Michigan Indigenous Peoples: Difference between revisions

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*[http://detroiturbanism.blogspot.com/2016/01/retracing-detroits-native-american.html Retracing Detroit's Native American Trails]<br>  
*[http://detroiturbanism.blogspot.com/2016/01/retracing-detroits-native-american.html Retracing Detroit's Native American Trails]<br>  
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OkrYn_FWfQ0 Cass County]  
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OkrYn_FWfQ0 Cass County]  
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fLhOR3oX7vo Village life<br>]
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fLhOR3oX7vo Village life<br>]  
*[http://detroiturbanism.blogspot.com/2016/03/indian-villages-reservations-and-removal.html Indian Villages, Reservations, and Removal]<br>


MICHIGAN HISTORICAL REVIEW articles
MICHIGAN HISTORICAL REVIEW articles  


CALLOWAY, Colin G. “The End of an Era: British-Indian Relations in the Great Lakes Region after the War of 1812,” 12:2, 1-20.  
CALLOWAY, Colin G. “The End of an Era: British-Indian Relations in the Great Lakes Region after the War of 1812,” 12:2, 1-20.  


&nbsp;CASSIDY, Michelle. “‘The More Noise They Make”: Odawa and Ojibwe Encounters with American Missionaries in Northern Michigan, 1837-1871,” 38:2, 1-34.
&nbsp;CASSIDY, Michelle. “‘The More Noise They Make”: Odawa and Ojibwe Encounters with American Missionaries in Northern Michigan, 1837-1871,” 38:2, 1-34.  


CLIFTON , James A. “ Michigan’s Indians: Tribe, Nation, Estate, Racial, Ethnic, or Special Interest Group?” 20:2, 93-152.  
CLIFTON , James A. “ Michigan’s Indians: Tribe, Nation, Estate, Racial, Ethnic, or Special Interest Group?” 20:2, 93-152.  
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GRAY, Susan E. “Limits and Possibilities: White-Indian Relations in Western Michigan in the Era of<br> Removal,” 20:2, 71-91. <br>&nbsp;<br>JUNG, Patrick J. “To Extend Fair and Impartial Justice to the Indian: Native Americans and the Additional Court of Michigan Territory, 1823-1836,” 23:2, 25-48.  
GRAY, Susan E. “Limits and Possibilities: White-Indian Relations in Western Michigan in the Era of<br> Removal,” 20:2, 71-91. <br>&nbsp;<br>JUNG, Patrick J. “To Extend Fair and Impartial Justice to the Indian: Native Americans and the Additional Court of Michigan Territory, 1823-1836,” 23:2, 25-48.  


KARAMANSKI, Theodore J. “State Citizenship as a Tool of Indian Persistence: A Case Study of the Anishinaabeg of Michigan,” 37.2, 119-138.<br>&nbsp;<br>KERRIGAN, William. “Apples on the Border: Orchards and the Contest for the Great Lakes,” 34:1, 25-41.<br>&nbsp;<br>LEWIS, G. Malcolm. “First Nations Mapmaking in the Great Lakes Region in Intercultural Contexts: A Historical Review,” 30:2, 1-34.<br>&nbsp;<br>LEWIS, G. Malcolm. “Intracultural Mapmaking by First Nations Peoples in the Great Lakes Region: A Historical Review,” 32:1, 1-17.<br>&nbsp;<br>MCCLURKEN, James M. “Ottawa Adaptive Strategies to Indian Removal,” 12:1, 29-55.
KARAMANSKI, Theodore J. “State Citizenship as a Tool of Indian Persistence: A Case Study of the Anishinaabeg of Michigan,” 37.2, 119-138.<br>&nbsp;<br>KERRIGAN, William. “Apples on the Border: Orchards and the Contest for the Great Lakes,” 34:1, 25-41.<br>&nbsp;<br>LEWIS, G. Malcolm. “First Nations Mapmaking in the Great Lakes Region in Intercultural Contexts: A Historical Review,” 30:2, 1-34.<br>&nbsp;<br>LEWIS, G. Malcolm. “Intracultural Mapmaking by First Nations Peoples in the Great Lakes Region: A Historical Review,” 32:1, 1-17.<br>&nbsp;<br>MCCLURKEN, James M. “Ottawa Adaptive Strategies to Indian Removal,” 12:1, 29-55.  


