<--- Back to Details
First PageDocument Content
Wisconsin / Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa / Fond du Lac Indian Reservation / Fond du Lac / Lake Superior Chippewa / Ojibwe people / Minnesota Chippewa Tribe / Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe / Ojibwe / First Nations / Minnesota
Date: 2014-01-28 12:13:07
Wisconsin
Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa
Fond du Lac Indian Reservation
Fond du Lac
Lake Superior Chippewa
Ojibwe people
Minnesota Chippewa Tribe
Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe
Ojibwe
First Nations
Minnesota

Nahgahchiwanong Dibahjimowinnan April[removed]Far end of the Great Lake)

Add to Reading List

Source URL: www.fdlrez.com

Download Document from Source Website

File Size: 2,99 MB

Share Document on Facebook

Similar Documents

Educator Guide for GradesAn Ojibwe Narrative: Reconnections to Place A partnership of the Minnesota Indian Affairs Council and the Minnesota Humanities Center

Educator Guide for GradesAn Ojibwe Narrative: Reconnections to Place A partnership of the Minnesota Indian Affairs Council and the Minnesota Humanities Center

DocID: 1vkrC - View Document

OJIBWE AND ENGLISH BILINGUAL SIGNS ON MADELINE ISLAND Madeline Island is often called the spiritual home of the Ojibwe people, who have lived here since hundreds of years before the first arrival of European fur traders

OJIBWE AND ENGLISH BILINGUAL SIGNS ON MADELINE ISLAND Madeline Island is often called the spiritual home of the Ojibwe people, who have lived here since hundreds of years before the first arrival of European fur traders

DocID: 1uuAH - View Document

Red Cliff Early Childhood CenterProgram Purpose, Goals and ObjectivesMission Statement Traditional Ojibwe values will guide our efforts to promote the spiritual, emotional, physical, and cognitive w

Red Cliff Early Childhood CenterProgram Purpose, Goals and ObjectivesMission Statement Traditional Ojibwe values will guide our efforts to promote the spiritual, emotional, physical, and cognitive w

DocID: 1udRj - View Document

Microsoft Word - Ojibwe Treaties.doc

Microsoft Word - Ojibwe Treaties.doc

DocID: 1u7Ff - View Document

aking the purchase, preserving the tradition. Prior to European contact, Ojibwe tribal fishermen used large birchbark canoes and gill nets constructed from twisted and knotted strands of willow bark to harvest fish from

aking the purchase, preserving the tradition. Prior to European contact, Ojibwe tribal fishermen used large birchbark canoes and gill nets constructed from twisted and knotted strands of willow bark to harvest fish from

DocID: 1u4fk - View Document