Chapter I: INTRODUCTION
Forty-five thousand Navaho* Indians and their flocks of sheep and
goats and herds of horses, totalling in 1937 about 1,000,000 head, range
over a reservation of fifteen million acres in northeastern Arizona and
northwestern New Mexico and over the border in to southern Utah. They
also wander far beyond the reservation. One can expect to see Navaho
anywhere between the Rio Grande River in the east, the Colorado River in
the west, the San Juan River in the north, and the Little Colorado River
in the south. Unlike other tribes which have decreased in numbers or
disappeared entirely, the Navaho have doubled their population in the
last thirty years. They are now the largest Indian tribe in the United
States, and their reservation is the most extensive. It is estimated
that the Navaho are ninety-eight per cent pure blood. The slight mixture
with white people is found only in the districts near the towns and
railroads.
*The anglicized form, "Navaho," is used in this paper, except in
quotations which retain the Spanish form "Navajo." The Indian Bureau
estimates the population for 1937 as 50,000.
Geologists describe the reservation as part of the great Colorado
Plateau, where erosion and other natural forces, acting upon the
sandstone, limestone, and conglomerate, have carved deep gorges and
isolated badland forms, above which the mountains rise. The rugged and
colorful landscape with its deserts, canyons, mountains, and mesas is
one of startling beauty. Erosion has created fantastic forms in the
rocks resembling ships, cathedral spires, and other impressive objects,
and produced natural bridges like the famous Rainbow Bridge. The
reservation has "a painted landscape with patches and bands of yellow,
ash-gray, drab, lavender, rose, pink, slate, maroon, sienna, lilac,
cream, and various shades of red and brown (Gregory, 1917:42). The
myriad colors have given this region the name, 'The Painted Desert'." It
is a country of contrasts in landscape, vegetation, altitude, rainfall,
and temperature.
The Navaho are believed to have been in this region since the
thirteenth or fourteenth century A. D. Everywhere around them they have
impressive reminders of the past in the archaeology and geology of their
present homeland. Dinosaurs have left their tracks in canyons; in the
desert is petrified wood; and in the cliffs are the ruins of an ancient
people who lived under the protective shade of massive canyon walls of
red sandstone. The Navaho have no memory of these people who came before
them, although some of the Navaho clans attempt, in their myths, to
trace their descent from the cliff dwellers. They regard the cliff
dwellings as the home of some of their gods, and avoid the ruins,
preferring to build their hogans of brush and mud on the flat
canyon floors near their gardens and peach orchards.
Economically, the value of the Navaho country is variable. Reverend
Anselm Weber, of the Franciscan Mission at St. Michael's Arizona, who
had a thorough knowledge of Navaho land problems, summed up the
situation in passing, in terms of popular folklore (quoted in "Survey of
Conditions of the Indians in the U. S., Pt. 34:17557), "... we are
living in a country, as the cowboy put it, where there are more rivers
and less water, more cows and less milk, where a person can look farther
and see less than anywhere in God's creation; or, as Mr. Charles S.
Lummis puts it, where a horned toad may scratch a living if it remains
single, but is doomed to starvation if led into matrimony." It has
become a commonplace to state that only the industrious Navaho could
scrape a living from such a country and become proudly self-supporting.
The tribe is at present going through a crisis of economic adjustment
because erosion, aggravated by the great flocks which exceed the
carrying capacity of the pasture land, has become more than a local
Navaho problem and has required the intervention of the Government to
prevent further damage. Torrential rains strip off the top soil, which
is carried down the San Juan and Colorado Rivers, coming to rest in
Boulder Dam. Engineers assert that the dam will be filled up with silt
in a few years if erosion is not checked. The Navaho, in cooperation
with the soil conservationists, have been reducing their herds end
developing irrigation in order to arrive at a better balance between
herding and farming.
ROUND OF LIFE Unlike the ancient cliff dwellers and the modern
Pueblo tribes who live in large communities, the Navaho are camp
dwellers. They are not true nomads, however, for each family does not
roam aimlessly over the entire reservation, but herds its sheep and
goats within a limited locality. Formerly this area might have a radius
of thirty or forty miles. Now, when there are many small herds and a
large population, the radius is more likely to be about ten or fifteen
miles. Before automobiles were used, the average Navaho rarely knew much
about the region beyond his pastures. Now, as a result of the economic
crisis and the reorganization of the local government, the Navaho have
acquired more knowledge of their fellow tribesmen who live elsewhere on
the fifteen million acres.
