Ethnographies

  • A Mission to the Menominee: Alfred Cope’s Green Bay Diary (Part I). (1966). Wisconsin Magazine of History, 49(4), 302-323.
  • A Mission to the Menominee: Alfred Cope’s Green Bay Diary (Part II). (1966). The Wisconsin Magazine of History, 50(1), 18-42.
  • A Mission to the Menominee: Alfred Cope’s Green Bay Diary (Part III). (1967). The Wisconsin Magazine of History, 50(2), 120-144.
  • A Mission to the Menominee: Alfred Cope’s Green Bay Diary (Part IV). (1967). The Wisconsin Magazine of History, 50(3), 211-241.
  • A Visit to the Menomonies. The Friend. Vol. XIII. 1849.
  • Adney, & Chapelle, H. I. (1964). The bark canoes and skin boats of North America / Edwin Tappan Adney and Howard I. Chapelle. Smithsonian Institution.
  • Arndt et al (2013) Menominee Perspectives on Commercial Tobacco Use.
  • Baerreís, D. A. (1950). Trade Silver and Indian Silversmiths. Wisconsin Magazine of History, 34(2), 76–82.
  • Balbi (1826) Atlas Ethnographique
  • Barrett, S. A. (1911). The dream dance of the Chippewa and Menominee Indians of northern Wisconsin. Pub. by order of the Trustees.
  • Beck, D. (2010). Collecting among the Menomini. Cultural Assault in Twentieth-Century Wisconsin. American Indian Quarterly, 34(2), 157-193.
  • Beck, D. (1995). Return to Namä’o Uskíwämît: The Importance of Sturgeon in Menominee Indian History. Wisconsin Magazine of History, 79(1), 32-48.
  • Bloomfield, L. (1930). Sacred Stories of the Sweet Grass Cree. F.A. Aclund.
  • Bradford. (1846). Notes on the Northwest, or, Valley of the upper Mississippi / by Wm. J.A. Bradford. Wiley and Putnam.
  • Brown, C. E. (2006). Folklore pamphlets, 1921-1945. Wisconsin Historical Society.
  • Burnham, E.J. (1903). The Wild-Rice Indians. Nature Study. Manchester, NY.
  • Bushnell, D.I. (1940). The Sketches of Paul Kane in the Indian Country, 1845-1848.
  • The Canoes of the Menomini Indians. Scientific American. 1897.
  • Chamberlain, A.F. (1891). The Maple amongst the Algonkian Tribes. American Anthropologist, 4(1), 39–44.
  • Culin, S. (1903). Games of the North American Indian. Twenty-fourth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology : to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1902-1903.
  • Curtis, M. E. (1952). The Black Bear and White-Tailed Deer as Potent Factors in the Folklore of the Menomini Indians. Midwest Folklore, 2(3), 177–190.
  • Densmore. (1932). Menominee music / by Frances Densmore. U.S. Govt. Print. Off.
  • Eastman, M. H., & Eastman, Seth. (1853). The American aboriginal portfolio. Lippincott, Grambo.
  • Engelhardt, Z. (1882). Omanomineu Kachkenohamatwon Kesekoch. Katolik Anamihau Masenachigon. St. Louis, Mo., B. Herder, 1882.
  • Engelhardt, Z. (1887). Katolik anamïhan, ene kä: Jesus ot Äsechzekon kateshim. As wechzekatek. St. Louis, Mo., B. Herder, 1887.
  • Gust-Ah-Yah-She (1929). The Indians Plea
  • Haas, M. (1968). The Menomini Terms for Playing Cards. International Journal of American Linguistics, 34(1), 217.
  • Herzberg, S. J., & State Historical Society of Wisconsin. (1977). The Menominee Indians, from treaty to termination.
  • Hilger. (1951). Chippewa child life and its cultural background / by Sister M. Inez Hilger. U.S. Govt. Print. Off.
  • Hilger, M. I. (1951). MENOMINI CHILD LIFE. Journal de La Société Des Américanistes, 40(1), 163–171.
  • Hilger, M. I. (1960). SOME EARLY CUSTOMS OF THE MENOMINI INDIANS. Journal De La Société Des Américanistes, 49, nouvelle sÉrie, 45-68.
  • Hoffman, W.J. (1890). Mythology of the Menomoni Indians. American Anthropologist, 3(3), 243–258.
  • Hoffman, W. J. (1896). The First Meeting of the Menomini and the Whites. U.S. Govt. Printing Office.
  • Hoffman, W. J. (1896). The Menomini Indians. U.S. G.P.O.
  • Hosmer, B. C. (1997). Reflections on Indian Cultural “Brokers”: Reginald Oshkosh, Mitchell Oshkenaniew, and the Politics of Menominee Lumbering. Ethnohistory, 44(3), 493-509.
  • James, E. (1827). History of Indian Languages
  • James, E. (1827). Remarks on the Mythology of the Algonkins
  • Johnston, G. (1900). Osawgenong: A Sac Tradition. Wisconsin Historical Collections Vol XV 1900. Relates the story of battle of Butte des Morts.
  • Journal of Ethnobiology v. 3 No. 1 1983
  • Krog, C. (1977) The Menominee Indians on the Menominee River. Wisconsin Academy review: Volume 23, Number 4.
  • Kurath, G. P. (1959). Menomini Indian Dance Songs in a Changing Culture. Midwest Folklore, 9(1), 31–38.
