Traditions of the North American Indians

Traditions of the North American Indians

by James Athearn Jones
Traditions of the North American Indians

Traditions of the North American Indians

by James Athearn Jones

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Overview

The first of three volumes of collected Native American folktales or oral traditions.

Born in Massachusetts in 1790, James Athearn Jones grew up with Native American culture all around him. His childhood nursemaid was from the Gay Head tribe, and his household was frequented by other local Indigenous people of all ages. He enjoyed hearing their folktales. As an adult, he traveled the continent and sought to preserve and collect these stories in a book.

In this first of three volumes, Jones shares eighteen captivating folktales from the North American Indians he encountered in his life. Discover such stories as “The Man of Ashes,” “Pomatare, the Flying Beaver,” and “The Resurrection of the Bison.” This enriching and enlightening collection serves as a fascinating means to explore some of the history and culture of Native Americans.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781504078597
Publisher: Open Road Media
Publication date: 11/01/2022
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 479
Sales rank: 25,005
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

James Athearn Jones (1790–1853) made several voyages to the West Indies, and subsequently became a teacher and an editor in Philadelphia. He lived in England from 1829–1831, and edited papers in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1846, and Buffalo. New York, in 1851. He published a collection of Native American folklore, Traditions of the North American Indians. Many of the legends were obtained from the Jones’s nurse, an Indigenous woman of the Gay Head tribe in Massachusetts.

Read an Excerpt


THE DAUGHTERS OF THE SUN. In the southern part of the lands which were once occupied by the Creeks, the Walkullas, and other tribes of Indians, lies the marsh Ouaqua- phenogan. On one side of it is the river Flint; on the other, the Oakmulgee. This marsh is of very great extent, so great that it takes several moons to travel around it. In the wet season, and when the great rains of the southerp sky are falling upon the earth, the whole surface of this marsh appears a vast lake. It is interspersed here and there with large islands and knolls of rich land, one of which, the largest island, situated in the centre of the lake, the present generation of Creeks represent to be a most blissful spot of earth. They term this little island, also, Ouaqua- phenogan, and relate the following tradition of its discovery, which I will repeat to my brother. Once upon a time, many ages ago, there were four young hunters in the nation of the Creeks, and these four young hunters upon the morning of a beautiful day in summer took their hunting speare, and their bows and arrows, and repairedto the forest. The hunting-ground to which they directed their steps lay upon the skirt of this marsh. It was the dry season of the year, and the surface of the lake was again a bog or morass. The four hunters, finding a narrow and crooked path, leading over the waste from the high grounds above the morass, determined, with a view to ascertain if no kind of game dwelt upon it, to thread this path for a short distance, but by no means to venture so far as to lose sight of the beacons which should guide their feet back to their village. They knew that very many hunters had been lost on this marsh, that there were manywho had lived to tell the story of their bewilderment, and many who, never having returned from...

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