More Than Moccasins: A Kid's Activity Guide to Traditional North American Indian Life
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More Than Moccasins - Laurie Carlson
EVERYDAY LIFE
Long ago, Indian families had everyday lives much like we do today. Homes had to be built and kept tidy. Treasures and tools had to be stored away carefully. Food had to be cooked, and clothing wore out and had to be replaced. People found different ways to do these things, depending upon what the weather and land was like where they lived.
Whether they lived in traveling camps or large villages, aunts, uncles, cousins, and grandparents all lived nearby; an Indian child was never lonely.
Fast Fact A good hunter could get 10 arrows in the air before one had fallen to the ground.
Tepee
The Indians on the Plains hunted the huge herds of buffalo that roamed the grasslands. They used the meat, hides, and bones to make almost everything they needed. The buffalo didn’t stay in one place but roamed around looking for grass to eat. The people had to follow them, so the Indians built portable houses that could be moved quickly and easily.
The Dakota people called their beautiful portable homes tepees. They made them from buffalo skins held up by poles. It took between 10 and 40 hides for one tepee, depending upon how wealthy the family was. New tepees were made in the spring to replace old ones that had worn out.
The outside of a tepee was decorated with paint. The top could be held open with poles to let smoke from the fire escape or it could be closed to keep out the rain. In the summer, the bottom could be rolled up to let a cool breeze pass through.
Each spring, all the members of a tribe gathered at one great camp. A council tepee was built in the center and the different bands or family groups put their tepees in a circle around it. Each band had a certain section of the circle so that people could find each other easily. A person would always know where to find an old friend because his or her tepee would be in the same place each spring. After all, they didn’t have street signs or house numbers, and these great camps had hundreds of tepees and thousands of people!
Fast Fact The Crow tribe had some tepee lodges so large that 40 men could dine together in one.
When women gathered together to work on a new tepee, they enjoyed a special feast. It took about a day for them to make a new one. When it was time to move the tepees, the women did the work, too. In contests, two Indian women could put up a tepee in less than three minutes! When it was time to move, the tepee was rolled up and tied to a travois,
along with the other things to be moved. The travois was made out of two poles that were fastened to the sides of a horse, a person, or a dog and pulled along the ground.
Good Idea Some families made small dog house
tepees for their pet dog. When it was time to move on, the dog’s tepee was taken down and tied onto a travois that the dog pulled to the next camp.
Kids’ Stuff Mothers made toy tepees for their daughters to play with. That’s how a girl learned to take down and set up her family’s home.
Native Wisdom A tepee door always faced east so that the wind blew against the back of the tepee, and the rising sun warmed and woke the sleeping family.
You can make a toy tepee, or an entire encampment!
MATERIALS
Bowl or plate
Construction paper
Markers, crayons, or paint
Scissors
Tape
The camp was set up around the council tepee.
Draw a large circle of paper by tracing around the rim of a bowl or plate. Cut the circle out and then cut it in half.
Decorate half the circle with interesting, pretty designs. Roll it into a cone shape and tape or glue the ends together. Cut a slit and fold back the door flaps. Make some clay people to live inside. (Use Play Clay, page 69.)
New tepees were white, but darkened gradually at the top from smoke. Use brown crayon to darken the top part.
Make several to create a whole spring camp!
What kind of furniture was inside a tepee? Only simple, lightweight things that could be carried from camp to camp. Tree boughs were piled and covered with hides for beds.
Use a bowl to trace a large circle.
Roll into a cone and tape. Fold back the door flaps.
Cut the circle in half.
Decorate and build an entire village.
Backrest
Backrests were made by weaving willow branches together. Furs were piled on top so that they were comfortable for people relaxing in their special places in the rear of the tepee and behind the fire.
MATERIALS
Construction paper
3 toothpicks
Scissors
Markers
Glue
You can make a tiny backrest for your tepee by cutting paper in the shape shown. Decorate it with markers and fold it. Use the toothpicks for the supports. Poke the narrow ends of the toothpicks into the top of the backrest. Glue 2 of the toothpicks securely to the back of the backrest. Spread the third toothpick back for support, like a tripod.
Good Manners People were careful to never walk in front of someone sitting in the tepee. It was a very rude thing to do. Instead, the people who were seated leaned forward so that others could pass behind them.