  • Nichols, P. J., & State Historical Society of Wisconsin. (1949). In the moon of sugar making.
  • Loudbear, R. (2007). Indian Country Politics: Theories of Operation and a Strategy for the Nonviolent Seizure of Political Power. American Indian Quarterly, 31(1), 66–86.
  • Lawson, P. V. (1900). Story of Oshkosh, his tribe and fellow chiefs : interesting historical sketch of the Menomonee chieftain … [publisher not identified].
  • Lurie, N. O. (1969). Wisconsin: A Natural Laboratory for North American Indian Studies. Wisconsin Magazine of History, 53(1), 2–20.
  • Mason, R. J. (1997). ARCHAEOETHNICITY AND THE ELUSIVE MENOMINIS. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology, 22(1), 69–94.
  • McKiernan, K. (1975). The Menominee Warrior Society (audio interview).
  • Menominee: MS 2797: Menominee linguistic notes and texts collected by Truman Michelson (1910)
  • Michelson, T. (1911). Menominee Tales. American Anthropologist, 13(1), 68–88. 
  • Michelson, T. (1935). The Menomini Hairy Serpent and the Hairy Fish. The Journal of American Folklore, 48(188), 197–199.
  • Nichols P. J.  & Lookaround, A. F.. (1952). Weavers of Grasses: Indian Women of the Woodlands. Wisconsin Magazine of History, 36(2), 130–133.
  • Norick, S. (1979). Outdoor life in the Menominee Forest. Franciscan Herald Press.
  • Olson, D. (1975). Update on the Menomonie Warrior Society Novitiate Takeover (audio).
  • Perrault, J.B. (1978). Narrative of the Travels and Adventures of a Merchant Voyageur in the Savage Territories of Northern America, leaving Montreal the 28th day of May, 1783 to 1820.
  • Pilling, & Eames, W. (1891). Bibliography of the Algonquian languages / by James Constantine Pilling. G.P.O.
  • Schorer, C. E. (1959). Indian Tales of C. C. Trowbridge: The Toadstool Man. Midwest Folklore, 9(3), 139–144.
  • Skinner, A. (1911). A Comparative Sketch of the Menomini. American Anthropologist, 13(4), 551–565.
  • Skinner, A. (1913). European Folk-Tales Collected among the Menominee Indians. The Journal of American Folklore, 26(99), 64–80.
  • Skinner, A. (1914). Political organizations, cults, and ceremonies of the Plains-Ojibway and Plains-Cree Indians. Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History, 475.
  • Skinner, A. (1914). The Algonkin and the Thunderbird. The American Museum Journal v. 14.
  • Skinner, A. (1915). Societies of the Iowa, Kansa, and Ponca Indians. Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History, 679.
  • Skinner, A. (1915). Associations and ceremonies of the Menomini Indians. Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History, 167.
  • Skinner, A. & Satterlee, J.V. (1915). Folklore of the Menomini Indians. Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History, 544.
  • Skinner, A. (1921). Material culture of the Menomini. Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation.
  • Skinner, A. (1920). Medicine ceremony of the Menomini, Iowa, and Wahpeton Dakota, with notes on the ceremony among the Ponca, Bungi Ojibwa, and Potawatomi. Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation.
  • Skinner, A. (1925). Songs of the Menomini Medicine Ceremony. American Anthropologist, 27, 290.
  • Skinner, A. (1911). War Customs of the Menomini Indians. American Anthropologist, 13(2), 299–312.
  • Slotkin, J. (1953). Social psychiatry of a Menomini community. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 48(1), 10-16.
  • Smithsonian Institution. Bureau of American Ethnology. (1893). Annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. : 14th pt.2 1892/93. G.P.O., 1897-1965.
  • Some Indian Conveyances, 1793-1836. Wisconsin Historical Collections Vol. XV 1900. Shows the markings used when signing documents, treaties, etc. Menominee and others.
  • Speck, F. Art Processes in Birchbark of the River Desert Algonquin, A Circumboreal Trait. Anthropological papers, numbers 13-18. (1941). The Bureau.
  • Spindler, G. & Spindler, L. (1978). Identity, Militancy, and Cultural Congruence: The Menominee and Kainai. The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 436(1), 73–85.
  • Spindler, G. D. (1955). Menomini Research. American Anthropologist, 57(4), 864–865. 
  • Spindler, L. S. (1952). Witchcraft in Menomini Acculturation. American Anthropologist, 54(4), 593–602
  • Tanner, J. (1940). An Indian captivity (1789-1822) John Tanner’s narrative of his captivity among the Ottawa and Ojibwa Indians; edited by Edwin James (1830)
  • Part 1
  • Part 2
  • Part 3
  • Titus, W. H., & State Historical Society of Wisconsin. (1930). Observations on the Menominee Indians.
  • Part 1
  • Part 2
  • United States. Board of Indian Commissioners, Department of the Interior. , & Ayer, Edward Everett. (1914). Report on Menominee Indian Reservation. [publisher not identified].
  • Thwaites, R. G., & State Historical Society of Wisconsin. (1902). The French regime in Wisconsin … 1634-1760. The Society.
  • Tronnes, L. R. (2002). “Where Is John Wayne?”: The Menominee Warriors Society, Indian Militancy, and Social Unrest during the Alexian Brothers Novitiate Takeover. American Indian Quarterly, 26(4), 526–558. 
  • Trowbridge (Bloomfield’s typed copy)
  • Trowbridge (Original kept in Detroit)