'Alice Cunningham Fletcher' (
March 15,
1838,
Havana -
April 6,
1923,
Washington, D.C.) was an American
ethnologist. She studied the remains of Indian civilization in the
Ohio and
Mississippi valleys, became a member of the
Archaeological Institute of America in
1879, and worked and lived with the
Omahas as a representative of the
Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology,
Harvard University.
In
1883 she was appointed special agent to allot lands to the Omaha tribes, in
1884 prepared and sent to the New Orleans Exposition an exhibit showing the progress of civilization among the Indians of North America in the quarter-century previous, in
1886 visited the
natives of Alaska and the
Aleutian Islands on a mission from the commissioner of education, and in
1887 was United States special agent in the distribution of lands among the
Winnebagoes and
Nez Perces. She was made assistant in ethnology at the Peabody Museum in
1882, and received the Thaw fellowship in
1891; was president of the
Anthropological Society of Washington and of the
American Folklore Society, and vice-president of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science; and, working through the
Womans National Indian Association, introduced a system of making small loans to Indians, wherewith they might buy land and houses.
In
1888 she published ''Indian Education and Civilization'', a special report of the
Bureau of Education. In
1898 at the Congress of Musicians held at Omaha during the Trans-Mississippi Exposition she read several essays upon the songs of the North American Indians in illustration of which a number of Omaha Indians sang their native melodies. Out of this grew her ''Indian Story and Song from North America'' (
1900), illustrating a stage of development antecedent to that in which culture music appeared.
In
1905, she became the first woman president of the American Folklore Society. In
1911 she published ''The Omaha Tribe'' together with
Francis La Flesche, an Omaha Indian, which is still considered to be the definitive work on the subject.
External links
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Camping With the Sioux: Fieldwork Diary of Alice Cunningham Fletcher
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References
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