The Indian tribes of the upper Mississippi Valley and region of the Great Lakes

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Last edited by MARC Bot
September 2, 2021 | History

The Indian tribes of the upper Mississippi Valley and region of the Great Lakes

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Nicolas Perrot (1644-1718)
Perrot’s life among the Indian tribes began as early as 1665, little more than a half-century after the founding of Quebec; and during nearly forty years he traveled and lived among the Indians- successively as engagé to the Jesuit missionaries, coureur de bois and trader, explorer, and agent of the Quebec government. His narrative greatly illumines the history of the relations between the French colony and the Indian tribes within its sphere of influence, and still more the character and customs of the aboriginal peoples in their primitive condition; for he was the first white visitor to several of the western tribes, and even those of the east were not yet very greatly altered by contact with Europeans.
– from editor Emma H. Blair’s Preface in Vol 1.

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Book Details


Table of Contents

Table of Contents Vol. 1
-Memoir on the manners, customs, and religion of the savages of North America. By Nicolas Perrot.
-History of the savage peoples who are allies of New France, by Claude Charles Le Roy.
Table of Contents Vol. 2
-History of the savage peoples who are allies of New France, by Claude Charles Le Roy (continued from Vol. 1).
-Memoirs relating to the Sauk and Foxes, letter to Reverend Dr. Jedidiah Morse, by Major Morrell Marston, U.S.A., commanding at Fort Armstrong, Ill., November, 1820.
-“Account of the manners and customs of the Sauk and Fox nations of Indian traditions.” A report on this subject, sent to General William Clarks, Superintendent of Indian Affairs, by Thomas Forsyth, Indian agent for the U.S. Government, St. Louis, January 15, 1827.
Appendices:
A. Biographical sketch of Nicolas Perrot.
B. Notes on Indian social organization, mental and moral traits, and religious beliefs; and accounts of three remarkable religious movements among Indians in modern times. Mainly from writings of prominent ethnologists, the remainder by Thomas Forsyth and Thomas R. Roddy.
C. Various letters, etc., describing the character and present condition of the Sioux, Potawatomi, and Winnebago tribes, “written for this work by missionaries and others who know these people well”.

Edition Notes

Published in
Cleveland, Ohio

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
970/.004/97
Library of Congress
E78.N8 B63

The Physical Object

Pagination
2 v. :

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL7093098M
Internet Archive
indiantribesofup01perruoft
LCCN
11028844

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History

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September 2, 2021 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
April 21, 2015 Edited by Ted Lienhart Added Preview & Table of Contents
December 17, 2011 Created by ImportBot import new book