Sights and Sounds of the Omaha Indians: Documenting Native American Celebrations

Some of our knowledge of Native American culture comes from photographs, books and video images. Many of these feature posed or stereotypical images which provided a distorted view of Native Americans. We are fortunate that some have worked to provide our country with materials about Native Americans with input from Native Americans.

Dancing with Audience Members at the Concert at the Library of Congress

The Library of Congress American Folklife Center has worked to preserve the culture of America’s people. Through on-site recordings and candid images we are able to experience the language, the songs, the stories and the performances of Native Americans in their communities or here at the Library of Congress.

One of these online presentations documents the music and language of the Omaha Indians of Nebraska. In the late 1800’s Francis La Flesche, the son of Omaha Indian chief Joseph La Flesche and Alice Cunningham Fletcher, a noted anthropologist, made 44 wax cylinder recordings of traditional Omaha songs. Folklorists Carl Fleischhauer and Dorothy Sara Lee recorded the 1983 Omaha Harvest Celebration Powwow and the 1985 performance of the Hethu’shka Society at the Library of Congress. These performances and the photographs taken during the Powwow and the performance provide a different vantage point for those interested in studying the culture of a Native American community.

Whipman David Blackbird

Compare the photographs taken during the Omaha Indian Powwow with the photoprints taken during the pow-wow and peace pipe conference August 5-8, 1925, held by Pawnee and Dakota to commemorate the 52nd anniversary of the battle of Massacre Canyon. What are the similarities and differences between these images? What can you tell about the people in the images?

If your students could document one local tradition what would it be and why? Have them begin the process using the procedures found in Exploring the Community Through Local History  and Family Customs Past and Present .

Voting Rights for Women

The original Constitution of the United States was nearly mute on voting rights, ceding them to the states to determine. This, the second of two posts exploring the struggles of two groups to gain full voting rights, will take a look at the long road toward the full enfranchisement of women.

Path to the Presidency: Catching the Voter’s Eye

Campaign posters, buttons and other ephemera are not new. Prior to the advent of radio, television and the internet, candidates used campaign signs, buttons, ribbons, light shades and banners to reach out to voters who might not have been able to come to a speech or access a newspaper. The Library of Congress has made many of these unique artifacts available online.

Presidential Elections: Newspapers and Complex Text

Newspapers offer rich examples of complex text, and they often have features to help readers understand and put it into context. Chronicling America offers digitized historical newspaper pages from 1836-1922, including a time-saving list of Recommended Topics. In this election season, I was drawn to the pages about presidential elections. Here are a few particulars that caught my attention, with teaching ideas that came to mind.

The Path to the Presidency: Political Speeches

On Tuesday, November 6, voters in the United States will go to the polls to elect a president, members of Congress and other state and local political leaders. As we move closer and closer to Election Day, this blog will be providing suggestions for ways to use primary sources from the Library of Congress to help students learn about the election process and past elections.