|
Report on the Moqui Pueblos of Arizona
Report On The Moqui Pueblos Of Arizona.
By Julian Scott, Special Agent
About the residence of Mr. Thomas V. Beam, known as the Tusayan trading post in
Keams Canyon, daily collect groups of Indians from various tribes, trading
posts, near and far, Navajo, Moqui, and the Oraibi generally, Cojonina, Zuñi and
Laguna occasionally, from the plateaus of the north, mesas of the west, and
butte country in the south. They come afoot, horseback, on burros, and on mules,
bringing with them hides, blankets, baskets, pottery, dried peaches, melons of
all kinds, gourds, pumpkins, beans, and corn for barter and trade; others come
for social purposes; gossip and news, to meet old friends, to engage in popular
sports, horse and foot racing, and in games of chance, like monte and koon kan.
Men, women, and even children engage in these pastimes, and, what is quite
remarkable, I never saw any quarreling among them, and their tempers were often
put to severe tests. The dissimilarity in costume of these various tribes is not
easily noticeable till after long observation; while generally similar, they are
quite unlike in detail; for instance, while all the men and boys wear scarfs, 2
or 3 inches wide, around their heads, tied in a simple knot at the side, the
Navajos gather all their hair at the back and tie it in a vertical bow of two
loops, low at the neck; all the others gather only their back hair into a
similar knot with the front parted or in bangs above the eyes, the side locks
hanging loosely over the ears and cheeks down to the shoulders. The Navajos
seldom wear head covering, except when necessary, and then the blanket is drawn
over like a hood. The Indians of all these tribes, viz; Navajos, Moquis, and
other Pueblos, wear variously colored, tightly fitting calico shirts, loose
trousers of the same material or cotton, falling just below the knee, and slit
on the outer sides from the bottom, about 6 inches upward, forming flaps,
through the openings of which the knees are seen and leggings of buckskin,
reaching up to just below the knee, overlapped and held in place by broad, gay
colored, and fringed garters, woven by the Moquis and Navajos, tied above the
calf in a bow or square knot, according to fancy, the lower part of the leggings
falling loosely over the moccasins. The moccasins are of plain buck or cow skin,
either of a natural color or dyed black or brick red; the vamp reaches to the
ankle, the quarters or sides extend a little higher and pass across the front;
the button fly folds over the outer quarter and fastens just above the heel.
Added to this description of their attire, I must mention the blankets, which
are of -various designs and colors, of Navajo, Moqui, Anglo-American, and
Mexican manufacture; they form not only an indispensable part of the Indians'
wardrobe, but also serve as their bed covering at night or day, whatever time
they take for sleep. The blanket is generally wrapped about one its full length,
covering the head and falling below the knees, and is girdled about the waist by
a cartridge belt, or by the more ornamental and expensive belt made by the
Navajo silversmith. When not used for shoulder or head covering, the upper part
is allowed to fall and form a double skirt, which falls gracefully about the
legs. These Indians wear beads of every kind, homemade, and principally of
shell, turquoise, and silver. The commercial value of the shell beads is gauged
according to their thinness and to a special pink color or tint' they possess.
The value of the turquoise beads is gauged by the delicacy and purity of their
blue shade, while that of the silver beads, including all other silver
ornaments, is determined by weight. (a) The ornaments made of
these beads, consist of necklaces, earrings, and bracelets. Other ornaments,
beautifully engraved, such as buckles, belts, buttons, and also bracelets, are
made of solid silver. They the not care for gold ornaments.
I visited the pueblos of the vicinity, going into many of the houses.
The Moqui houses generally can be termed " rough rubble" masonry, being of
rough, uncut sandstone, laid in blue or dark mud, all from and about the mesas.
The stones are usually about 10 inches square. The house roof is made of peeled
pine poles from 6 to 8 inches in diameter, laid from wall to wall and about 15
inches apart. The rooms are from 8 to 10 feet square and the ceilings low, say 7
feet. The connecting doorways between the rooms are sometimes but holes, 4 feet
high at most. Over the ceiling rafters or joists, which have a slight pitch or
fall, are laid small cedar branches, side by side, like a thatch. Over these is
the fiber of the yucca, which makes a matlike covering, and on this is laid the
mud which makes the roof, say a foot deep. The walls of the houses project above
the roof a foot or more, and sometimes outlet holes are in this parapet, through
which the little water which conies from rain runs out. Some of the houses have
long split logs inserted in these holes for drainpipes. When a Moqui wants to
repair the roof of his house he simply shovels upon it a quantity of mud. The
floors of the houses are rock for the first story and mud for the others, laid
as in the roof. The joists in all the houses are similar. The fireplaces are in
the corners of the rooms usually, with flues (this is modern, however), but some
are still in the center, the smoke, escaping through the square hole in the
roof. In many of the houses old jars of pottery are used for chimneys, the
bottoms being knocked out and the jars piled one on the other. Sometimes piles
of stone or boulders make the chimneys.
The houses of the 7 Moqui pueblos are similar to those of the pueblos of New
Mexico in general features, except that the former are of stone, while most of
the latter are 'of adobe. The interiors and sleeping arrangements are about the
same, and the methods of making bread and cooking food of both the Moquis and
Pueblos ate the same. Some articles are found among the Moquis made by the
Mexicans or Navajos or bought from the Mormons, who are their neighbors on the
northwest. Some few Moquis have lamps and cooking stoves.
Moqui Dolls
A. Male Cachina, 10 inches high, 2. A female
Cachina, 14 inches high. 3. Clay god, 4
inches high. 4. Moqui boomerang. 5. Clay
god, 4 inches high

Shipaulavi, second Moqui mesa, Arizona
While age, and neglect
characterized their exteriors there was a
neatness and cleanliness inside agreeably
disappointing. The rooms, plastered with mad
generally, were small and dimly lighted,
making it difficult to notice details,
though some had windows of gypsum for glass.
From the ceilings were suspended poles, upon
which hung dried meat and strings of peaches
and dried pumpkins. Pieces of deer horns
were driven in the walls and used as hat and
coat racks. The fireplaces were small,
generally built in a corner, and answered
for both heating and cooking. Here and there
in the walls were niches of different sizes,
which served as storing places for crockery,
trinkets, and clay gods. Some of the rooms
had low stone seats running along one or two
sides, which were covered with goat and
sheep skins and blankets to make them more
comfortable. These, rolled out on the floor,
are usually the beds of the Moquis.
Occasionally there would be an ordinary
chair or two and a pine table. The floors
were of clay or cement. The ceilings were
low, not more than 7 to 8 feet, and the
inside doors, or connecting ones, say 4 by 3
feet.
Every family possesses facilities for
grinding corn, and in most of the houses we
entered were found one or more of their
young women kneeling behind low bins
containing inclined stone slabs (lactates),
on which they were grinding corn into meal
of different grades of fineness.. They bake
a bread from this corn meal, called wyavi,
or piki.
