Item #00009557 Early Days Among the Cheyenne and Arapahoe Indians. John H. Seger.

Early Days Among the Cheyenne and Arapahoe Indians

Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1934. Second edition. Hardcover. 8vo. [14], 15-155, [5] pp. Orange cloth with dark orange lettering on the spine; orange topstain. Price of $2.00 on the front flap of the dust jacket. Illustrated by a frontispiece of the author and with two additional plates, black and white photographs of Seger interacting with Native Americans. Edited by Stanley Vestal. Part of The Civilization of the American Indian series. Hand S145. Rader 2904. Seger's account was first published in 1923, this is the second Oklahoma Press edition with an appendix on "Tradition of the Cheyenne Indians". Oklahoma Historical Society, "Seger, John Homer (1846–1928)". Seger founded the town of Colony, Oklahoma and the Model Indian Industrial School. Throughout his life he was charged to encourage Native American peoples to assimilate to white American culture. He helped establish agricultural communities for the Cheyenne people, including the building of a cattle herd for their community. In 1890–91 Seger became a special agent appointed to help allot the Oklahoma reservation lands to individual tribe members. During his time in Oklahoma he became intimately familiar with the culture of the Cheyenne and Arapahoe, at a time when Native Americans were being coerced into white traditions, and into settlements that were created without direction from Native peoples. Near Fine / very near Fine. Item #00009557

A Near Fine book with a name on the front pastedown and offsetting to each pastedown, likely from the jacket flaps; dust jacket is close to Fine.

Price: $200.00

See all items in History, Western Americana
See all items by