On his range, the Navaho Indian has a series of hogans and corrals
built at various sheltered places conveniently near water, grass, and
fuel. Usually the flocks are kept in corrals at night and driven out to
graze in the morning. The mountains are open to all for pastures, so
when the lowlands are parched and barren in summer, those who live near
the high mountains delegate certain members of the family to take all or
part of the stock to the green highlands watered by mountain streams. In
the winter the family goes to the foothills and mesas where it can find
fuel. In the spring it returns to the desert to take advantage of the
fresh vegetation and water renewed by the spring rains. The garden is
planted with maize, pumpkins, and beans in April and May. Lambing
generally takes place in early spring, the season varying in different
parts of the reservation as breeding is not yet controlled in all areas.
Shearing begins when the weather is sufficiently warm so that the
animals will not suffer.
The Navaho rise at dawn because then the Talking Gods are believed
to wander over the earth, blessing the people who are awake. Before
beginning the day's chores, the family chants a blessing and makes an
offering of corn pollen to the gods. The Navaho who keep to the customs
of earlier times say grace before their meals. The children and some of
the women herd the sheep, while the men care for their horses or work in
the gardens. The women also share in the gardening work, and in their
spare moments weave the blankets which have made the name "Navaho" known
over the world. The men in their leisure moments train their ponies for
races. In the evening the father may play and talk to his children,
telling them stories or making them toys. If the father is a good story
teller, men gather from miles around to hear his stories
(Wetherill).
Personal property is owned by individuals without discriminations
based on age or sex. A person may possess "hard goods" in the form of
jewelry, saddles, and cash; or "soft goods" like blankets, sheepskins,
and clothing; or herds of sheep and horses; or intangible property like
knowledge of secret magic names, ceremonies, and lore of many kinds.
This latter type of property is highly regarded, for anyone with magical
knowledge, it is believed, can control natural forces to bring good
fortune and ward off evil. A man who has some knowledge of magic, and
knows songs with magic power, exerts a great influence among the people.
One Navaho said sadly and apologetically to Dr. W. W. Hill, "I have
always been a poor man. I do not know a single song." Women have a high
and respected position, own their own property, and sometimes are
wealthier than the men. Women usually own most of the sheep.
During the long winters, "when the snakes are asleep and the thunder
silent," the Navaho hold their great religious ceremonies, or "chants"
as they are popularly called. The purpose of a chant is to cure disease
in an individual, and also to invoke the blessings of the gods on the
people in general. Some of the chants have ceremonies lasting from five
to nine days. These ceremonies are charged with much religious and
poetical feeling. The impersonation of spirits and gods in elaborate
costumes and the making of beautiful sandpaintings are two notable
features. The family of a sick person spends hundreds of dollars to pay
the medicine man who takes charge of the chant, and to secure the proper
religious paraphernalia. People come from all over the reservation, and
even from other tribes, to share in the religious and social life which
goes on. Many spend the winter travelling from one "dance" to
another.
Everyone wears all the finest jewelry of silver, turquoise, coral,
and shell he owns and can get out of pawn from the trader. The women
wear colorful velvet blouses and voluminous calico skirts, a style
copied from the costumes worn by the officers' wives at Fort Sumner, New
Mexico, where the Navaho were once kept in captivity. The men, if they
do not dress in American overalls and shirts, wear velvet tunics and
trousers of bright calico, a Spanish-American style. A light weight
Pendleton blanket, preferred to the native heavy blankets, is thrown
over the shoulders.
A stranger is certain of finding hospitality. The Navaho have the
trait, shared with all human beings except the most sophisticated, of
liking to find that a stranger is related by marriage or blood. And
since there are all of fifty clans in the tribe, many of which have
names similar to clans in neighboring tribes, some kind of relationship
is usually traceable between the interested host and guest. The
generosity and hospitality of the Navaho is such that they will deny
themselves necessities in order to share the little they have with their
less fortunate relatives and friends.
In earlier times the Navaho married outside both their father's and
mother's clans. An individual belongs to the clan of his mother, and
traces descent through her. When a man marries, he goes to live with his
wife's people, but is careful to avoid showing disrespect to his
mother-in-law by speaking to, or even seeing, her. Tradition sternly
requires, even to this day, that this custom be observed. A family group
consists of maternal grandparents, parents, unmarried children, and
daughters with their husbands and children.