The houses being one above the other in
terraces, the roof of the lower. is
frequently the front yard of the upper. They
all extend back to the same rear wall. The
caps and sills of some of them are made of
sandstone. Ladders are used to reach the
higher dwellings, and I am told that until
recent years the lower houses were entered
from the top; those hawing roofs to the sky
have a square hole for light and air and
exit. We form nearly all the terraces and
upper roofs covered with ripened corn of
every color; they also dry their peaches on
these roofs. We were here shown more piki
(bread) made of the colored corn, which they
bake on flat, hot stones, the color of winch
the process of baking did not change.
On the outer walls of the houses, and over
the windows and doors, hung in graceful
festoons and small bunches ripening chili,
in color from emerald green to brilliant
scarlet, old water jars, whose bottoms had
been worn out, were worked into their
chimneys with the other masonry, giving them
quite a tasteful appearance.
In every household can be seen from one to a
dozen wooden or clay idols or gods of the
oddest and quaintest shapes, roughly made,
and while resembling each other, they are
different from any other Indian images. They
are of all sizes, from 2 inches to over 4
feet high, painted in various colors;
sometimes they are invested with beautiful
ceremonial robes, woven expressly for them.
These gods are not, properly speaking, gods
at all, but represent different Cachinas (or
Katcheenas), who are but semigods and
intermediaries between the Moquis and their
principal deity.
The gods made from trunks or limbs of small
trees which by chance have grown to resemble
in part a man are regarded with great favor,
especially for gods for the estufa, it being
believed that the spirit of a Cachina is in
such wood. The material employed in making
the Cachinas is usually cottonwood, Such as
have ceremonial vestments are of wood, the
clothes being of white cotton cloth, richly
embroidered in Colors; the cloth used is
from the Moqui looms and is of a peculiar
fabric; clothes, including headdress, are
also made of feathers. The colors employed
in painting these gods are used as each
individual fancies. (b)
The Moquis have a great number of dogs.
These clogs, like the children, climb the
ladders and narrow stone steps from roof to
roof with the greatest ease, likewise the
cats, here in large numbers.
We came to a bevy of girls, collected upon
one of the housetops, appearing in fall
dress toilet, the most noticeable feature of
which was their tunics, each of some bright
color, red, green, arid yellow being the
favorites, worn gracefully about the
shoulders. The hair was arranged in the
peculiar cartwheel side pun. Their simplest
dress consisted of a small blanket brought
close under the left area With the two upper
corners fastened over the right shoulder,
the side edges being tied beneath, forming
an arm hole, leaving the right and left arm,
left shoulder, and part of the left breast
bare. It is girdled at the waist by a belt
of their own weaving, and closed clown the
side either with colored yarn or silver
pins. Seine of them wore leggings peculiar
to the Moqui and Navajo women, each
consisting of an entire deerskin, wrapped in
spiral folds from over the moccasins upward
to the knee and there fastened in some
mysterious manner.
The estufa bears more relation to the life
and customs of the Moquis than churches or
clubhouses do to the Anglo-Saxon. The
ordinary estufas are simply underground
rooms. Some are sacred, some are for
lounging, some for work. They are used by
the Males, and are usually from 12 to 16
feet square. Some, however, are
parallelograms, and from 8 to 10 feet high.
They are sometimes walled inside with stone,
and have beams of cedar or cottonwood laid
across them, with an opening 2 by 2 or 2 by
3 feet left in the ceiling or roof for a
ladder. This is the only means of
Ventilation. The roof or ceiling beams are
lagged in with other beams or thick brush,
and dirt is thrown over all. The floor is
sometimes laid with stone, sometimes with
mud, and around the 4 sides of the room are
stone benches. One of these benches is
usually constructed so as to form a table,
for the ladder to rest on,
In the center of the room is a place for a
fire of wood, with several stones 10 by 12
inches or larger lying about it, which are
used for seats. The walls contain niches for
idols, and on one side is a pole about 6
feet long, suspended 2 feet from the
ceiling, hung with rawhide, to which the
weavers attach their blankets when weaving.
The estufas are sometimes decorated by the
different orders, septs, gentes, or clans,
but usually they are clay or stone lined,
sometimes whitewashed. The ladders are made
of wood, with loose rounds.
The estufas where the men bold religious
ceremonies do not differ much from the
ordinary estufas. They are also underground
rooms, usually oblong in shape, 12 to 14
feet wide, 18 to 20 feet long, and 10 to 12
feet deep, They are reached by descending a
ladder through a narrow opening or hatch,
These places of worship are destitute of any
kind of furniture. On 3 sides are usually
built stone benches, where the men sit; the
floor is covered with large flagstones, and
a small pile of ashes, almost under the
hatch, is generally to be seen, where the
fire has been kindled when needed. There are
niches in the walls, in which masks and
wooden gods are stored when not in use. The
only source of light to these sacred places
is through the opening at the top, which is
also the only means of ventilation.
Many picture writings were observed on the
rocks about the mesa, and afterward many
were observed at the second or western mesa
and about Oraibi.
In some of the excursions I made into the
desert and to the mesas I frequently came
across large herds of Navajo sheep and
goats, always attended by women and children
acting as herders, together with a large
number of dogs, far from their own
reservation, monopolizing the feeding and
watering places belonging to the Moquis.
These Navajos, with their herds, roam up and
clown the canyons and over the plateaus to
the Tusayan trading post, and. spend days
along the mesas skirting the canyons,
occupying all the little side canyons that
have water, and their hogans are found near
all these points, which they appropriate.
They overrun the Moqui lands at will.
I visited the Moqui School at Kearns Canyon
several times, examined all its buildings,
and found them in excellent condition and
kept in the most perfect order, everything
appearing to be under good management and
wholesome discipline.
The Moqui people are rich in legends and
folklore. They have their stories of giants,
giantesses, hobgoblins, fairies, and all
kinds of spirits, which they believe once,
lived and inhabited the earth in time long
since gone by. Every cliff and mesa, every
mountain and canyon, has some story attached
to it which the natives treasure with care.
All these legends, traditions, and stories
are transmitted, orally, from generation to
generation, with minutest exactness of
circumstances and detail. A child in telling
these, stories is attentively heard by its
elders and quickly prompted if it makes a
mistake in any particular; so we can feel
assured in reading any of these legends
received directly from these people that
they accord with the true, literal Indian
version, These people also have their
superstitions and their belief in ghosts.
All the Moquis have peach orchards, which
are situated at the foot of the mesas in
protected spots; the young trees are
surrounded by stonewalls to keep them from
the ravages of the sheep and goats. Some of
the orchards are inclosed within high walls.
One can hardly imagine the amount of labor
which has been expended upon a peach tree
which has attained its full growth. Apricots
are also cultivated, and gourds, pumpkins,
corn, beans, and a great variety of
watermelons. Peaches are dried for winter
use, and watermelons are kept, through the
dryness of the atmosphere, as late as March.
