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HOW THE
BLACKFOOT LIVED |
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Blackfoot
Lodge Tales, by George Bird Grinnell, [1892] |
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The
primitive clothing of the Blackfeet was made of the dressed skins of
certain animals. Women seldom wore a head covering. Men, however, in
winter generally used a cap made of the skin of some small animal, such
as the antelope, wolf, badger, or coyote. As the skin from the head of
these animals often formed part of the cap, the ears being left on, it
made a very odd-looking head-dress. Sometimes a cap was made of the skin
of some large bird, such as the sage-hen, duck, owl, or swan. |
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The
ancient dress of the women was a shirt of cow skin with long sleeves
tied at the wrist, a skirt reaching half-way from knees to ankles, and
leggings tied above the knees, with sometimes a supporting string
running from the belt to the leggings. In more modern times, this was
modified, and a woman's dress consisted of a gown or smock, reaching
from the neck to below the knees. There were no sleeves, the armholes
being provided with top coverings, a sort of cape or flap, which reached
to the elbows. |
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Leggings
were, of course, still worn. They reached to the knee and were generally
made, as was the gown, of the tanned skins of elk, deer, sheep, or
antelope. Moccasins for winter use were made of buffalo robe, and of
tanned buffalo cow skin for summer wear. The latter were always made
with parfleche soles, which greatly increased their durability, and were
often ornamented over the instep or toes with a three-pronged figure,
worked in porcupine quills or beads, the three prongs representing, it
is said, the three divisions or tribes of the Nation.
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The men
wore a shirt, breech-clout, leggings which reached to the thighs, and
moccasins. In winter both men and women wore a robe of tanned buffalo
skin, and sometimes of beaver. In summer a lighter robe was worn, made
of cow skin or buckskin, from which the hair had been removed. Both
sexes wore belts, which supported and confined the clothing, and to
which were attached knife-sheaths and other useful articles. |
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Necklaces
and ear-rings were worn by all, and were made of shells, bone, wood, and
the teeth and claws of animals. Elk tushes were highly prized, and were
used for ornamenting women's dresses. A gown profusely decorated with
them was worth two good horses. Eagle feathers were used by the men to
make head-dresses and to ornament shields and also weapons. Small
bunches of owl or grouse feathers were sometimes tied to the scalp
locks. It is doubtful if the women ever took particular care of their
hair. |
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The men,
however, spent a great deal of time brushing, braiding, and ornamenting
their scalp locks. Their hair was usually worn in two braids, one on
each side of the head. Less frequently, four braids were made, one
behind and in front of each ear. Sometimes, the hair of the forehead was
cut off square, and brushed straight up; and not infrequently it was
made into a huge topknot and wound with otter fur. Often a slender lock,
wound with brass wire or braided, hung down from one side of the
forehead over the face. |
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As a
rule, the men are tall, straight, and well formed. Their features are
regular, the eyes being large and well set, and the nose generally
moderately large, straight, and thin. Their chests are splendidly
developed. The women are quite tall for their sex, but, as a rule, not
so good-looking as the men. Their hands are large, coarse, and knotted
by hard labor; and they early become wrinkled and careworn. They
generally have splendid constitutions. I have known them to resume work
a day after childbirth; and once, when travelling, I knew a woman to
halt, give birth to a child, and catch up with the camp inside of four
hours.
