The
name Blackfoot Indians fascinated me since the first time I heard it. Until
recently, I didn’t investigate this tribe. I felt certain this group of people
didn’t really have black feet, but I did wonder why they were labeled Blackfoot.
Their custom of dying their moccasins black gained them their name.
Blackfoot with horses |
In
the past few years I’ve set several books in Montana. I set out to learn more
about the indigenous people there. Although there were Blackfoot, Crow, Sioux
and smaller tribes in Montana, the area in which my latest book is set is where
the Blackfoot live.
Blackfoot man wearing buffalo robe |
The
Blackfoot/Blackfeet are an Algonquian people who were migratory plains
hunter-gatherers from the Great Lakes region until they acquired horses and rifles in the
1700s. They then became hunters and raiders and migrated to the Northwestern
United States, specifically Montana and Idaho as well as Alberta Canada. They were
notably defensive of their territory. Although either spelling is acceptable,
Blackfoot is the original name.
Six chiefs of Blackfoot Confederacy Note the way they wear feathers |
Three groups make up the Blackfoot
Confederacy. The Blackfeet (Siksika), the Blood (Kainai, Kainah), and the
Piegan (Piikani, Pigunni). The Blackfoot Confederacy in the United States and
Canada were forced to divide their
traditional homeland in the nineteenth century according to national borders.
They were forced to sign treaties with one of the two countries and settle in
reservations on one side of the border or the other. They were then enrolled in
one of the two government bodies. The two successor groups are the Blackfeet
Nation, a federally-recognized tribe in Montana, and the Piikani Nation, a
recognized Indian band in Alberta, Canada.
Blackfoot girl teen |
In my book, MELODY, book 7 of the Angel Creek Christmas Brides, the
heroine and hero rescue an injured Blackfoot teen and take her to their home to
recover. That meant I had to know what she would have worn. Blackfoot women wore long deerskin dresses. The
photo of a teen shows her with a less elaborate style of dress than a woman
would have worn. Men wore buckskin tunics and breechcloths with leggings. Blackfoot dresses and war shirts
were fringed and often decorated with porcupine quills, beads, and elk teeth.
Both Blackfoot women
and men wore moccasins. In winter they wore buffalo-hide robes.
Burning sweet grass in the sweat lodge |
They used red paint on their face for war. This is how I described the girl's father in my book |
Blackfoot raised
tobacco. Tobacco, Nicotiana rustica, was originally used primarily by eastern
tribes, but Blackfoot often mixed it with other herbs, barks, and plant matter,
in a preparation commonly known as kinnikinnick. They sometimes used kinnikinnick
in a poultice to treat a medical condition.
There are many
interesting facts about this group of people. I hope I’ve whetted your interest
and you’ll dig into researching them. You can learn a little more from reading
MELODY, now on pre-order for a November 8 release from Amazon. The Universal buy
link is htpp://mybook.to/Melody.
The Angel Creek Christmas Bride Series for 2019 begins releasing November 1 with CAROLINE by Lily Graison. Releases will be each week. All six are available for pre-order. Covers are identical except for the author's name and the book's title.
Thank you for the info! :)
ReplyDeleteWow, this is so very interesting, Thank you so much for sharing this information, you make me want to read more History, because you make it very interesting and fun, Thank you for teaching me something and helping me like History. Your book sounds like a very good read . God Bless you.
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