The crops are gathered and owned in common.
Each family gets its portion and the rest is
stored for the common use.
During the season of
planting and growing many of the men and
boys, in order to protect their crops from
the wandering herds of time Navajos, crows,
ravens, and cutworms, temporarily live in
brush houses by their fields, some of which
are far out in the desert, along the washes
where the ground is sure of natural
irrigation. After the planting these men
spin yarn and weave blankets, sashes, and
other articles of wearing apparel, a most
unusual occupation for a male Indian and
unknown in other tribes, except in few
instances. The people of the first mesa are
Skilled in making pottery. Those of the
second mesa and of the Oraibi are noted for
their fine willow and large coiled
basketwork.
After their harvest their religious
ceremonies begin, in which they thank the
Great Spirit for blessings vouchsafed to
them, and ask that the coming days be
prosperous; that drought, famine, and
pestilence be kept away, and that the
supposed ancient prosperity and mighty
condition of their race be ultimately
restored. It is evident that they are
hardworking people, for almost every moment
of their time is spent in obtaining the
necessaries of life, as they are poor and in
a barren country. A day now and then is
appointed for sports, which only the men
attend, dancing (c) and
horse racing, the latter being the principal
outdoor sport. For the horse

NA-JI (hah-hee) citizen of Mishongnavi,
second mesa, Arizona, 1890.
LA-LO-LA-MY, chief of the Oraibi, Moqui
Pueblo, Arizona.
racing they go into the
desert and select grounds at a point where
they can be seen from the mesas, and when
the day arrives the men all come mounted on
their best ponies, dressed in a variety of
costumes, some in the castoff clothing of
the white man, sonic in only a "gee-string"
(breechcloth), eagle feathers, a pair of
moccasins, and an old hat, some tastefully
and others most gorgeously arrayed in finery
of their own invention and manufacture. When
the races open the people form two lines,
facing each other, the distance between them
being about 30 feet. Usually but two race at
a time. Those entering the contest ride away
300, 400, or 500 yards, to some point agreed
upon; then, turning, they dash forward,
riding to and between these lints to a
lariat, which has been drawn across from one
side to the other. All the spectators act as
judges. There is never any dispute as to the
result of a race, no matter how much has
been staked upon it, one way or the other.
The wildest demonstrations of delight are
indulged in by the winners, and the losers,
join heartily in the general hilarity.
The Moquis bury their dead with much
ceremony. They do not pat them in boxes or
coffins, but wrap them in blankets and lay
them away in the rocks with bowls of sacred
meal, meat, water, corn, and fruits. This is
not done from any superstitious notion that
these things are going to be of any use to
the dead, but because they are symbols of
certain ideas. The women are the chief
mourners. The great altitude of the town
with the consequently rare and pure air
prevents odors.
Their form of courtship and marriage is very
simple. In this part of their life neither
priests nor civil officials have anything to
do. When a young man seeks a wife he pays
court to a maiden of his own choosing, and
if' he is favored she sends him a, basket of
variously colored. piki, or poky, which
signifies that she is willing to marry him.
Then he, with all his people, visits her
family and they have a little fate. This is
returned, when the young man goes away with
the girl, now his bride, and lives in her
house. These people are very moral and hold
in most sacred regard the family life. They
do not marry sisters or cousins, and they
invariably go out of their family or gees to
select wives or husbands.
In visits paid to the different Moqui
pueblos, or villages, I frequently met with
Indians of other tribes who had come for
trade, and who were objects of interest on
account of their great dissimilarity in
costume, manner of dressing the hair, and
painting their faces. The Moquis as a rule
do not paint their faces except for
ceremonials. There were Apaches, Utes,
Pintos, Navajos, and Cojoninas, The latter
Indians deserve special mention. There are
but few of them now, and their home is at
the bottom of Cataract Creek canyon, one of
the side canyons of the Great Colorado. They
live in houses of stone and earth, which I
am told are built like those of the Moquis.
They make the beautiful willow baskets,
which are deep, and so tightly woven that
they hold water, They are like the Apache
baskets, only the designs worked in them are
of 1 color, black, while the Apache baskets
are of 2 colors, black and red.
From Moqui, or Walpi, to Holbrook the road
passes many old ruins, which came into view
every little while high up on the mesas.
These mounds, sometime; walls covering
acres, were ruins when the Spaniards first
came there. Ten miles or so to the south,
and at our right, overlooking that part of
the desert where the "Giant's Chair" is
situated, is Awatubi (meaning high rock),
probably the most picturesque of all these
ruins. The Navajos call it Tal-li-hogan
(singing house). It is supposed to be one of
the 7 Moqui towns of the ancient province of
Tusayan, which have been supposed by some to
be the "7 cities of the kingdom of Cibola",
and a part of the walls of a church built by
the Franciscan monks and Indian slaves are
still standing in a good state of
preservation. Some of the walls of the
houses, too, have outlived the storms, and
could today, with a little repairing, be
utilized for places of abode. I was told by
the Indian Nah-ji that the people of Awatubi
became very bad and put to death their chief
and the members of his family; that 4 years
from the time of this revolt the men of the
other 6 pueblos entered the city while those
of Awatubi were engaged in religions
ceremonies in their estufas, and that at a
given signal fired brush, which they had
brought with them was thrown into the
estufas, together with chili (red pepper),
which greatly aided in the suffocation of
their victims. Those who attempted to escape
were brained with stone axes. They then
killed all the old women, sparing the young
children, who were divided among the other
pueblos. The town was completely destroyed
and has not since been used as a human
habitation, unless temporarily by some
nomadic Navajos.
All evidences of the Spanish invasion and
possession have passed away excepting a few
remains of old buildings, probably churches,
judging from their dimensions. One of these,
under Shimopavi, just south, is a mission,
or church, with walls from 4 to 6 feet
thick; they now form a part of a large sheep
corral. Other Spanish ruins lie among the
ruins of Awatubi. All other evidences of
this occupation have disappeared, except now
and then small ancient silver crosses of
strange shapes, which the Indians wear among
their beads.
Tewa, the present seventh town, was built
after the expulsion of the Spaniards as a
home for some hired fighting men, who went
there and settled with their families. The
Navajos, Utes, and Apaches had constantly
menaced the Moquis, who were and still are a
very peaceable people, as the name they call
themselves implies, Ho-pi-tub. It was for a
better protection of life that they built
their houses on the Mesas. Their fields were
always in danger of being despoiled by
roaming bands of one or the other of these
tribes, and their condition became
distressing. Finally, hi their extremity,
they secured the aid of some Indians from
Tehua, on the Rio Grande, Who took
possession of the new village and gave it
the name Tewa, as it is now spelt, the "w"
substituting the Spanish "hu". The village
had been provided for them and was one of
the inducements offered to get them. Besides
their dwellings all the other necessaries of
life were furnished, and the Tehuas were not
obliged to perform any other duty than that
of protecting the Moqui flocks, herds,
fields, and orchards against the incursions
of their enemies. The Tehuas were inured to
war and proved a valuable auxiliary to their
old kinsmen, with whom they were destined to
become more closely united. It is nearly 200
years since they became a part of the Moqui
establishment, marrying and intermarrying
and speaking the Moqui tongue, yet in all
this time they have preserved their own
language in toto. The descendants of these
Indian military families are farmers. They
show a pronounced difference in their
bearing from the pure Moqui, and as a
general rule are taller and broader. They
are foremost in all things that pertain to
their future good, and were the first to
leave the mesa and build new homes more
convenient to wood and water and their
fields. They have from the beginning
encouraged the school that has been
established for the Moquis at Kearns Canyon.