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As a
rule, children are hardy and vigorous. They are allowed to do about as
they please from the time they are able to walk. I have often seen them
playing in winter in the snow, and spinning tops on the ice, barefooted
and half-naked. Under such conditions, those which have feeble
constitutions soon die. Only the hardiest reach maturity and old age. |
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It is
said that very long ago the people made houses of mud, sticks, and
stones. It is not known what was their size or shape, and no traces of
them are known to have been found. For a very long time, the lodge seems
to have been their only dwelling. In ancient times, before they had
knives of metal, stones were used to hold down the edges of the lodge,
to keep it from being blown away. These varied in size from six inches
to a foot or more in diameter. Everywhere on the prairie, one may now
see circles of these stones, and, within these circles, the smaller
ones, which surrounded the fireplace. Some of them have lain so long
that only the tops now project above the turf, and undoubtedly many of
them are buried out of sight. |
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Lodges
were always made of tanned cow skin, nicely cut and sewn together, so as
to form an almost perfect cone. At the top were two large flaps, called
ears, which were kept extended or closed, according to the direction and
strength of the wind, to create a draft and keep the lodge free from
smoke. The lodge covering was supported by light, straight pine or
spruce poles, about eighteen of which were required. Twelve cow skins
made a lodge about fourteen feet in diameter at the base, and ten feet
high. I have heard of a modern one which contained forty skins. It was
over thirty feet in diameter, and was so heavy that the skins were sewn
in two pieces which buttoned together. |
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An
average-sized dwelling of this kind contained eighteen skins and was
about sixteen feet in diameter. The lower edge of the lodge proper was
fastened, by wooden pegs, to within an inch or two of the ground.
Inside, a lining, made of brightly painted cow skin, reached from the
ground to a height of five or six feet. An air space of the thickness of
the lodge poles—two or three inches—was thus left between the lining and
the lodge covering, and the cold air, rushing up through it from the
outside, made a draft, which aided the ears in freeing the lodge of
smoke. The door was three or four feet high and was covered by a flap of
skin, which hung down on the outside. Thus made, with plenty of buffalo
robes for seats and bedding, and a good stock of firewood, a lodge was
very comfortable, even in the coldest weather. |
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It was
not uncommon to decorate the outside of the lodge with buffalo tails and
brightly painted pictures of animals. Inside, the space around was
partitioned off into couches, or seats, each about six feet in length.
At the foot and head of every couch, a mat, made of straight, peeled
willow twigs, fastened side by side, was suspended on a tripod at an
angle of forty-five degrees, so that between the couches spaces were
left like an inverted V, making convenient places to store articles
which were not in use. |
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The owner
of the lodge always occupied the seat or couch at the back of the lodge,
directly opposite the door-way. The places on his right were occupied by
his wives and daughters; though sometimes a Blackfoot had so many wives
that they occupied the whole lodge. The places on his left were reserved
for his sons and visitors. When a visitor entered a lodge, he was
assigned a seat according to his rank — the nearer to the host, the
greater the honor. |
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Bows were
generally made of ash wood, which grows east of the mountains toward the
Sand Hills. When for any reason they could not obtain ash, they used the
wood of the choke-cherry tree, but this had neither strength nor spring
enough to be of much service. I have been told also that sometimes they
used hazel wood for bows. |
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Arrows
were made of shoots of the sarvis berry wood, which was straight, very
heavy, and not brittle. They were smoothed and straightened by a stone
implement. The grooves were made by pushing the shafts through a rib or
other flat bone in which had been made a hole, circular except for one
or two projections on the inside. These projections worked out the
groove. The object of these grooves is said to have been to allow the
blood to flow freely. Each man marked his arrows by painting them, or by
some special combination of colored feathers. The arrow heads were of
two kinds,—barbed slender points for war, and barbless for hunting.
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Knives
were originally made of stone, as were war clubs, mauls, and some of the
scrapers for fleshing and graining hides. Some of the flint knives were
long, others short. A stick was fitted to them, forming a wooden handle.
The handles of mauls and war clubs were usually made of green sticks
fitted as closely as possible into a groove made in the stone, the whole
being bound together by a covering of hide put on green, tightly fitted
and strongly sewed. This, as it shrunk in drying, bound the different
parts of the implement together in the strongest possible manner. Short,
heavy spears were used, the points being of stone or bone, barbed. |
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I have
heard no explanation among the Blackfoot of the origin of fire. In
ancient times, it was obtained by means of fire sticks, as described
elsewhere. The starting of the spark with these sticks is said to have
been hard work. At almost their first meeting with the whites, they
obtained flints and steels, and learned how to use them. |
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In
ancient times — in the days of fire sticks and even later, within the
memory of men now living — fire used to be carried from place to place
in a "fire horn." This was a buffalo horn slung by a string over the
shoulder like a powder horn. The horn was lined with moist, rotten wood,
and the open end had a wooden stopper or plug fitted to it. On leaving
camp in the morning, the man who carried the horn took from the fire a
small live coal and put it in the horn, and on this coal placed a piece
of punk, and then plugged up the horn with the stopper.
