Ya`at`eeh Welcome to the Navajo Nation After we get back to our country it will brighten up again, the Navajo will be as happy as the land, black clouds will rise and there will be plenty of rain. Corn will grow in abundance and everything will look happy. Barboncito, Navajo Head Chief These pages are devoted to the Navajo Nation, the largest Native American tribe in the Southwest. The ...
Features news of significance to the Navajo Indian community.
Official Website for the Nez Perce Tribe ...
Nipmuc Indian Association of Connecticut The Nipmuc Indian Association of Connecticut is dedicated to our Nipmuc ancestors, to our future seven generations, and to all who have helped our People. Nipmuc Indians are the original people of central New England, and are among the Eastern Woodlands or Algonquian Indians of the Eastern United States. Before the arrival of European settlers in the ...
www.nativetech.org/Nipmuc
Canyon De Chelly & Navajo Nation Unofficial Web site with FAQ's About Life with Navajo People. Includes the Chinle/Central Navajo Nation Directory ...
NARRAGANSETT HISTORY (revised 7.15.97) Location Narragansett Bay and western Rhode Island Population Probably more than 10, 000 in 1610, but by 1674 this had dropped to 5, 000. The Narragansett lost almost 20 of their population in a single battle with the English in December of 1675. Massacre and starvation soon killed most of the others. By 1682 less than 500 Narragansett remained. They were ...
www.dickshovel.com/Narra.html
Asco wequassunnu'mmis netop (Good Morning, Friend) Narragansett Indian Tribe Post Office Box 268 Charlestown, Rhode Island 401-364-1100 (Telephone) 401-364-1104 (Fax) Site Design and Development by Dixon Technology Group Top of Page | Home | Tribal Government | History | Programs | Tribal Directory | Newsletter/Calendar | Links | Employment | Contact Us ...
www.narragansett-tribe.org
Information on NTUA: board of directors, management, employment, mission statement, history, company news, press release, white paper, commercial and residential accounts, community programs, etc.
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
NIPMUC HISTORY Nipmuc Location Central plateau of Massachusetts extending south into northern Rhode Island and northeast Connecticut. Population Estimates of the pre-contact population of the Nipmuc are at best confusing, because there is no agreement as to which groups belonged to the Nipmuc. The numbers vary between 3, 000 and 10, 000 with as many as 40 villages. Some Nipmuc tribes were ...
www.dickshovel.com/nipmuc.html
Canoe Creek Band Canoe Creek Band is made up of two communities, Dog Creek which is where the administration office is located and Canoe Creek. Both communities are located in a semi remote area southwest of Williams Lake on the east side of the Fraser River. The infamous Gang Ranch is located directly across the river from Canoe Creek IR #3. Anyone visiting the communities for the first time ...
www.cariboolinks.com/ctc/canoe
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
Introduction to NIsgaa Lisims Government site with legislation and government services implementing the Nisgaa Treaty.
NAVAJO: Dine (The People) Navajo are of the the Athabascan language group and their relationship and travels are told of on that page. The People have other versions. Origin Some History Blessingway Shoe Game Religion Legend of Spider Rock Weaving Origin First man and first woman were created by the Holy People (basketmakers), and brought to the surface through a series of underworlds. The ...
www.ausbcomp.com/redman/navajo.htm
www.nezperce.com/npphoto1.html
Lois Scozzari, The Significance of Wampum to Seventeenth Century Indians in New England ...
www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/41/037.html
The traditional Navajo story of the creation of the Dine (the Navajo) ...
www.lapahie.com/Creation.cfm
The 'Namgis First Nation is governed by an elected Chief and Band Council of nine elected members. The other elected body is the four-member Board of Education which is accountable to Council. Council members and Chief serve 2-year terms. A management team of administrators and department heads reports directly to Council. The total full time workforce is approximately 100, of which 20 work ...
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
Navajos .com Looking for something Welcome to navajos.com. We've collected a list of resource sites to help you find exactly what you're looking for. Find what you're looking for below or use the search box on the left. Thanks for visiting and we hope you we've made your internet experience a little better. Resources Small Business Marketing, Office Products, Human Resources Web & eCommerce ...
Narragansett Bay: A Friend's Perspective Indians and Colonists Primitive man is believed to have arrived in Narragansett basin in the late Pleistocene, about 6500 B.C. From then until the English colonists came, fishing and hunting and local water transportation in dugout canoes were the primary uses. When Roger Williams was banished from the Massachusetts colony for dissenting opinions and ...
www.providenceri.com/narragansettbay/indians_and_colonists.html
Shidineh.com-MyNavajo.com A Navajo interactive environment for any Native American to get or exchange information on a discussion board, chat, or through our free email. We also have many books on Navajos and Native Americans for purchase. We are very user friendly.
Ya'ateeh! Welcome to the Navajo Nation Washington Office website. Since August 1984 our office has served as an extension of the Navajo Nation Government to represent our concerns to the Federal Government and Agencies in Washington, D.C. As a division within the Executive Branch of the Navajo Nation Government, the employees of the NNWO are dedicated to enhancing the Navajo Nation at the ...
Early History Of The Navajo | Our Tribe | Achievements | NAVAJO NOTES
www.ghv.org/tribes/navajo
The infamous Long Walk of the Navajo Indians to Fort Sumner, New Mexico ...
www.logoi.com/notes/long_walk.html
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
Nanticoke Indians Annual Pow-Wow ... Nanticoke Indians Celebrate Heritage Photos: Members of the Nanticoke Indian tribe perform rituals on Sunday, Sept. 12, 1999, to bless the sacred ground they hold their Pow-Wow on each year. Each year, members of the Nanticoke Indians gather with the public off Route 24 near Millsboro for the tribe's annual Pow-Wow. Part of the two-day celebration of ...
www.sussexcountyonline.com/news/photos/powwow.html