Polaki is their principal man, or chief, and
in him is typified the force and energy of
his race.
The Moquis have been led to believe that all
who would leave the mesas, that is, their
old homes in the 7 pueblos, and come down
and build new houses in the valleys would be
provided roofs for their houses by the
government. This encouragement or statement
has brought clown more than was expected and
more than roofs can be provided for. To get
nearer water is one of the inducements, if
not the principal one, for them to leave
their old homes on the mesas, and they can
not understand why they should nave been
asked to come down if they are not to be
dose to the water. They claim that by this
allotment no benefits in that direction will
be derived. They also desire to build and
live in small communities, but some of the
walls which they have put up to this end
have been pushed over, and their wishes in
this respect disregarded. The springs which
they have always had continue to be their
only supply.
The Moqui men say that they begin to think
that the promises of the nation and white
men to develop new water sources or improve
the old ones are lies, and that after all,
the so-called efforts to help them are only
schemes for the ultimate dispossessing them
of their old homes and lands, where for
centuries they have lived, following the
peaceful habits of agriculturists, never
asking any other aid from the government
excepting that of protection against the
Navajos. There is grave danger here of a
charge of bad faith. The United States can
best aid these people by expending a few
thousand dollars to develop their water
supply and put them in the way of planting
quick-growing trees for fuel and timber. In
other matters, save schools, it is wise to
let them alone. They now feed and care for
themselves but the future water and wood
supply should be undertaken by the nation
$15,000 expended judiciously now will settle
these things. o
There. is evidence of an abundance of water
about all the mesas, but the springs are not
properly developed, and at present there is
a great waste of water; there being no
reservoirs to keep or store the water it
easily percolates through the earth and sand
to the 'tower rock benches beneath the
drift, and so is lost.
At intervals along the foot of the first
mesa there are 11 well-known springs; at the
second, 18, of which 14 are about the spur
upon which the village of Shimopavi rests.
Oraibi, on the third mesa, and the largest
of all the pueblos, has comparatively the
smallest water supply, there being at the
present time but 5 springs to furnish its
large number of inhabitants with this great
necessity.
There is, however, a present greater
necessity than lack of water confronting
these peaceful and industrious people, that
is fuel. The mesas for 7 to 12 miles around
have been completely denuded of every
vestige of wood or timber. They now have to
go to remote canyons and distant mesa tops
for their supply. The idea of planting
trees, except those that bear fruit, has
never occurred to them. The parts of the
tablelands the Moquis cultivate, as viewed
from the mesas, seem but little specks of
green in the vast areas of sandy waste.
The agent of the Navajos is also the Moqui,
agent.
The country immediately about the Moqui
towns suggested the name for this region.
Leaving the tablelands and passing down to
the lower levels the surface becomes more
broken, with here and there lonesome looking
buttes. The Navajos called all this section
"Ta-sa-un", meaning "isolated buttes", and
the Spaniards christened the country the
"Tusayan" and called it the "Province of
Tusayan".
The Moquis are an entirely peaceful and
industrious people, self-sustaining,
supporting themselves by agriculture, stork
raising, and the manufacture and sale of
pottery and basket work. The villages, or
pueblos, are from 700 to 800 feet above the
valleys, and wood has to be brought by men
and donkeys, or burros, a distance of 6 to 8
miles, while water, obtained from springs at
the bottom or base of the Mesas, has to be
brought by women

Woman of Tewa, Arizona first Mesa
in jars to 2 miles, up
well-worn paths along the sides of the mesas
to the villages. Their supply of water
depends entirely on the continuance of the
wet or rainy season. Snows begin in and
about the high mountains in December and
continue until February. The rainy season
commences about the middle of July and lasts
until September. Sometimes, after a rain, a
little dew is noticeable in the morning, but
only for a few days or until the surface
water disappears. It can not be said that
the water supply increases or decreases.
There are many springs adjoining the mesas,
which, if properly developed, would more
than treble the present water supply. Their
corn and wheat fields are along the water
washes and in the valleys. Both cereals are
planted in hills, the corn irregularly, from
5 to 6 feet apart, the wheat about 18 inches
apart. A primitive planting stick, say 2.5
feet in length and 1.5 inches in diameter,
with a projection about 19 inches from the
end and 4 inches long, on which they place
their foot to force the stick in the ground,
is mostly used in planting. In using it they
dig down to where the sand or earth, as it
may be, is moist; then the seed is deposited
and covered up. Small brush houses are built
near the grain fields, in which watchers
remain during the growing season to keep off
the ravens and other birds. A few of the
Moquis use modern hoes, beyond which they
possess no implements for farming. Melons of
all kinds, squashes, pumpkins, cucumbers,
beans, and chili (pepper, used in all their
stewed dishes), are planted in groups, the
seeds being dropped in the holes- made by
the stick beside the corn and wheat fields.
Peach orchards are plentifully sprinkled
among the rolling sand hills, which bank up
against the sides of the mesas. Some are
planted on the top of the mesas, where there
is sufficient earth and sand to hold
moisture. At Shimopavi and Oraibi,
particularly at the latter place, at the
north and west of the town, there are a
number of large and thriving peach orchards,
which, until our last visit, had been
usually considered the only Moqui peach
orchards. Ou the first mesa, about 1 mile
north of Tewa, are 2 large orchards covering
from 3 to 5 acres, and 3 miles further
north, on the west slope of the mesa, there
are fully 20 acres of peach trees of great
age and still yielding abundance of fruit;
the trees are planted along lines on the
walled terraces, which are daily watered
through small ditches running along each
terrace, ingeniously contrived to receive
and distribute an abundant supply of water
from a large spring up and under the first
bends of the mesa. This spring is called 44
Co-nell-a-bah", sheep spring.
The Navajos have made frequent raids upon
this place with their herds, so that there
are now acres of peach orchards gone to
waste through the destruction of portions of
the terraces and trees. These terraces are
all on the north side, from which direction
the Navajos come.
A mile to the north of Tewa, around a spur
of the mesa, are the terraced gardens of
Weepo (onion springs), where the water
supply is quite as great as that of
Co-nell-a-bah. These gardens are used by all
the Indians of the 7 pueblos or villages.