As might be expected of a tribe with such a large population and
extensive territory, there is considerable variety in the practices,
beliefs, and physical characteristics in various districts. Cultural
factors such as contacts with white people or with neighboring tribes,
and natural factors such as geography and rainfall have been important
in creating local variations. Just as differences in design, yarn, size,
and color in hundreds of Navaho blankets do not prevent one from seeing
that as a group they are peculiarly Navaho, so it is with the culture as
a whole.
The income of the Navaho is derived from the sale of agricultural
and livestock products, crafts, and, in some areas, from lumber and
pinyon nuts. In recent years, the income per capita has been increased
by wages obtained on reservation work projects financed by the United
States Government. In 1936 this amounted to $40 per capita. The average
income of the Navaho is not definitely known. Various estimates have
been made. The most recent estimate, by the Soil Conservation Service,
of the per capita income, including the commercial income and the
non-commercial (the cash value of produce raised and consumed at home),
is about $85. For a consumption group (the economic unit used by the
Service), which averages 7 plus, the total income, together with the
wages, is estimated at $900.
TRADING POSTS The meat, wool, hides, jewelry, and pinyon nuts
are purchased by traders who are licensed by the American Government to
conduct trading posts on the reservation. One cannot discuss Navaho life
since 1868 without taking into account the influence of traders. An
intensive study of the history and functions of the trading post system
among the Navaho was made by B. Youngblood of the United States
Department of Agriculture (Survey of Conditions, Pt. 34:18036-115). The
information presented here is drawn largely from this report.
The trading post system is described as one of the best remaining
examples of frontier commerce. "The trader extends unsecured credit on
open accounts in anticipation of the Indians' wool and lamb crops, and
he also extends minor credits secured by pawn, including silver
bracelets, rings, and belts, beads, guns, saddle blankets, rugs or other
articles of value." He advances provisions and craft supplies to makers
of jewelry and blankets. He supplies merchandise on credit to encourage
the Indian ceremonies. He acts as a middleman between White and Indian
cultures, purchasing the goods of the Indians and selling them products
of White manufacture. "Most traders counsel the Indians on business and
personal affairs. With few exceptions, they, at one time or another,
have advised the Indians relative to sheep breeding and wool, lamb, and
rug improvement from the viewpoint of the commercial markets." They work
in cooperation with the wholesalers who supply them with goods and
purchase the trader's Indian produce, and they work with the Government.
"The traders are also called upon frequently for aid and advice
concerning Indian family and community affairs, such as marital
difficulties, illness, deaths, and inheritances."
Names, famous in Navaho history, occur in the roster of traders:
Joseph Lee, S. E. Aldrich, C. N. Cotton, J. Lorenzo Hubbell, J. B.
Moore, T. V. Keam, J. Wetherill, and others. Of the 50 trading posts
studied by Youngblood, 35 were conducted by individuals, 15 by
corporations and partnerships. Most of the traders were of old
Anglo-American stock, with a few of Spanish and Indian descent.
The Navaho apply to trading the same genius they displayed in
diplomatic relations with the early Spanish and Americans. Trading is a
social and business event. Nothing can make a Navaho hurry in his debate
between canned peaches and tomatoes, or stem his oratory when he wishes
the trader to throw in a sack of candy as a friendship gift. If there is
a cash balance after his charge account has been settled, he prefers to
get silver for each item he has sold. Then he pays it out again, coin by
coin, for each new purchase. The Navaho women are particularly shrewd
bargainers. Books written by or about traders and their experiences in
the Navaho country are listed in the bibliography.
ADMINISTRATION The Navaho were never organized under one
chief, nor did they have hereditary chiefs. A capable and intelligent
person might take charge during a crisis, but he had no influence other
than that exerted by his personality or wealth. A wealthy man had many
followers and slaves whom he commanded. A man who organized and carried
out a war party was a War Chief only for the duration of the raid.
The early Spanish and American officials found it impossible to deal
with such a truly democratic people, so they nominated some of the
natural leaders as "chiefs" to act as negotiators between the Navaho and
the Whites. They gave each "chief" a silver medal and a cane as symbols
of his position. The Navaho tribe has produced men of outstanding
character and leadership. Narbona and Manuelito, who lived during the
trying years of the nineteenth century, when Navaho and Whites were at
odds, were two of the great Navaho whose memories are now respected by
Indians and Whites alike.
In 1923 a tribal council of twelve members and twelve alternates was
organized to work in cooperation with the Indian Bureau and the Indian
Agents of the six administrative districts of the reservation. Since
1935 a new system of local administration has been developing. The
United States Indian Bureau now has a central agency or "Navaho capital"
to carry out the administrative work. In addition the reservation has
been divided into eighteen districts to carry out the land management
program. Each district has a supervisor who is directly responsible to
the General Superintendent at Window Rock, Arizona, the central
agency.
