Carl and Anne Braden Papers, 1928-2006

Container Title
Reel   1
Envelope 8
1. The Chippewa Indian Was Always Self-Supporting
2. Chippewa Dyes (Page 1 is missing)
3. The Indian as a Skilled Laborer
4. First Sawmills on the Bad River Reservation
5. Weaving: Woolen Fibres
6. Mat-weaving with Different Materials; Preparing the Ana-kunuc-kons (Bullrushes)
7. Tanning a Hide - An Actual Demonstration by Da-ba-sa-si-no-kwe (Cedar Root)
8. Farming among the Chippewa
9. Tobacco Cultivated on the Bad River Reservation
10. Picking Blueberries in Northern Michigan
11. Blueberrying Forty-Five Years Ago - Strange But True
12. Gathering Ginseng
13. Lodges
14. Fire-Making from Bewa-nug or Sa-ka-ta-gon
15. An Emergency Light
16. Torches Used by the Chippewa of Early Days
17. Birch Torch: How Made
18. Transportation of Fire or Io-ko-De
19. Birchbark Buckets Used for Cooking
20. Birchbark Buckets
21. Glue
22. Name-Kwani Bigiu - Resin or Gum: Method of Securing
23. Pitch
24. Wigus
25. How Baskets Were Made by Indians
26. How Indian Cradles Were Made and Why
27. A-gim-ug - Snow Shoes
28. How the Chippewa Made Soap
29. Indian Pipes and Pipestone
30. Canoes and How Constructed
31. Dugout or Boat
32. The Construction of a Canoe at Lac du Flambeau in 1923
33. March Notes
34. Maple Sugar Industry
35. Maple Sugar Making - Later Day Process
36. How Nokomis Did It
37. Salt
38. Wild Rice - Compilation
39. Wild Rice Project, Bad River Reservation, October, 1936, Odanah
40. Wild Rice Harvest on the Bad River Reservation, Season, 1937
41. Method of Cooking by the Camp Fire
42. Primitive Way of Cooking Foods