There are hundreds of acres of these peach
orchards, and they are found in the most out
of the way places, wherever there is sand
which will hold moisture. The sands have
drifted over some of them so deeply that the
tree trunks are lost to sight, the limbs
emerging like the blades of the yucca plant
from the drift about them. It is impossible
to accurately state the aggregated acreage
of these orchards, and equally difficult to
estimate the actual acreage of their
cornfields. It is believed that between the
7 pueblos or villages there are 3,000 to
3,600 acres of corn lands, and there are
certainly 1,000 or more acres of peach
trees. I should have said the peach orchards
are set out very much as those in the east,
and are grown front the pit. Great care is
required in preserving the young trees from
the goats and burros, or donkeys. Stone
walls are built singly about each young
tree, and brush is then piled over these;
even after this provision much care is
required, frequent watering being necessary
if the season is a dry one. The stone
inclosures and brush also serve to keep the
sand from drifting over and burying the
young trees. The Moquis have about 2,000
acres in vegetables.
All of the 7 pueblos or
villages are under the chieftainship of one
man, whose title is hereditary. He is
assisted by sub-chiefs or principal men, one
or more of whom live in each village. To the
council of chiefs the medicine men, or
priests, are always invited, and they have a
voice in the discussion of all subjects that
come before the council, The principal
priests, that is, the heads of the different
orders, such as the antelope, snake, hear,
and beaver, elect their own successors,
imparting to them during their last days the
carefully bidden secrets so potent in their
religious ceremonies. Their successors are
usually chosen from their own family or
gens, and they are instructed from their
youth. in the mysteries of the 'particular
order into which they may be initiated. up
to a certain point, beyond which none of the
final rites are revealed until their
predecessors select them to take their
exalted places. (d)
The Moquis are subject to all the diseases
common to other people. Pestilence more
frequently breaks out among them than among
nomadic Indians, owing, no doubt, to the
accumulated filth about their villages.
While their houses are neat within, their
streets are common cesspools, All corners
and covered ways are the conveniences, the
outhouses and water-closets of well
regulated homes. Ollas of urine stand in
front of every house (the urine is used for
dyeing purposes), so it is easily imagined
that the atmosphere they constantly breathe
while within the walls of their town is
poisonous and death dealing. They have
doctors who are skillful in the treatment of
simple ailments and some of the diseases.
These doctors may come from among the
medicine men, or priests, and they may
belong to the council of chiefs.
Herbs constitute their only medicine beyond
the sun bath and prayers. The women attend
to all cases of childbirth.
The Moquis, as already stated, bury at the
foot of the mesas in walled graves, where,
wrapped in blankets, their dead are laid
away, first covered by slabs of stone, over
which earth or sand is thrown. Burial bowls
containing corn and other eatables are
buried with them, but not because of a
belief that they will benefit the dead, but
to symbolize some of their religious
beliefs.
The Moquis, male and female, are, as a rule,
small in stature; the average height of the
men will not exceed 5 feet 6 inches, but
there are some stalwarts among them. They
are well proportioned, but their heads often
appear overlarge, owing rather to the thick
and vigorous growth of hair than to enlarged
amnions. This growth of hair is undoubtedly
due to their not wearing head covering
constantly. While they generally possess
finely-cut and regular features, many of
them have heavy jaws and broad faces, though
rarely large or coarse mouths. They resemble
the Arapaho or Cheyenne more than the Kiowa,
or Comanche, and to the casual observer or
stranger they all look alike, but close
acquaintance with them shows that there is
as great a dissimilarity in features among
them as in other races. The women are, of
course, smaller than the men, with broad,
squat figures.
The custom the men have of banging their
hair, with side locks parted from the top of
the head and falling to the shoulders, their
back hair gathered and tied in a knot low on
the neck, contributes largely to the idea of
similarity of features. The older men do not
strictly follow this custom, but often
neglect the banging and allow their hair to
fall loosely about their shoulders and back,
parting it in the middle on top. The hair of
the male Moqui is exceedingly coarse, and
only in rare instances is it any other color
than a blue-black. The few albinos among
them have flaxen hair, pink skin, and. white
eyes, which seem to move involuntarily; they
are the most repulsive looking objects met
with among the Indians, The women when young
are lithe and rather pretty, but as they get
older they become portly, though not clumsy.
They have a peculiar gait, a waddle,
inclining the body, forward as thought they
were always about to step a little faster.
This is attributed to the heavy burdens they
carry on their heads, particularly water,
which they bring from the distant springs
lying at the base of the mesas, sometimes 3
miles away. For this purpose they use large,
almost round jugs, which they make of clay
and burn. When the jug is filled it is swung
to the small of the back, and the strap
fastened through the ears of the jug is
brought over the forehead, and the long
march homeward begins. Sometimes the jug is
wrapped in a blanket and carried as with the
strap, but this is done only when one or
both of the ears of the jug may be broken.

Virginity is highly prized by the Moquis.
The hair of the females, the decorations or
marks on their pottery, and the method of
their basket weaving indicate whether or not
the Moqui women making the articles are
childbearing. When a Moqui woman ceases to
be childbearing it is said of her "the gate
is closed". Their plaque baskets, used for
holding and passing bread, are made of one
continuous strand of colored braided straw,
and when the end of the outer coil is left
unfinished and scraggy it signifies that the
woman making it is still able to bear
children; in other words "the gate is open".
When the end, is finished and rounded sheds
unable to bear children, and "the gate is
closed".

The Oraibis do not pay so
much attention to this distinction in the
decoration of their willow baskets. The
large coil baskets or plaques are made on
the second mesa, pottery principally on the
first mesa, and the small willow baskets on
the third mesa. The three great pottery
pueblos are Sichumnavi, Tewa, and Walpi, The
method of making is by hand.
Unmarried women, maidens, wear their hair in
the "curt wheel" "sideboard" style, denoting
virginity, that is, they have "half a
blanket to let", and are ready to wed. The
married women braid their hair in two
braids, parting it in the middle from the
forehead to the back of the neck. Sometimes
it is all brought forward and tied in a knot
at the top of the forehead; some of them
bang the hair and wear it cut short. Very
young girls also wear the peculiar large
"wheel" puff. The Moqui females spend much
time in doing up their hair. They are
particular to keep the scalp clean, and
almost daily wash the hair with soapweed
(amolí), which gives it a beautiful satin
gloss. They frequently neglect the nice
while washing the hair. In washing the face
or wetting the hair they fill the mouth with
water and spurt it out (after the manner of
Chinamen sprinkling clothes), a little at a
time, in the hands, which are held together,
forming a bowl, and then apply it to the
fume. They do not use towels; the air is so
dry and moisture evaporates so quickly that
there is no need of a towel.
The Moquis are very fond of tobacco and are
habitual smokers, with a decided preference
for the little yellow cigarette, which they
make themselves. Its use among them is not
confined to the men; women and children are
also sharers in the smoking habit, and they
all seem to enjoy it as much as they do
their melons and peaches. They do not raise
the tobacco usually smoked by them, but buy
it from the traders. Small presents of it
form a most excellent means of making
friends with them.
