Official Website for the Nez Perce Tribe ...
Provides information for students, teachers, and public on Nez Perce history, Nez Perce Scholarship programs, Nez Perce Tribe, Nez Perce National Historic Park, Nez Perce Photography ...
www.nezperce.com/npeindex.html
The Nez Perce War of 1877 forever changed the lives of the Nez Perce people. In SACRED JOURNEY OF THE NEZ PERCE, a one-hour documentary, we learn of their struggle for survival and their determination to maintain their culture. Tribal members from throughout the Northwest describe the history of their people. The program is narrated by Nez Perce CBS news anchor Hattie Kauffman. SACRED JOURNEY is ...
idahoptv.org/productions/archives/sacred/sacred.html
www.nezperce.com/npphoto1.html
Nez Perce Literature m_lac _te tit_qan nim_pu hiw_ke waq_pa (A long time ago, the Nimipu people were not many in number) Indian people are still here. We are not going away. It is time that the newcomers to this country started paying proper respect to the elder status of the first nations. Otis Halfmoon, Nez Perce The earth is our mother. She should not be disturbed by hoe or plough. We want ...
www.indians.org/welker/nezperce.htm
This website is made possible by the generous support of Idaho Humanities Council, the University of Idaho Library, and the John C. Smith Memorial Fund This website requires Internet Explorer 4.0 or Netscape 4.0 browers. ...
www.lib.uidaho.edu/mcbeth/index.htm
Nez Perce History        The Nez Perce, the largest ethnic group in the Columbia Plateau, were closely related to the Cayuse, Tenino and Umatilla tribes to their west. Their languages are closely related, all part of the Sahaptian branch of the Penutian language phylum. The Nez Perce were also heavily influenced by their Plains neighbors to the east. They acquired horses ...
logos.uoregon.edu/explore/oregon/nphistory.html
THE NEZ PERCE INDIANS By Cameron The Nez Perce (Ness-purse) Indians lived in Idaho, Oregon and Washington State, west of the Rocky Mountains, close to many river valleys. They were mainly woodland Indians, but they sometimes lived in the grasslands or in the mountains. Originally, they called themselves the Nimiipu (NEE-me-poo) tribe, which meant the real people. French explorers came and named ...
www.fi.edu/fellows/fellow4/feb99/mccullough/Nez_per_cam.htm