Good Manners The Sioux people signaled when visitors were welcome. If a neighbor’s tepee flap was open, a visitor was welcome. If the flap was down, a visitor had to rattle it a bit and wait to be invited in. If the flap was closed and 2 sticks were crossed over the door, no visitors were welcome.
Fast Fact All chiefs had runners or criers who ran through the camp announcing the chief’s decision to move camp. When the chief’s tepee started to be taken down, it signaled everyone to begin. A visitor to an early Sioux camp saw some 600 tepees taken down in only a few minutes.
Wigwam
Many tribes lived in villages that stayed in one place. They didn’t travel as much as the Plains tribes. People in the Great Lakes area, the East, and California built houses and lived near lakes or rivers. Many of them planted gardens and sold the vegetables to explorers and fur traders. Wigwam-type houses were built by Indians in many areas across the country. They used young trees that could be cut to make poles that bent easily into the framework. The poles were covered with whatever was available—peeled bark, woven grass mats, mud, twigs, and branches.
Indians built the frame of the wigwam by burying the ends of the saplings in the ground, bending them, and then lashing them together with strips of bark or hide. The covering was tied on in bundles. A hole was left in the roof near the center so that smoke from the fire in the center pit could escape.
Cut 1-inch strips.
Tape 2 strips together.
Tape 3 strips to the loop to make a frame.
Tape it into a loop.
Cover with a coffee filter.
MATERIALS
Sheet of paper, 8½ by 11 inches
Coffee filter
Brown paper bag
Scissors
Glue
Tape
Watercolor paints or crayons
Cut the paper into 1-inch strips. Tape 2 of the strips together to make a long piece. Tape it into a loop to use as the base. Tape 3 strips to make a frame. Use paint or crayons to make the coffee filter brown, green, or tan to match whatever you want to cover it with. Glue it over the framework. Cut a door opening, and fold it back. Glue on leaves, grass clippings, or cut paper strips to cover the coffee filter with a natural-looking roof.
You can also cover your wigwam with torn strips of brown paper bag, dipped in glue. Let it dry hard.
Glue grass or straw to the coffee filter.
You can also dip torn strips of paper in paste and layer them.
Good Manners In tepees and wigwams, every family member had a special place to sit or sleep. Usually the father or the eldest adults sat in the honored place in the rear, behind the fire. This was a nice spot because no draft blew from the door and it was the least smoky place to sit.
Pueblo Village
The desert dwellers in the Southwest created beautiful and practical homes from mud. They formed walls out of building blocks made from a mixture of clay, water, and straw and covered with smooth layers of mud. This kind of house was perfect for the hot, dry climate in the Southwest.
Early explorers called the mud bricks adobe
(uh-dough-bee), a Spanish word. These adobe buildings were sometimes like big apartment buildings. The Indians built them on top of a flat hill so that they could watch for enemies. When they built the first level, they used logs as beams for the ceiling. They covered the logs with layers of grass and twigs and a thick layer of adobe mud. When it was dry, the next level was built right on top of the first. Each level had several rooms. A large family would live on one level, with grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins living in the many rooms. A different family lived on the level above or below. There was a platform around each level—a deck—where ladders were set.
To keep enemies from getting in, the first-floor rooms had no doors. Those who lived there climbed ladders and went inside through a hole in the roof. When enemies were coming, the people pulled all the ladders inside.
You can make a single pueblo house from a shoe box or join someone else to make a large village from many boxes.
MATERIALS
Cardboard boxes in various sizes
Moss or green sponges
Cornmeal, salt, or sand
Black construction paper
Twigs or popsicle sticks
Tan tempera or latex house paint
Craft glue (or a hot glue gun, for grown-up use)
Scissors
Arrange the boxes with the larger ones on the bottom. Glue them together in position. It is easier if you have a large, flat cardboard base to attach them to so that you can pick up and move the village easily. You can add desert plants by gluing pieces of moss or green sponges to the base.
Use pointed scissors to cut roof openings here and there. Since, the pueblo people built the first story without doorways, they had to climb ladders and go inside through doorways in the roof. When an enemy approached, they could pull up the ladders to keep the enemy from getting inside.
Paint