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    • Home
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    • Dayton Rifle Company
    • The Death George Mann
    • Brother Jonathan
    • A Captive Returns Home
    • The Johnston Cemetery
    • Fort Mann (Shelby County)
    • Hunting the Upper Miamis
    • France Claims Ohio
    • Miami Claim Upper Piqua
    • Shawnee Claim Upper Piqua
    • Alcohol on the Frontier
    • Frontier Health&Wellness
    • Miami County's Mounds
    • Upper Piqua's Stone Wall
    • An Old Hero Returns
    • Shawnee Religion
    • Educating The Children
    • Shawnee Language
    • A History of the Shawnee
    • Running with Daniel Boone
    • Ohio County Formation
    • Squire Boone Jr Timeline
    • A Miami Hunting Story
    • Wildcat McKinney
    • Miami-Shelby Co. Heroine
  • Home
  • War in Miami County
  • Local Massacres
  • Dayton Rifle Company
  • The Death George Mann
  • Brother Jonathan
  • A Captive Returns Home
  • The Johnston Cemetery
  • Fort Mann (Shelby County)
  • Hunting the Upper Miamis
  • France Claims Ohio
  • Miami Claim Upper Piqua
  • Shawnee Claim Upper Piqua
  • Alcohol on the Frontier
  • Frontier Health&Wellness
  • Miami County's Mounds
  • Upper Piqua's Stone Wall
  • An Old Hero Returns
  • Shawnee Religion
  • Educating The Children
  • Shawnee Language
  • A History of the Shawnee
  • Running with Daniel Boone
  • Ohio County Formation
  • Squire Boone Jr Timeline
  • A Miami Hunting Story
  • Wildcat McKinney
  • Miami-Shelby Co. Heroine

Thomas Alford Wildcat –On the Shawnee Educating Their Children


Recently I shared information concerning the Shawnee religion (from a white man’s perspective), the Shawnee alphabet, and marriage customs of  some Algonquin tribes.  


To better understand 18th and 19th century Indian culture, I have been seeking works of “authority” to  understand the Eastern Woodland tribes….  I would like to share some  information I found concerning Shawnee parents teaching their children.   In the writings of Thomas Wildcat Alford, he tells us about Shawnee  parents educating their children.


As you may recall, Thomas Wildcat Alford, or Gay-nwaw-piah-si-ka,  (1860-1938) was the great-grandson of Tecumseh and a member of the  Shawnee tribe.  He attended the Hampton Institute in Virginia and  converted to Christianity.  Because of his conversion, he was rejected  by the Shawnee and was not permitted to become chief.

Concerning Shawnee parents teaching their young, Alford writes:


“The training of the young, then, formed an important part of the  life-work of our people, and was not neglected, even though the family  had no fixed place of abode, nor established household regulations.  In  fact, I believe the men of our race take a greater interest in the  training of their sons than do the white people with whom I have been  associated:  for the white men generally leave the moral training of  their children to their wives; while pride of offspring is one of the  strongest factors in the lives of our people.


All of our lessons were learned from our elders.  All of our  histories, traditions and codes, were passed from one generation to  another by word of mouth, and always accurately memorized and  translated.  We had no books… no printed rules; our memories must be  kept clear and accurate; we must be taught keenness of observation, and  above all, taught to be absolute master of ourselves.


Every father was a teacher of his sons, and every mother sought to  instill into her daughter’s mind those things considered essential for  her to know; nothing was left to chance.  To begin with, children were  taught respect for their elders, which virtually means respect for  authority.  Not only their own parents, but all who show advance in  years assumed some degree of importance and authority.


It is often remarked that Indians take to institutional training  better than white people, make better soldiers; better subjects for  discipline; and it is true.  Indian parents give few commands because  they are advocates of freedom of character, and children are seldom  punished.  But obedience is exacted from the beginning.  A few words of praise from a parent of an elder is regarded as the highest award o  prize that could be given for good conduct.


Our people appreciated superior wisdom of any kind, but naturally  they thought more of that wisdom that formed the background of our own  racial life.  A knowledge of warfare, of history, and of nature, and the habits of wild creatures; an acquaintance with trees and all wild  plants, wild fruits, and their use; to be able to judge weather; to  foretell what seasons would be and to recall those past, this  constituted a well rounded education for our men.


All these things called for a good memory, keen observation, and  close application.  Endurance and self-control were taught so rigidly  that those qualities became natural with us.  It was a proud and happy day when an Indian boy realized his father considered him old enough to begin actual training.”

 

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