Sometimes they blow the smoke slowly through
the hand and waft it heavenward. When they
can not get paper to make cigarettes the
cottonwood leaves, which are tough and well
adapted for the purpose, are used. It is
amusing to see a small, nude child, not more
than 5 years old, make a cigarette and smoke
it with the air of a veteran. The Moquis
have native tobacco, which they use in
ceremonies. They do not use commercial
tobacco in their ceremonies.
The domestic life, food, and cooking of the
Moquis are generally similar to the Pueblos
of New Mexico, They have in their domestic
life all the charms of peace. Their bread
(piki) consists of corn meal and water made
into a thin batter, which is spread in
handfuls over a large flat stone
sufficiently hot to quickly bake it. When a
number of these sheets or wafers have been
cooked, they are rolled up together and laid
away.(e) The women grind
the corn for the bread on the metáte (or
stone) with stones. Their cooking is done in
rude fireplaces, generally in the corner of
their rooms, but some of them now have
modern stoves. Their cooking utensils are
iron pots, kettles, and tomato cans, or
anything that will hold water. Coffee pots,
cups and saucers, and knives and forks are
used, but not generally. Their rooms are
furnished with blankets, sheepskins,
pottery, sometimes as loom, and large stones
for seats, but lately boxes and even chairs
have made their appearance. Soups and. stews
are made, from mutton or beef, with various
small vegetables, including the onion. Cow's
milk and butter are not used, goat's milk
supplying the place of the former.
Watermelons and peaches are their fruits.
Sugar they buy when they can. They are very
fond of all sweets.
The cattle, horses, burros, sheep, and goats
are not owned in community but by
individuals. The fields are owned by
families or gentes, and worked by them
together, the products being divided
equally. The herds of each pueblo are cared
for by herders assigned each day by the
governor. The crier in the early morning
passes through the streets arousing the
herders, when the herds are driven out and
brought back at night and placed in the
stone pens about the mesas. The Oraibis own
the most of the cattle of the Moquis. The
herds are the property of individuals, but
are herded as a whole.
The Moquis clip their sheep once, or twice a
year. The wool was formerly cut off with a
knife, and recently a Moqui was seen using a
piece of tin from a tomato can for sheep
shearing; but shears are now generally used.
The Moquis, it is said, believe in a great
spirit, who lives in the sun and who gives
them light and heat. With the Moquis there
is male and female in the idea of deity;
flue earth is the female, and all living
things are the issue. (f)
Serofula is prevalent to some extent among
them; no cases of syphilis, however, are
known to exist at the present time. The
Moquis are a pure, an unmixed people. The
bite of the rattlesnake has no terror to the
Moquis, as their doctors cure it-without
fail, even after swelling has begun. The
remedy applied is jealously guarded, and
like' other secrets is transmitted through
the chief priests of the snake order.
Many of the Moquis possess firearms,
repeating rifles, revolvers, and ammunition,
for hunting (g), which they
buy of the small traders that lurk about the
outskirts of the reservation, many of whom,
south of here, on the Little Colorado, are
also selling whisky. Dancing is a social as
well as a devotional matter with the Moquis.
Their dances are very frequent.
As the women do most of the house building,
such as laying the stones, plastering, and
roofing, for this reason, perhaps, the
dwellings belong to them. The Moqui women,
it is said, own all the household goods as
well as the houses. The descent of this
property is in the female line and through
the mother. The men do all the weaving of
blankets, dresses, and sashes. The Moqui
sacred blanket of white, with colored
borders, is held in great esteem by all
Indians. (h) The men are
domestic and kind, the women are loving and
virtuous, the children are obedient and
return the affection bestowed upon them by
their parents. The men own the small tracts
of land which they cultivate.
The Moquis tan hides after the fashion of
other Indians, by scraping and rubbing with
the brains of the animal and then stretching
the hide until dry. Rawhide is generally
used for the soles of their moccasins and
for the covering of their saddles. Their
boxes and sacks for the storing and
transporting of provisions were formerly
made of rawhide, but now they use commercial
hags and boxes, which they procure from the
traders. They are quick to receive and apply
the ingenious articles used by white people
religion of a people who are low in mental
development, and in whose pitiful lives the
hours of trial and privation and sorrow are
much more numerous than the happy ones, that
the spirit of good, though all-wise, is not
all-powerful, so it is found here.
Cotukinuniwa loves his children and would
send to thorn nothing but good; but that he
eon not always do, for Balilokon is
sometimes stronger than ho, and wills evil.
Yet it would not be right to call Balilokon
the spirit of evil, for ho is by no meters
always so. When he is pleased the mists and
rains fall gently and the sap runs lustily
through plants and trees, giving them
vigorous growth; the springs and rivers are
full, but clear, giving abundance of good
water to the people and their flocks, and
the blood flowing in the veins of the
children of the tribe is the blood of
health; but Balilokon is sometimes angered
and the rains come not at all, or come in
deluges that destroy; the rivers are dry or
are raging floods; the sap is withdrawn from
the plants and trees and they die, and the
blood of the people flows through their
veins but to poison. There have been times
when the auger of Balilokon it seemed no
ceremony or prayer could appease, then
hundreds of the people went down to death,
and one time, a Nay in the dim past, so many
moons ago that their wisest one can not tell
how many, he sent a great flood that covered
nearly all the earth, nod but very few of
the people and not many of the beasts were
saved. Balilokon, having it in his power to
do so much of evil, is the god most prayed
to, and in his name almost all of the
ceremonies are hold. At the foot of the
cliff at the southern point of the mesa is a
large rock [Moqui luck shrine] with a nearly
flat top, about 8 by 10 feet in sire, and a
few yards to one side of it is a well-worn
trail. On the top of the rook are thousands
of pebbles, seemingly every one that could
possibly be lodged there, and around the
base are other thousands them have fallen.
It is the great luck stone, and from time
immemorial have the children of the villages
gone there to get forecasts of their lives.
Each little devotee of the Mind goddess
selects 3 pebbles, and while walking down
the trail throws (them, one by one, upon the
reek. If but 1 pebble lodges the thrower
will know much of sorrow and disappointment,
yet his efforts will sometimes bear good
fruits. If 2 pebbles stay ho will find more
than the average of success, and if all 3
lodge upon the top ho may march onward
boldly, for what can withstand him! Should
all the little stones fall off, what then?
Well, the child can ask himself but one
question, "Why was I born?"-Charles R.
Moffet, 1889.
