Part 4
describes the Battle of the Little Big Horn.
Eastman, Charles A. _Indian Boyhood._ New York, Little, Brown and Company, 1902. 289 p. il. Tales of Dakota Indian children.
Eastman. Charles A. _Smoky Day's Wigwam Evenings._ Boston, Little, Brown and Company, 1910. o. p. 148 p. il. B. Indian legends written for children.
Fiske, Frank B. _The Taming of the Sioux._ Bismarck, Tribune Publishing Company, 1917. o. p. 186 p. il. An account of the Custer massacre with descriptive material on Indian life, dress, and customs.
Garland, Hamlin. _Book of the American Indian._ New York, Harpers, 1923. 274 p. il. Fifteen true Indian stories, including one of Sitting Bull.
Gilmore, Melvin R. _Ethnobotany of the Great Plains Area; Uses of Plants by the Indians of the Missouri River Region._ Reprinted. Washington, Government Printing Office, 1919. 154 p. il. (Smithsonian Institution, U. S. Bureau of American Ethnology, 33d annual report.)
Gilmore, Melvin R. _Prairie Smoke._ New York, Columbia University, 1929. 208 p. Appreciatively written collection of Indian lore by former curator of State historical society.
Godfrey, Captain E. S. _Custer's Last Battle._ Century Magazine, Jan. 1892. 29 p. il. One of Custer's troop commanders gives an authentic account of the campaign which culminated in this battle.
Graham, W. A. _Story of the Little Bighorn._ New York, Century Company, 1926. o. p. 174 p. il. A historical narrative describing the Custer massacre.
Hans, Frederic M. _The Great Sioux Nation._ Chicago, M. A. Donahue and Company, 1907. o. p. 575 p. il. A history of Indian life and warfare.
Hebard, Grace R. _Sacajawea._ Glendale, California, A. H. Clark Company, 1933. 341 p. il. A story of the life of the Bird Woman and her family.
Hodge, Frederick Webb. _Handbook of American Indians._ Washington, Government Printing Office, 1912. 1992 p. 2 v. il. (Smithsonian Institution, U. S. Bureau of American Ethnology.)
Hoffman, W. J. _The Mide'wimin or Grand Medicine Society of the Ojibwa._ Washington, Government Printing Office, 1891. Pp. 143-300. il. (Smithsonian Institution, U. S. Bureau of American Ethnology, 7th annual report.) An accurate account of Indian customs.
Holley, Frances C. _Once Their Home._ Chicago, Donahue and Henneberry, 1890. o. p. 405 p. il. Interesting account of early Dakota, stressing relations between white and red men.
Kelly, Mrs. Fannie. _Narrative of My Captivity Among the Sioux Indians._ Chicago, Donnelley Gassette and Loyd, 1880. o. p. 285 p. il. Personal experiences of the author among the Indians, and an account of the Sully expedition.
McLaughlin, Major James. _My Friend the Indian._ Chicago, Houghton Mifflin Company, 1910. o. p. 404 p. A sympathetic account of Indian life.
McLaughlin, Mrs. Marie L. _Myths of the Sioux._ Bismarck, Tribune Publishing Company, 1916. o. p. 200 p. il. Thirty-eight myths related by wife of Major McLaughlin, herself one-fourth Sioux.
Missionary Register. _Northwest American Indians._ London, L. B. Seeley & Son, 1826. o. p. 637 p. A report of missionary work among the Indians of the Red River Valley.
Radin, Paul. _Story of the American Indian._ New York, Boni and Liveright, 1927. 372 p. il. Contains an interesting description of the Mandan Indian villages.
Riggs, Rev. S. R. _Grammar and Dictionary of the Dakota Language._ Washington, Government Printing Office, 1893. 239 p. (Smithsonian Institution, U. S. Bureau of American Ethnology.)
Sarett, Lew. _Many, Many Moons: Indians of North America: Slow Smoke._ New York, H. Holt and Company, 1925. 104 p. Poems of Indians and prairie life.
Schultz, J. W. _The Bird Woman, the Guide of Lewis and Clark._ Chicago, Houghton Mifflin Company, 1918. o. p. 235 p. il. The story of Sakakawea as told to the author by the daughter of a Mandan chief.
