A History of Utah’s American Indians, Chapter 4

A History of Utah’s American Indians, © 2000 “The Paiute Tribe of Utah,” pp. 123–66 Gary Tom and Ronald Holt Tabuts [elder brother/wolf] carved people out of sticks and was going to scatter them evenly around the earth so that everyone would have a good place to live. But Shinangwav [younger brother/coyote] cut open the sack and people fell out …

A History of Utah’s American Indians, Introduction

  A History of Utah’s American Indians, © 2000 “Introduction,” pp. xi-xx Forrest S. Cuch The day will come, when a white people will set foot on the eastern shores and claim this land as their own. They will build a white house near the shore from where they will govern their people. Upon establishing their government, they will raise …

A History of Utah’s American Indians, Chapter 6

A History of Utah’s American Indians, © 2000 “The White Mesa Utes,” pp. 225–63 Robert S. McPherson and Mary Jane Yazzie Billy Mike, the oldest living resident of the White Mesa Ute community, sat comfortably and slowly ran his fingers through his silver hair. The thick glasses perched upon his nose served more as a token of past vision than …

A History of Utah’s American Indians, Chapter 3

  A History of Utah’s American Indians, © 2000 “The Goshute Indians of Utah,” pp. 73–122 Dennis R. Defa A group of Goshute Indians, date unknown The Goshute Indians live in a little known and sparsely populated portion of the state of Utah. There actually are two Goshute reservations, the largest of which is the Deep Creek Reservation located on …

A History of Utah’s American Indians, Chapter 2

A History of Utah’s American Indians, © 2000 “The Northwestern Shoshone,” pp. 25–72 Mae Parry In early historic times the Shoshone Indians were a large nation of Indians who lived and traveled over an extensive territory that included parts of Idaho, Utah, Nevada, and Wyoming. Usually groups of extended families traveled together in varying numbers according to the season and …

A History of Utah’s American Indians, Chapter 1

  A History of Utah’s American Indians, © 2000 “Setting the Stage: Native America Revisited,” pp. 3–24 Robert S. McPherson The writing of Native American history can be said to have started when Christopher Columbus first waded ashore on San Salvador Island in the Caribbean. It has continued ever since. What preceded his arrival–the prehistoric phase of Native Americans–has generally been …

The Peoples of Utah, Japanese Life in Utah

The Peoples of Utah, ed. by Helen Z. Papanikolas, © 1976 “Japanese Life in Utah,” pp. 333-62 by Helen Z. Papanikolas and Alice Kasai The mists rise over The still pools at Asuka. Memory does not Pass away so easily. …Akahito For centuries the Japanese were content to live isolated in their wooded land of crags, mists, and ample waters, but …

The Peoples of Utah, Italianita in Utah: The Immigrant Experience

The Peoples of Utah, ed. by Helen Z. Papanikolas, © 1976 “Italianita in Utah: The Immigrant Experience,” pp. 303–31  by Philip F. Notarianni Many years later I was to realize that, to a child of nine years, emigration to America meant a new birth, to which a certain inevitable continuity with the past had given an added significance.                                …Angelo M. …

The Peoples of Utah, Immigration from the Middle East

The Peoples of Utah, ed. by Helen Z. Papanikolas, © 1976 “From Babylon to Babylon: Immigration from the Middle East,” pp. 385–408 by Robert F. Zeidner Syria has always been an inhospitable place to live in and a splendid place to leave. …Philip K. Hitti INTRODUCTION The Middle Eastern peoples who settled in Utah–and in the entire nation–represent a congeries of …