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The punk
smoldered in this almost air-tight chamber, and, in the course of two or
three hours, the man looked at it, and if it was nearly consumed, put
another piece of punk in the horn. The first young men who reached the
appointed camping ground would gather two or three large piles of wood
in different places, and as soon as someone who carried a fire horn
reached camp, he turned out his spark at one of these piles of wood, and
a little blowing and nursing gave a blaze which started the fire.
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The other
fires were kindled from this first one, and when the women reached camp
and had put the lodges up, they went to these fires, and got coals with
which to start those in their lodges. This custom of borrowing coals
persisted up to the last days of the buffalo, and indeed may even be
noticed still. |
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The punk
here mentioned is a fungus, which grows on the birch tree. The Indians
used to gather this in large quantities and dry it. It was very abundant
at the Touchwood Hills (hence the name) on Beaver Creek, a tributary of
the Saskatchewan from the south. |
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The
Blackfeet made buckets, cups, basins, and dishes from the lining of the
buffalo's paunch. This was torn off in large pieces, and was stretched
over a flattened willow or cherry hoop at the bottom and top. These
hoops were sometimes inside and sometimes outside the bucket or dish. In
the latter case, the hoop at the bottom was often sewed to the paunch,
which came down over it, double on the outside, the needle holes being
pitched with gum or tallow. The hoop at the upper edge was also sewed to
the paunch, and a rawhide bail passed under it, to carry it by. |
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These
buckets were shaped somewhat like our wooden ones, and were of different
sizes, some of them holding four or five gallons. They were more or less
flexible, and when carried in a pack, they could be flattened down like
a crush hat, and so took up but little room. If set on the ground when
full, they would stand up for a while, but as they soon softened and
fell down, they were usually hung up by the bail on a little tripod.
Cups were made in the same way as buckets, but on a smaller scale and
without the bail. Of course, nothing hot could be placed in these
vessels. |
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It is
doubtful if the Blackfoot ever made any pottery or basket ware. They,
however, made bowls and kettles of stone. There is an ancient children's
song which consists of a series of questions asked an elk, and its
replies to the same. In one place, the questioner sings, "Elk, what is
your bowl (or dish)?" and the elk answers, "Ok-wi-tok-so-ka," stone
bowl. On this point, Wolf Calf, a very old man, states that in early
days the Blackfoot sometimes boiled their meat in a stone bowl made out
of a hard clayey rock. 1 Choosing a fragment of the right size and
shape, they would pound it with another heavier rock, dealing light
blows until a hollow had been made in the top. |
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This
hollow was made deeper by pounding and grinding; and when it was deep
enough, they put water in it, and set it on the fire, and the water
would boil. These pots were strong and would last a long time. I do not
remember that any other tribe of Plains Indians made such stone bowls or
mortars, though, of course, they were commonly made, and in singular
perfection, by the Pacific Coast tribes; and I have known of rare cases
in which basalt mortars and small soapstone ollas have been found on the
central plateau of the continent in southern Wyoming. These articles,
however, had no doubt been obtained by trade from Western tribes. |
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Serviceable ladles and spoons were made of wood and of buffalo and
mountain sheep horn. Basins or flat dishes were sometimes made of
mountain sheep horn, boiled, split, and flattened, and also of split
buffalo horn, fitted and sewn together with sinew, making a flaring,
saucer-shaped dish. These were used as plates or eating dishes. Of
course, they leaked a little, for the joints were not tight. Wooden
bowls and dishes were made from knots and protuberances of trees, dug
out and smoothed by fire and the knife or by the latter alone. |
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It is not
known that these people ever made spears, hooks, or other implements for
capturing fish. They appear never to have used boats of any kind, not
even "bull boats." Their highest idea of navigation was to lash together
a few sticks or logs, on which to transport their possessions across a
river. |
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Red,
brown, yellow, and white paints were made by burning clays of these
colors, which were then pulverized and mixed with a little grease. Black
paint was made of charred wood. |
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Bags and
sacks were made of parfleche, usually ornamented with buckskin fringe,
and painted with various designs in bright colors. Figures having sharp
angles are most common. |
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The diet
of the Blackfoot was more varied than one would think. Large quantities
of sarvis berries (Amelanchier alnifolia) were gathered whenever there
was a crop (which occurs every other year), dried, and stored for future
use. These were gathered by women, who collected the branches laden with
ripe fruit, and beat them over a robe spread upon the ground.