In the "neck", or "saddle" which connects
the first of the Moqui "islands" of rock
[the first-or eastern mesa, on which is
Walpi] with the main tableland is a shrine
of great importance. It is a little
inclosure of slabs of slate surrounding a
large stone fetich, which as been carved
into a conventional representation of the
sacred. snake. In 2 small natural cavities
of the dance rook are also kept other largo
fetiches.-Charles F. Lummis, in "Some
Strange Corners of Our Country ", 1802
At points about the Moqui villages are
altars and shrines, on or in which are idols
made of wood or pottery, and at which the
Moquis individually worship. Near Oraibi is
a noted phallic-shrine. The Moqui worship or
devotional acts are largely private. Their
communal and public worship is generally by
dancing or in games. Some of these shrines
may be the-remains of the old Catholic
worship.
In 1875; John W. Powell wrote; "The greater
part of their [the Moquis'] clothing is made
of wool, thought all of their priestly
habiliments, their wedding and burying
garments are still made of cotton".
The Moqui men weave a white
blanket of wool of from 2 to 3 feet in width
and 5 to 8 feet in length. Those blankets,
which have margins or borders worked in rod
and black of curious patterns, are both
useful mid artistic. They are costly, and
are known as Moqui sacred blankets. The
Moqui industries are few, blankets, fur
clothing, baskets, and pottery being the
staples. The Moqui blankets are eagerly
purchased by other Indians. They keep out
water and are of bright colors. Indians, the
civilized as well as the wild, love bright
colors. The blue or grey blankets issued by
the United States the Indians soon drop or
exchange for highly colored ones, and even
in Minnesota one can at times see the Moqui,
Navajo, and Mexican blankets on the stalwart
Chippewas.
Condition of the Indian by State, 1890
a.
The usual rule with the Indians of this
section is to charge $2 for jewelry
containing $1 of silver.
b. About the heads of
some are coronets of 5 or 6 small squares of
wood. These coronets sometimes resemble a
Maltese cross, with it near approach to a
Grecian border on them, the lines being in
green. The bodies of the wooden gods are
usually painted white, and frequently a bit
of the down of a feather is glued to the
points of the coronet, which may be a
symbol, copied from the halos around the
bonds of the images of saints in Catholic
churches. Tho Spanish Catholic influence is
quite apparent, in many of the Moqui images,
and also in some of their customs, on their
pottery, and in figures on their blankets.
c. In 1880 Mr. C. R.
Moffet attended a tininina, or social dance,
given by the young men of Walpi. He thus
describes it "We made our way through the
intricate windings of the narrow streets to
nearly the opposite side of the village,
where we found about 40 men assembled in a
long, low, and narrow ball. As only one very
poor clip was burning, and as the only
opening through, wall or roof was a very low
and narrow door near one end, it is safe to
say that the lighting and ventilating of
their ballroom was not first class. The
dancers had removed- all superfluous
clothing, and it was extremely ludicrous to
see an Indian come in and, after quietly
greeting those present, with great dignity
take off his shirt and hang it up, just as a
white man under similar circumstances would
remove his overcoat and hat. The musical
instruments were a tom-tom, made of a
section of to hollow cottonwood log, one end
of which was covered with dried mule skin, a
number of gourds filled with pebbles, and
wonderful innovation, a half string of
sleigh bons. Ties pebble-filled gourds and
the bells were rattled and the tom-tom,
beaten with a heavy stick, came in from time
to time like a bass drum, and the dancers,
in a long single file, kept time. First but
the right foot of each moved, to the music,
then both feet, then both foot and, one arm,
then all the limbs, then the head, then the
whole frame fairly writhed. The line slowly
retreated to the back of the hall, but at
once advanced with ever accelerating speed,
ending in. a terrific bound. All this in
perfect unison, keeping time to the music,
all the dangers chanting the story of their
tribe. First, low and plaintive the song,
telling the death of some renowned chief, or
great misfortune of their people; then
higher, telling of the capture of whole
herds of deer, and antelope, and big horn,
by their mighty hunters; then higher, ever
higher, tolling the adventures of their
brave warriors on the fields of strife, and
ending in a terrible yell, that marked the
close of a wonderful exploit of some
death-dealing chief. The wavering light, the
shadowy corners, scarcely lighted at all the
rattling belle and gourds, and the mournful
tom-tom; the long line Of nearly mule
Indians, their long hair streaming out
behind, marching, bounding, writhing, and
wildly tossing their arms; and the strange
song, now soft and low, now loud and fierce,
formed a scene oppressively weird, and never
to be forgotten. The dentine ended at about
10 o'clock."
d. Clans or Gentes
Among the Moquis.-The great difficulty
experienced by anyone on visiting the Maqui
towns is to get some one to talk with him.
Now and then a Moqui may speak a little
English and some Navajo or Spanish. These
people, while obliging and good natured, are
not very communicative as to home life
unless they see a chance for trade or to
receive motley for their conversation.
Unless their antecedent history is known one
might as well be in the midst of a desert.
One might remain with them 10 years and find
out but little unless be knew their
language, or learned it or fell in with
those who knew it and could speak English.
The Moquis are cunning and will fill the
listening ear with wonders if the palm is
crossed. They like silver, both the color
and the coin. One can suggest a form,
theory, clan, or gens, and the Moquis will
supply what is wanting. How much of what is
thus obtained from them is true is a query.
In writing of gone, Lewis H. Morgan, in his
"Ancient Society", 1878, says of the Moquis:
"In seine of the tribes, as the Moqui
village Indians of New Mexico (Angoria), the
members of the gene claimed their descent
from the animal whose name they born, their
remote ancestors having been transformed by
the Great Spirit from the animal into the
human form". Captain J. G. Bourke, in ''The
Moquis of Arizona", says of the clans or
gentes of the Moquis: The clans or gentes of
the Oraybi [Oraibi] Moquis are almost
identical with those of Suchongnewy
[Sichumnavi]. Nahivehma [Naha] said that,
in. Oraybi there is a crane gens, but the
oak and road runner gentes are both
extinct". Bishop Hatch, of the Mormon
church, insisted that while he was in Oraybi
there was a sacred family among the Moquis;
he said that there was a widow, whose infant
son, not over 4 years old, was upon every
feast day or occasion of ceremony loaded
down with beads of seashell, chalehibuitl,
abalone, and everything else precious in the
eyes of the Moquis. Concerning the clans or
gentes of the Moquis, Bishop Hatch says: I
give the following lists, obtained at
different times, and varying slightly from
the inability of different Moquis to give
the correct Spanish for each clan name or my
own inability to understand them. Surgeon
Tem Broock, United States
army in 1852, compiled the following list;
1, Deer; 2, Sand; 3, Water; 4, Bear; 5,
Hare; 6, Prairie Wolf (coyote); 7,
Rattlesnake; 8, Tobacco plum; 2,seed Grass.