Seymour, Flora W. _The Indians Today._ Chicago, Benj. H. Sanborn Company, 1927. o. p. 235 p. il. Well-written, intended for boys and girls.
Standing Bear, Luther. _My People, the Sioux._ New York and Boston, Houghton Mifflin Company, 1928. 288 p. il. The social life and customs of his people described by a Sioux chief.
Vestal, Stanley. _Happy Hunting Grounds._ Chicago, Lyons and Carnahan, 1928. 220 p. il. Story of warfare between Mandan and Cheyenne Indians.
Vestal, Stanley. _New Sources of Indian History._ Norman, University of Oklahoma Press. 1934. 351 p. il. Description of the Dakota Indians, especially of their Ghost Dance, and a biography of Sitting Bull.
Vestal, Stanley. _Sitting Bull._ Boston and New York, Houghton Mifflin Company, 1932. 350 p. il. B. An interesting biography of this famous Sioux chief.
Vestal, Stanley. _Warpath._ Boston and New York, Houghton Mifflin Company, 1934. 291 p. il. B. A true story of Chief White Bull and his connection with Dakota Indian wars.
Walker, J. E. _Campaigns of General Custer in the Northwest, and Final Surrender of Sitting Bull._ London, Jenkins, 1881. o. p. 139 p. il. The story of the Custer massacre prefaced with a history of the military life of General Custer.
Wall, Oscar G. _Diary._ Published by the author, 1909. o. p. 282 p. Recollections of the Sioux massacre, Yellow Medicine incident with its important battles, and the Sibley expedition.
Warren, William A. _Minnesota Historical Society Collections._ St. Paul, 1885. Vol. V. pp. 21-394. A history of the Ojibway Indians.
Wemett, William Marks. _The Indians of North Dakota._ Fargo, Northern School Supply, 1927. 256 p. il. A history of Indian life written especially for school children.
Will, George Francis. _Archaeology of the Missouri Valley._ Anthropological Papers of American Museum of Natural History, v. 22: pp. 291-341. New York, 1924. A scientific discussion of the Missouri Valley.
Will, George Francis. _Arikara Ceremonials._ North Dakota Historical Quarterly, July 1930, v. 4: pp. 247-263. An interesting paper on Arikara life.
Will, George Francis and Hyde, George E. _Corn Among the Indians of the Upper Missouri._ St. Louis, Missouri, William Henry Miner Company, Incorporated, 1917. o. p. 323 p. il. A description of agriculture among the Indians.
Will, George Francis. _Magical and Sleight of Hand Performances by the Arikara._ North Dakota Historical Quarterly, Oct. 1928, v. 3, pp. 50-65. Unusual description of Indian "magic."
Will, George Francis. _The Mandans._ North Dakota Historical Quarterly, Oct. 1930, v. 5: pp. 38-48. A revision and condensation of an article on the life and language of these agricultural Indians, originally written for the Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology. Also includes the story of the Mandan earth lodge on the grounds of the State capitol, Bismarck.
Will, George Francis and Spinden, H. J. _The Mandans._ Cambridge, Massachusetts, Peabody Museum, 1906. o. p. 219 p. il. A study of the culture, archeology, and language of the tribe.
Wilson, Gilbert L. _Indian Hero Tales._ Chicago, American Book Company, 1916. o. p. 203 p. il. Tales of the Abnaki, Micmacs, and Algonquins retold, with a section on Indian folklore in general.
Wilson, Gilbert L. _Myths of the Red Children._ Chicago, Ginn, 1907, o. p. 154 p. il. A collection of Indian legends.
Wilson, Gilbert L. _Waheenee; An Indian Girl's Story._ St. Paul, Webb Publishing Company, 1921. o. p. 189 p. il. Story of Arikara woman, wife of the tribal chieftain Son-of-the-Star, as told by herself to the author.
Wilson, Thomas. _The Antiquity of the Red Race in America._ Washington, Government Printing Office, 1897. See pp. 1039-1045. (Smithsonian Institution, U. S. Bureau of American Ethnology.) Deals with the origin and history of North American Indians.
Wissler, Clark. _Costumes of the Plains Indians._ Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History, v. 17: pp. 39-91. 1915.