The Turtle's Beating Heart
Page 17
“Of a total of 201”: Nichols and Hauptman, “Delaware,”
A former coach at Haskell: Castaneda, “Cliff McDonald Tells the Story.”
He was re-christened: “Linwood History.”
A woman from the Kansas: Gloria White, email message to the author, November 15, 2015.
After in Cold Blood: Truman Capote, In Cold Blood. New York: Random House, 1966.
It is identical: “Black Beaver,” Findagrave.com, http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=1210.
“The Retsingers deeded”: “Delaware Cemetery,” Eudora History.
On July 10, 2013: “Purchase of Property in Lawrence,” 1.
Over 70 percent: Norris, Vines, and Hoeffel, “American Indian and Alaska Native Population,” 20.
Prose writer Louis Owens: Owens, Mixedblood Messages, 150–51.
“As a young person”: Hogan, Woman Who Watches Over the World, 56.
In Oklahoma, a few miles: Mish, Oklahomeland, 101–24.
John D. Berry: Berry, “Mixed Blood.”
“One day the words”: Hogan, Woman Who Watches, 57.
Gerald Vizenor’s “fourth dimension”: Vizenor, Fugitive Poses, 167–81. Vizenor reviews his ideas about Indigenous transmotion, cartography, and survivance in this section of the book.
When Native and European: Magnusson and Palsson, Vinland Sagas.
My Cherokee friend Linda: Rodriguez, public reading, Oak Park Public Library.
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Few Delaware oral accounts remain from the earliest days. Names were Anglicized in the seventeenth century and after. Some of the early commentators, such as Reverend Peter Jones, were mixed-blood—his mother was Eastern Ojibwa.
“Abstract of Stock Stolen by Whites from the Delaware Tribe of Indians since the Treaty of 1854.” Pratt Papers, Kansas Historical Society Research Center at Topeka. Roll 9, beginning frame 391, October–December 1862. Lenape Delaware History. ftp://lenapedelawarehistory.net/mirror/stock_stolen.htm.
Adams, Richard C. Legends of the Delaware Indians and Picture Writing. Edited by Deborah Nichols. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1997.
Berry, John D. “Mixed Blood: Connecting Two Worlds.” Panel presentation, Returning the Gift Conference. Albuquerque. December 4, 2015.
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Bruner, Hazel C. Days to Remember: The Burns Community, 1864–1970. North Newton KS: Mennonite Press, 1970.
Buller, Curtis, ed. Can’t You Hear the Whistle Blowing? A History of Newton High School Basketball, 1900–1958 & 1979. Denver: Sid Gates, 2008.
Caron, Michael. “Tribe Has Historical Ties to Land.” Lawrence Journal-World, August 14, 2013. Delaware Tribe. http://delawaretribe.org/blog/2013/10/01/opinion-tribe-has-historical-ties-to-land/.
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Henry, Dianna. Email message to the author. December 19, 2011.
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Hobson, Geary. “The Folks Left Out of the Photographs.” In The People Who Stayed: Southeastern Indian Writing after Removal, edited by Geary Hobson, Janet McAdams, and Kathryn Walkiewicz. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2010.
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Jones, Peter. History of the Ojebway Indians with Especial Reference to Their Conversion to Christianity: With a Brief Memoir of the Writer by Peter Jones (Kahkewaquonaby); and Introductory Notice by G. Osborn. London: A. W. Bennett, 1861. https://openlibrary.org/books/OL7213189M/History_of_the_Ojebway_Indians.
“Linwood History.” United States School District 458. http://www.usd458.org/gen/blvs/Linwood_History_p44.html.
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Norris, Tina, Paula L. Vines, and Elizabeth M. Hoeffel. “American Indian and Alaska Native Population: 2010: Census Briefs.” U.S. Census Bureau. January 2012. http://www.census.gov/prod/cen2010/briefs/c2010br-10.pdf.
Orr, Gregory. Poetry as Survival. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2002.
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About Denise Low
Denise Low is an adjunct professor for the Master of Liberal Arts program at Baker University, former Kansas poet laureate, and former dean of humanities and arts at Haskell Indian Nations University. She is the author of numerous creative works, including Jackalope, Melange Block: Poems, Natural Theologies: Essays about Literature of the Middle West, and Words of a Prairie Alchemist: The Art of Prairie Literature.
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