MEAD, Rebecca J. "The Kawbawgum Cases: Native Claims and the Discovery of Iron in the Upper&nbsp;Peninsula of Michigan." 40:2. 1-32.<br>MIDDLETON, Richard. “Pontiac: Local Warrior or Pan-Indian Leader?” 32:2, 1-32.<br>&nbsp;​<br>MUMFORD, Jeremy. “Mixed-Race Identity in a Nineteenth-Century Family: The Schoolcrafts of Sault Ste. Marie, 1824-27,” 25:1, 1-23.
MEAD, Rebecca J. "The Kawbawgum Cases: Native Claims and the Discovery of Iron in the Upper&nbsp;Peninsula of Michigan." 40:2. 1-32.<br>MIDDLETON, Richard. “Pontiac: Local Warrior or Pan-Indian Leader?” 32:2, 1-32.<br>&nbsp;​<br>MUMFORD, Jeremy. “Mixed-Race Identity in a Nineteenth-Century Family: The Schoolcrafts of Sault Ste. Marie, 1824-27,” 25:1, 1-23.  


PEARCE, Margaret Wickens. “The Holes in the Grid: Reservation Surveys in Lower Michigan,” 30:2, 135-165. <br>&nbsp;<br>PETERS, Bernard C. “Hypocrisy on the Great Lakes Frontier: The Use of Whiskey by the Michigan Department of Indian Affairs,” 18:2, 1-13. <br>&nbsp;<br>PETERS, Bernard C. “Indian-Grave Robbing at Sault Ste. Marie, 1826,” 23:2, 49-80. <br>&nbsp;<br>PETERS, Bernard C. “John Johnston’s 1822 Description of the Lake Superior Chippewa,” 20:2, 25-46. <br>&nbsp;<br>PETERS, Bernard C. “Wa-bish-kee-pe-nas and the Chippewa Reverence for Copper,” 15:2, 47-60. <br>&nbsp;<br>PFLUG, Melissa A. “Politics of Great Lakes Indian Religion,” 18:2, 15-31.<br>&nbsp;<br>SCHENCK, Theresa. “Who Owns Sault Ste. Marie?” 28:1, 109-120. <br>&nbsp;<br>SCHWARTZ, James Z. “Taming the ‘Savagery’ of Michigan’s Indians,” 34:2, 39-55.  
PEARCE, Margaret Wickens. “The Holes in the Grid: Reservation Surveys in Lower Michigan,” 30:2, 135-165. <br>&nbsp;<br>PETERS, Bernard C. “Hypocrisy on the Great Lakes Frontier: The Use of Whiskey by the Michigan Department of Indian Affairs,” 18:2, 1-13. <br>&nbsp;<br>PETERS, Bernard C. “Indian-Grave Robbing at Sault Ste. Marie, 1826,” 23:2, 49-80. <br>&nbsp;<br>PETERS, Bernard C. “John Johnston’s 1822 Description of the Lake Superior Chippewa,” 20:2, 25-46. <br>&nbsp;<br>PETERS, Bernard C. “Wa-bish-kee-pe-nas and the Chippewa Reverence for Copper,” 15:2, 47-60. <br>&nbsp;<br>PFLUG, Melissa A. “Politics of Great Lakes Indian Religion,” 18:2, 15-31.<br>&nbsp;<br>SCHENCK, Theresa. “Who Owns Sault Ste. Marie?” 28:1, 109-120. <br>&nbsp;<br>SCHWARTZ, James Z. “Taming the ‘Savagery’ of Michigan’s Indians,” 34:2, 39-55.  
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SECUNDA, Ben. “The Road to Ruin?: ‘Civilization’ and the Origins of a ‘Michigan road Band’ of Potawatomi,” 34:1, 119-149. <br>&nbsp;<br>STEVENS, Paul L. “The Indian Diplomacy of Capt. Richard B. Lernoult, British Military Commandant of Detroit, 1774-1775,” 13:1, 47-82.  
SECUNDA, Ben. “The Road to Ruin?: ‘Civilization’ and the Origins of a ‘Michigan road Band’ of Potawatomi,” 34:1, 119-149. <br>&nbsp;<br>STEVENS, Paul L. “The Indian Diplomacy of Capt. Richard B. Lernoult, British Military Commandant of Detroit, 1774-1775,” 13:1, 47-82.  


TANNER, Helen Hornbeck. “Mapping the Grand Traverse Indian Country: The Contributions of Peter Dougherty,” 31:1, 45-92. <br>&nbsp;<br>TEASDALE, Guillaume. “Old Friends and New Foes: French Settlers and Indians in the Detroit River Border Region,” 38:2, 35-62.
TANNER, Helen Hornbeck. “Mapping the Grand Traverse Indian Country: The Contributions of Peter Dougherty,” 31:1, 45-92. <br>&nbsp;<br>TEASDALE, Guillaume. “Old Friends and New Foes: French Settlers and Indians in the Detroit River Border Region,” 38:2, 35-62.  


TUCKER, Patrick M. and Laurel E. Heyman. “Welcome to Hard Times: Two French Merchants and Militiamen in the Detroit River Region during the War of 1812,” 38:1, 53-81.  
TUCKER, Patrick M. and Laurel E. Heyman. “Welcome to Hard Times: Two French Merchants and Militiamen in the Detroit River Region during the War of 1812,” 38:1, 53-81.  
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