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Choke-cherries were also gathered when ripe, and pounded up, stones and
all. A bushel of the fruit, after being pounded up and dried, was
reduced to a very small quantity. This food was sometimes eaten by
itself, but more often was used to flavor soups and to mix with
pemmican. Bull berries (Shepherdia argentea) were a favorite fruit, and
were gathered in large quantities, as was also the white berry of the
red willow. This last is an exceedingly bitter, acrid fruit, and to the
taste of most white men wholly unpleasant and repugnant. The Blackfeet,
however, are very fond of it; perhaps because it contains some property
necessary to the nourishment of the body, which is lacking in their
every-day food. |
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The camas
root, which grows abundantly in certain localities on the east slope of
the Rockies, was also dug, cooked, and dried. The bulbs were roasted in
pits, as by the Indians on the west side of the Rocky Mountains, the
Kalispells, and others. It is gathered while in the bloom—June 15 to
July 15. A large pit is dug in which a hot fire is built, the bottom
being first lined with flat stones. After keeping up this fire for
several hours, until the stones and earth are thoroughly heated, the
coals and ashes are removed. The pit is then lined with grass, and is
filled almost to the top with camas bulbs. Over these, grass is laid,
then twigs, and then earth to a depth of four inches. On this a fire is
built, which is kept up for from one to three days, according to the
quantity of the bulbs in the pit. |
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When the
pit is opened, the small children gather about it to suck the syrup,
which has collected on the twigs and grass, and which is very sweet. The
fresh-roasted camas tastes something like a roasted chestnut, with a
little of the flavor of the sweet potato. After being cooked, the roots
are spread out in the sun to dry, and are then put in sacks to be stored
away. Sometimes a few are pounded up with sarvis berries, and dried. |
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Bitter-root is gathered, dried, and boiled with a little sugar. It is a
slender root, an inch or two long and as thick as a goose quill, white
in color, and looking like short lengths of spaghetti. It is very
starchy. In the spring, a certain root called mats was eaten in great
quantities. This plant was known to the early French employees of the
Hudson's Bay and American Fur Companies as pomme blanche (Psoralea
esculenta). |
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All parts
of such animals as the buffalo, elk, deer, etc., were eaten, save only
the lungs, gall, and one or two other organs. A favorite way of eating
the paunch or stomach was in the raw state. Liver, too, was sometimes
eaten raw. The unborn calf of a fresh-killed animal, especially buffalo,
was considered a great delicacy. The meat of this, when boiled, is
white, tasteless, and insipid. The small intestines of the buffalo were
sometimes dried, but more often were stuffed with long, thin strips of
meat. During the stuffing process, the entrail was turned inside out,
thus confining with the meat the sweet white fat that covers the
intestine. The next step was to roast it a little, after which the ends
were tied to prevent the escape of the juices, and it was thoroughly
boiled in water. This is a very great delicacy, and when properly
prepared is equally appreciated by whites and Indians. |
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As a
rule, there were but two ways of cooking meat — boiling and roasting. If
roasted, it was thoroughly cooked; but if boiled, it was only left in
the water long enough to lose the red color, say five or ten minutes.
Before they got kettles from the whites, the Blackfeet often boiled meat
in a green hide. A hole was dug in the ground, and the skin, flesh side
up, was laid in it, being supported about the edges of the hole by pegs.
