
audiobook
by Waheenee, Gilbert Livingstone Wilson
WAHEENEE AN INDIAN GIRL’S STORY
FOREWORD
A LITTLE INDIAN GIRL
WINTER CAMP
THE BUFFALO-SKIN CAP
STORY TELLING
LIFE IN AN EARTH LODGE
CHILDHOOD GAMES AND BELIEFS
KINSHIP, CLAN COUSINS
INDIAN DOGS
A young Hidatsa girl’s voice carries us back to the riverbanks of the early 1900s, where earth lodges rose beside the Knife River and the rhythm of prairie life shaped every day. She recalls the ceremony that gave her the name Waheenee‑wea—Buffalo‑Bird Woman—a prayer for health and good fortune that followed her through childhood sickness and the hardships of a community still healing from a devastating smallpox winter. Through her eyes we glimpse the practical concerns of gathering firewood, planting corn, and the intimate rituals that bound her family together.
The narrative weaves personal memories with broader cultural lessons, offering vivid portraits of winter camps, games, kinship ties, and the seasonal cycles that defined Hidatsa existence. Illustrated by the author’s brother, the pictures echo historic sketches while bringing the stories to life for modern listeners. Together, the oral recollections and visual details create an intimate portrait of a people’s resilience, tradition, and the gentle wisdom passed from one generation to the next.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (218K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United States: Webb Publishing Company, 1921.
Credits
MFR, Robert Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2022-01-09
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

d. 1932
A Hidatsa elder remembered for preserving traditional knowledge, she shared vivid firsthand accounts of village life, farming, food, and family on the northern Plains. Her words have become an important record of Hidatsa culture in the nineteenth century.
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1868–1930
A Presbyterian minister turned ethnographer, he is remembered for carefully recording Hidatsa life through the voices of Buffalo Bird Woman, Henry Wolf Chief, and Edward Goodbird. His books still matter for readers interested in Native history, agriculture, and everyday life on the northern plains.
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