
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