The meat and water having been placed in this hollow, red-hot stones
were dropped in the water until it became hot and the meat was cooked. |
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In time
of plenty, great quantities of dried meat were prepared for use when
fresh meat could not be obtained. In making dried meat, the thicker
parts of an animal were cut in large, thin sheets and hung in the sun to
dry. If the weather was not fine, the meat was often hung up on lines or
scaffolds in the upper part of the lodge. When properly cured and if of
good quality, the sheets were about one-fourth of an inch thick and very
brittle. The back fat of the buffalo was also dried, and eaten with the
meat as we eat butter with bread. |
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Pemmican
was made of the flesh of the buffalo. The meat was dried in the usual
way; and, for this use, only lean meat, such as the hams, loin, and
shoulders, was chosen. When the time came for making the pemmican, two
large fires were built of dry quaking aspen wood, and these were allowed
to burn down to red coals. The old women brought the dried meat to these
fires, and the sheets of meat were thrown on the coals of one of them,
allowed to heat through, turned to keep them from burning, and then
thrown on the flesh side of a dry hide, that lay on the ground nearby.
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After a
time, the roasting of this dried meat caused a smoke to rise from the
fire in use, which gave the meat a bitter taste, if cooked in it. They
then turned to the other fire, and used that until the first one had
burned clear again. After enough of the roasted meat had been thrown on
the hide, it was flailed out with sticks, and being very brittle was
easily broken up, and made small. It was constantly stirred and pounded
until it was all fine.
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Meantime,
the tallow of the buffalo had been melted in a large kettle, and the
pemmican bags prepared. These were made of bull's hide, and were in two
pieces, cut oblong, and with the corners rounded off. Two such pieces
sewed together made a bag which would hold one hundred pounds. The
pounded meat and tallow — the latter just beginning to cool — were put
in a trough made of bull's hide, a wooden spade being used to stir the
mixture. |
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After it
was thoroughly mixed, it was shoveled into one of the sacks, held open,
and rammed down and packed tight with a big stick, every effort being
made to expel all the air. When the bag was full and packed as tight as
possible, it was sewn up. It was then put on the ground, and the women
jumped on it to make it still more tight and solid. It was then laid
away in the sun to cool and dry. It usually took the meat of two cows to
make a bag of one hundred pounds; a very large bull might make a sack of
from eighty to one hundred pounds. |
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A much
finer grade of pemmican was made from the choicest parts of the buffalo
with marrow fat. To this dried berries and pounded choke-cherries were
added, making a delicious food, which was extremely nutritious. Pemmican
was eaten either dry as it came from the sack, or stewed with water. In
the spring, the people had great feasts of the eggs of ducks and other
water-fowl. A large quantity having been gathered, a hole was dug in the
ground, and a little water put in it. At short intervals above the
water, platforms of sticks were built, on which the eggs were laid. A
smaller hole was dug at one side of the large hole, slanting into the
bottom of it. When all was ready, the top of the larger hole was covered
with mud, laid upon cross sticks, and red-hot stones were dropped into
the slant, then they rolled down into the water, heating it, and so
cooking the eggs by steam. |
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Fish were
seldom eaten by these people in early days, but now they seem very fond
of them. Turtles, frogs, and lizards are considered creatures of evil,
and are never eaten. Dogs, considered a great delicacy by the Crees,
Gros Ventres, Sioux, Assinaboines, and other surrounding tribes, were
never eaten by the Blackfeet. No religious motive is assigned for this
abstinence. I once heard a Piegan say that it was wrong to eat dogs.
"They are our true friends," he said. "Men say they are our friends and
then turn against us, but our dogs are always true. They mourn when we
are absent, and are always glad when we return. They keep watch for us
in the night when we sleep. So pity the poor dogs." |
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Snakes,
grasshoppers, worms, and other insects were never eaten. Salt was an
unknown condiment. Many are now very fond of it, but I know a number,
especially old people, who never eat it. |
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(Courtesy
of Tiger Lilli Sakima) |

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