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During the summer and fall of 1938 Mary Inez Hilger, a sister of the Order of St. Benedict, lived on the White Earth Indian Reservation in northwestern Minnesota while she gathered data about housing conditions. Her work portrays both the traditional lifeways of 150 Chippewa families and the adaptations they made at a time of tremendous cultural change.
In a series of interviews, she collected personal stories and a wealth of material about living conditions, social life, and material culture on the reservation. Her research, commissioned by the Bureau of Indian Affairs as part of a survey of the Chippewa reservations in Minnesota, became the basis for her dissertation in social science, first published in 1939.
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Chippewa families: a social study of White Earth Reservation, 1938
1998, Minnesota Historical Society Press
in English
0873513525 9780873513524
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Includes bibliographical references and index.
Originally published: Washington, D.C. : Catholic University of America Press, 1939.
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