Carl and Anne Braden Papers, 1928-2006

Container Title
Other Essays (Envelopes 14-17 and unlisted essays)
Reel   2
Envelope 14
Indian Mythology
Maquaday
Legend of Bug-wudj-inini
Ogeemageerzshig (This item was listed on the envelope but was missing when the microfilm was produced.)
Maquadayaquud
Chased Away (This item was listed on the envelope but was missing when the microfilm was produced.)
Windigo and Wabadow (This item was listed on the envelope but was missing when the microfilm was produced.)
Maquday (This item was listed on the envelope but was missing when the microfilm was produced.)
The Legend of the Birch and Maple Tree
Why the Rabbit Has a Split Nose
The Elusive Badisa Bido
Wenabosho
Pete's Encounter with a Wild Cat
The Height of Styles (This item was listed on the envelope but was missing when the microfilm was produced.)
An Indian Humorist
Thrilling Experience of an Early Mail Carrier
Reel   2
Envelope 15
Religious Beliefs of the Chippewa
The Manito, or the Munido
Initiation in the Midewiwin Society
Medicine Men
The Indian Doctor
Indian Prophecies
Dreams
Unbelief
The Midewe Cross The Mide Cross
The Indian Fire Ball (2 versions) (This item was listed on the envelope but was missing when the microfilm was produced.)
Fire Ball
The Fire Walker
The Fire Ball at Cloquet, Minnesota
Djisakiwin (Shake Lodge Ceremonies)
Shake Lodge, or Dji-sa-kan
Messages through the Djisaki Lodge
The Skeptic and the Djisakid (This item was listed on the envelope but was missing when the microfilm was produced.)
The Fatal Stag Feast
(Significance of) Design on Chippewa Bead Work
Reel   2
Envelope 16
How the Early Indians Reckoned Time and Weather
The Fisherman's Wind Indicator
Chippewa Signs
How the Indians Predicted Winter
Herbs and their Uses
Gathering Medicine and Offering of Thanks
Recollections of Joe Stoddard
Widow's Traditional Custom
Blueberry Picking among the Chippewas
Lye, Tallow, and Lake Sand as Cleansers
Pictured Rocks
On Early Fishing
Wild Rice Industry
We-gub - Twine and Thread
The Origin of the Indian Lacrosse Game
Facts about Indians
Chippewa-Sioux Feud - Origin
A Chippewa Indian Tells about the Supi Indians
Alexander Nevieux
Chief Kish-ket-tuh-wug
Indian Burial Customs
Tin (This item was listed on the envelope but was missing when the microfilm was produced.)
Iron Ore Deposits on Bad River Reservation - Tom 0'Connor - Copper Mines - The Fisher
Wabado
John Condecon
Reel   2
Envelope 17
How the Indians Lived before the Coming of the White Man
Indian Souvenirs
Requirements of a Guest at a Feast
Chippewa Belief on Death of an Infant
How Indian Hominy Is Made
Tainted Food
Reel   2
Articles unlisted by Sister M. Valentina (No envelope #)
Djisakiwin Among the Bois Fort Chippewa
Feast for the Dead
Types of Dances Practiced by the Chippewas of Lake Superior
The Pow Wow [and other dances]
Eating and Cooking Utensils
Methods of Cooking by the Camp Fire
Foods
Wild Rice
Burial Customs [fragment]
Origin of Long Island
Bewitched Indian
Medicine Men
Health on the Bad River Reservation and the Uses of Medicinal Herbs [fragment]
A Mysterious Ailment Cured
Evil Medicine Men
Bad Medicine Man's Fragility
Preserve the Historical Background of the Indian
My Experience with Nananda-Wi-Owe-Winini (Medicine Man)
The Wrath of a Juggler [?]
Zinso-O-Win - Protective Medicine
Records of the Medicine Lodge
Medicine - Good and Bad
Have the Chippewa Indians Always Known Bread as Lugelate?
How the Different Kinds of Food and Beverages Were Prepared
Preparation of Indian Foods
Indian Foods and Beverages [a list]
Chippewa Methods of Hunting and Preparing Game and Fish
Untitled article on same subject
Indian Dances [of] the Chippewa Indians [a list]
Indian Dances Among the Chippewa Indians [a list]
The Pow-wow
Origin of the Pow-wow
Chippewa Dances
The Calumet Dance
Invitations to Celebrations Held at Lake Nebagaman and Balsam Lake, Wisconsin
Lac Courtes Oreilles Reservation
Peter Lemieux - Engineer
What was the Age of Mike James' Father When He Died?
Little Girl's Point
Canadian Rabbit Skin Blankets
My Trip to Washington, by Dan Morrison
History of the John Morrison Family
The Early Home of John R. Morrison
The First Real Indian Seen
Indian Dwellings
Log Houses
Why the Northern Indians Have No Written Records
Early Settlement of Iron River
My First Visit on an Indian Reservation
Ottawas
Chief Anaquadoons' Peace Pipe
Log Houses, and Mike James [two articles on same page]
Odanah's Old Settlers and Log Houses
Reminiscences Concerning Odanah's Oldest Settlers and Log Houses
The Federal Government and the Indian
Relationship in the Chippewa Indian Tribe
Fire Making from Bewa-Nug or Sa-Ka-Ta-Gon
Ojibway - Various Spellings
Food Substitutes in Times of Scarcity
History of John Bear - Noted Lacrosse Player
Names of Odanah Chippewa Who Fought in the Civil War [a list]
Frank Scott, Wa-Mi-Ti-Go-Shi