Between July 1, 1933, and July 1, 1936, the United States Government
has spent over ten million dollars on physical improvements within the
reservation and over one million on improvements in the areas just
outside the reservation which the Navaho also occupy. The development of
educational facilities for both children and adults has always aroused
disputes. Opinion is divided over boarding versus day schools, and
whether the education for young people should prepare them for possible
absorption into the general population of the United States, or for life
on the reservation. The present administration has improved the
educational facilities by establishing about fifty day schools for
children, constructing and furnishing the buildings so that they can be
used by adults as community centers. Despite this improvement there are
an estimated 6,000 Navaho children still without schools. The
educational policy at the present time is to educate the children nearer
their homes and parents, and along lines which fit them for a better
life right in their own country. (Survey of Conditions,
34:17580-17601.)
CULTURE PERIODS Before the Spanish introduced sheep, horses,
and cattle into America, in the sixteenth century, the Navaho were a
small and insignificant tribe which lived by raising a little maize,
hunting wild animals, raiding the Pueblos and gathering roots and seeds.
Quickly appreciating the value of the domesticated animals left by the
Spanish among the Pueblos, the Navaho acquired some by theft. Instead of
eating the stolen animals or killing them upon the death of the owner,
as the Apache did, the Navaho carefully tended their flocks, thus taking
the first step toward becoming a pastoral people. The change in their
lives was revolutionary. The flocks increased through natural growth and
further theft until the Navaho became a wealthy tribe. The raids on
their neighbors brought them not only possessions, and captives who
would work in the fields and care for the flocks, but also arts and a
complex religion. During this time their weaving, perhaps learned from
the Pueblos, developed, and Navaho blankets were soon prized throughout
the Southwest by both Indians and Whites. The scanty yucca-fiber
clothing of the aboriginal Navaho was replaced by buckskin, by woolen
garments woven by the women, and by cotton cloth secured by trade with
the Pueblos and Mexicans.
The Spanish governors, and later the American, were helpless to stop
the raids of the "American Bedouins," or the "Pirates of the Desert," or
the "Shepherd Kings," to use some of the more polite epithets applied to
the Navaho. Each officer returned to report that he had made a "lasting
peace" with the Navaho; that he had found them a handsome, intelligent,
hospitable, and high-spirited people with broad fields and large herds;
that they possessed fine blankets and silver ornaments; that they were
better dressed than any other tribe; and treated their women with
unusual respect. In 1863 Christopher Carson, the great Indian fighter,
succeeded in conquering the Navaho by ignoring their brilliant oratory
and refusing to make treaties. Instead he destroyed the fields ready for
harvest, and killed off flocks and warriors. The survivors were sent
east into captivity at Bosque Redondo, the site of Fort Sumner, on the
Pecos River. In 1868 the subdued Navaho were sent home to take up again
a pastoral life and the care of their farms. Their progressive and
adaptable nature soon re-asserted itself, and by hard and honest work
they have recouped their losses.
The history of the Navaho during their life in the Southwest is then
of four general, periods: 1. The aboriginal or pre-Spanish period. 2.
The pre-captivity, or the early historical period, which began with the
arrival of the Spanish in the last years of the sixteenth century.
Actually it was not until 1630 that Navaho and Spanish met, but the
Navaho had apparently come into indirect contact with the white
civilization before this time through the Pueblo Indians, on whom the
Spanish concentrated their attention. The year 1846 marks the transfer
from Spanish to American intervention in Navaho affairs; it was in this
year that the first American treaty with the warlike Navaho was made.
The entire early historical period marks the change of the Navaho to a
semi-pastoral life and their growth into an import ant and populous
tribe. This period ends in 1863 with most of the tribe in captivity as a
punishment for more than a century and a half of profitable raiding. 3.
The captivity, or transition period, extends from 1863 to 1868 when
about three-fourths of the tribe was exposed to American culture at
Bosque Redondo under control of the American army. 4. The modern period
begins with their return from captivity in 1863, and continues into the
present.
If one excepts the prevalent theory that the Navaho were newcomers
into the Southwest, having been there only about 200 years before the
Spanish, these four periods total only 500 years.
Summary of Periods
1. Aboriginal or pre-Spanish
2. Early historical or pre-captivity
1630-1846 Spanish
1846-1863 American
3. Captivity
1863-1868
4. Modern
1868-
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