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Letter Ponca Indian Reservation, to my dear brother & sister, 1873 Mar. 10
Letter Ponca Indian Reservation, to my dear brother & sister, 1873 Mar. 10
Letter Ponca Indian Reservation, to my dear brother & sister, 1873 Mar. 10
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Open book Letter Ponca Indian Reservation, to my dear brother & sister, 1873 Mar. 10

Title Letter Ponca Indian Reservation, to my dear brother & sister, 1873 Mar. 10 
Creator Tom
Date 1873 
Place Great Plains, Nebraska--Ponca Reservation
Subjects Indians of North America, Ponca Indians
Description Written in an elegant cursive hand, with a fine-point pen and brown ink, on a folded sheet of cream stationery, embossed with a small drawing of a building with three domes, similar to the U.S. Capitol building, below the logo "Congress"; previously folded in thirds, as evidenced by two horizontal creases.
Forms part of the Edward  E. Ayer Manuscript Collection (Newberry Library) 
Summary Letter, dated March 10, 1873 on the Ponca Indian Reservation, written by a man identified only as "Tom", formerly of Omaha, Neb., to his brother & sister, possibly living in England. The letter describes the Ponca Indian Reservation as a "wild wilderness of a place, situated on a low piece of table land on the upper Missouri River in Dacotah Terrotory.  The River runs through it, and the mountains on each side, & to all appearances, all round it."  The writer, who left home in Omaha on Feb. 10th or 11th, 1873, is one of 12 whites on the reservation, living with 740 Indians, who subsist on supplies of pork, flour, coffee, sugar and salt, issued to them by the U.S. Government.  Although there is a missionary who preaches to them in their language, and "3 mission ladies" who try to teach the Indians to sew, the Indians remain "perfectly wild."  Many of them die of scrofula, and the writer has helped to make several coffins since he arrived.  He describes the funeral and burial customs of the Indians, and notes that some are laid to rest in trees.  Male mourners show their grief by dancing, and crying at the teepe of the deceased, and cutting off pieces of their own flesh with their knives.  Some Indians are buried along with their horses, and food and other possessions to help them on their journey to the happy hunting grounds.  During burial ceremonies, a party of armed Poncas must guard the mourners from marauding tribes who frequently trespass onto the reservation, steal cattle, and scalp anybody they catch.  There are no government soldiers on the reservation for protection.  The writer does not explain why he is on the reservation--only that extreme cold weather, ice three-feet-thick on the river, and illness have hindered him. He expresses his unwillingness to bring his family to such a wild area, so far from civilization.  He closes by mentioning his desire to return to England and visit with his brothers George, Henry, and Sam, and sisters Mary and Lizie, and urges them to write to him at his old address, "in care [of] H.L. Latey, Omaha, Nebraska".   The letter is signed "Your brother Tom." 
Extent 1 folded sheet ([4] p.) ; 21 cm 
Format International relations
Archival Collection Title Edward E. Ayer Collection, Edward E. Ayer Manuscript Collection
Link to Catalog View record
Call Number Ayer MS 2202 
BibID 330796
Rights Status No Copyright - United States
Contributing Institution Newberry Library
Newberry Open Access Policy The Newberry makes its collections available for any lawful purpose, commercial or non-commercial, without licensing or permission fees to the library, subject to these terms and conditions.
IIIF Resource Type Canvas 
Size 1560px × 2465px     11.04 MB 
File Created 09/06/2023 
Filename 993307968805867_Ayer_MS_2202_00001.tif 
Unique Identifier NL11OOVL 
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