Tegua Tom, in October, 1881, gave me the
following names: 1, Water; 2, Toad, or Frog;
3, Sun; 4, Snake; 5, Rabbit; 6, Butterfly;
7, Tobacco, 8, Badger; 9, Corn; 10,
Cottonwood.; 11, Clown, or Dead Man; 12,
Bear; 13, Coyote; 14, Deer; 15, Lizard, and
16, Road runner. The Tegna Indians living in
the village of Hano, or Tegue, with the
Mavis have 1, Sun; 2, Corn; 3, Snake; 4,
Tobacco; 5, Cottonwood; 6, Pine; 7, Cloud;
8, Boar; 9, Parrot. Tom himself was of the
corn gums, his father of the frog, and his
wife of the bear. Nahivehma, Tom said, was
roadrunner. The clans or goatee of the
Moquis, according to an old Moquis, who
expressed himself with great intelligence,
although he spoke but little Spanish, are as
follows. My informant, I must take care to
say, was old Tochi, or Moccasin, our host or
lust night. Ho said that be himself belonged
to the boli or butterfly, gene, that his
wife and children wore of the aguila, or
eagle, his father was venado, or deer, and
his son hail married a quingoi, or oak, and
his brother a lena, or ku-ga.
| 1. Boll |
Mariposa |
Butterfly |
|
10. Pa-kua |
Sapo |
Toad, or Frog (3) |
| 2.
Kuaja |
Agnila |
Eagle |
|
11. Tajua |
Sol |
Sun |
| 3. Ka-ah |
Maiz |
Corn |
|
12. A-to-co |
Grulla |
Crane (now extinct) |
| 4. Chia |
Vibora |
Rattlesnake |
|
13. Shu-hui-ma |
Venado |
Deer |
| 5. Sui |
Conejos |
Rabbit (1) |
|
14. Ku-ga |
Lena |
Firewood (almost extinct) |
| 6. Honan |
Oso |
Bear |
|
15. Sha-hue |
Coyote |
Coyote |
| 7. Piba |
Bunchi |
Tobacco (negative (2) |
|
16. Huspon |
Pnisano |
Road-runner (chapparal) |
| 8. Honaui |
Tejon |
Badger |
|
17. Quingoi |
Eucina |
Oak |
| 9. Pa-jeh |
Agua |
Water |
|
18. Oma-a |
Nube |
Cloud |
(1) The Spanish, word conejos' was given, but I am too well
acquainted with the employment by the Indians of this word for liebre' (a
hare or jack rabbit, and vice versa) not to feel it my duty to point out the
uncertainty of the translation.
(2) No. 7 is named from the bunchi,' or native tobacco, cultivated by all
the pueblos of New Mexico and Arizona,
(3) In like manner, the Spanish ' sapo' (toad) is used so generally by the
Indians instead of "rana' (frog), and I am so well satisfied that 'pa-kua'
in the Moqui language means frog that I have felt constrained to give that
as the name of the tenth gene:
(4) The Indian could not explain what this meant; he repeated 'leua, lena'
(firewood), but whether "alamo' (cottonwood), or some other tree like the
cedar or pine, I could not make out."
e. John W. Powell, in 1875, thus wrote of the Moqui
method of baking piki, er bread They take great pains to raise corn of
different colors and have the corn of each color stored in a separate room.
This is ground by hand to a fine flour in stone mills, then made into a
paste like a rather thick gruel. In every house there is a little oven, made
of a fiat stone, 18 or 20 inches square, raised 4 or 5 inches from the door,
and beneath this a little fire is built, When the even is hot and the dough
mixed in a little vessel of pottery the good woman plunges her hand in the
mixture and aridly swears the broad surface of the furnace rook with a thin
coating of the paste. In a few moments the film of batter is baked, when
taken up it looks like a sheet of paper. This she folds and places one tray.
Haying made 7 sheets of this paper bread, from the batter of one color and
placed them on the tray she takes batter of another color, and in this way
makes 7 sheets of each of the several colors of corn batter."
f. The Moquis know one all wise and good spirit,
Cotuknuniwa, "The Heart of the Stars". They have also Balilokon the Great
Water Snake, the spirit of the element, of water, and they see Min in the
rains and snows, the rivers and springs, the sap in the treed, and the blood
in the body. The whole Moqui heavens are filled, too, with Katcina, angels,
or, literally, "those who have listened to the gods". All of the great dead
men of the Moqui Nation at some time before they died saw [Cachina, or
Kateheena] and received messages from them, and some of the chiefs now
living have seen them, too. As is so often found in the
g. The Moquis stilt use bows and arrows for 'killing
small game, and have a curious "boomerang" of wood. about 18 inches long,
list, say 1.5 inches wide and looped in the center, with which they kill
rabbits. Whether they can throw this so deftly as to have it return to the
thrower with the aid of the velocity which sends it away I can not verify.
The boys are very adept in the use of the bow and arrow and the boomerang.
The boomerang is the favorite weapon in the Moqui rabbit hunt [the Moquis
use rabbit skins for robes and the flesh for food], besides it saves powder
and shot or cartridges. As we were returning, about dark, from our last call
we found coast of the inhabitants of the village [Walpi] congregated. in an
open space, while from a housetop a chief was delivering a harangue. "Me
chief of the hunt proclaims a rabbit hunt for tomorrow ", explained the
doctor, "and all the able-bodied men and boys above a certain age must go".
In these limits the Moqui's usually drive to some part of the plaits to the
south and east of the villages, where the little "cottontails" are very
plentiful, and where they also find a good many of the large jack rabbits.
Leaving all their firearms at home (powder and lead are too scarce and
valuable to be used on rabbits), they go forth armed, some with bows and
blunt arrows, but most of them only with pieces of wood shaped quite like a
Turkish scimiter, the blade about 20 inches long, 2 inches wide, and
one-quarter of an inch thick. From 50 to 100 Indians surround a large tract,
gradually converge, driving the game before them. When near the center the
rabbits attempt to escape through the lines, and they are knocked over by
arrows or the crooked sticks, thrown by the hunters with wonderful skill.
The hunts sometimes yield a marvelous number of cottontails, if the hunters
can be believed.-C. R. Moffet, 1889.
h. Blankets are no more made by the Pueblos (of New
Mexico), and they of Moqui alone continue to weave the women's dresses, with
which they supply all the other (including New Mexico) pueblos, as they do
with baskets,-Gushers F. Lummis, 1802.
Notes About the Book:
Source: Report on Indians Taxed and Indians not Taxed in the United States, Except
Alaska at the Eleventh Census: 1890, Department of the Interior, Government
Printing Office, Washington DC., 1894
A
Report to the Secretary of War of the United
States on Indian Affairs, by Rev. Jedidiah
Morse, 1822, Printed by S. Converse
Online Publication: The manuscript was scanned and
then ocr'd. Minimal editing has been done, and readers can and should expect
some errors in the textual output. Several spellings have been used for the same
tribe of Indians.
This site includes some historical materials that may imply negative
stereotypes reflecting the culture or language of a particular period or place.
These items are presented as part of the historical record and should not be
interpreted to mean that the WebMasters in any way endorse the stereotypes
implied.
Free
Genealogy |
Indian
Genealogy |
Condition of the Indian by State, 1890 |
|