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Tipi, Earth Lodges and Villages
The Tipi. One of the most characteristic features of Plains Indian culture
was the tipi. All the tribes of the area, almost without exception, used it for
a part of the year at least. Primarily, the tipi was a conical tent covered with
dressed buffalo skins. A carefully mounted and equipped tipi from the Black-foot
Indians stands in the center of the Plains exhibit. Everywhere the tipi was
made, cared for, and set up by the women. First, a conical framework of long
slender poles was erected and the cover raised into
place. Then the edges of the cover were staked down and the poles supporting the
"ears" put in place. The "ears" are wings, or flies, to keep the wind out of the
smoke hole at the top; they were moved about by the outside poles. The fire was
built near the center and the beds spread upon the ground around the sides. The
head of the family usually sat near the rear, or facing the door.
While in essential features the tipis of all Plains tribes were the same, there
were nevertheless some important differences. Thus, when setting up a tipi, the
Blackfoot, Crow, Sarsi, Hidatsa, Omaha, and Comanche first tie four poles as a
support to the others; while the Teton-Dakota, Assiniboin, Cheyenne, Gros
Ventre, Arapaho, Kiowa, Plains-Cree, Mandan, and Pawnee use three, or a tripod
foundation. For the remaining tribes, we lack data, but it seems safe to assume
that they follow one or the other of these methods. The three-pole foundation
gives the projecting tops of the poles a spiral appearance while the four-pole
beginning tends to group them on the sides. Thus, to a practiced eye, the
difference is plain. The covers, ears, doors, etc., are quite similar
throughout. The shapes of tipis, however, show some differences. Thus, the
Cheyenne prefer a wide base in proportion to the height while the Arapaho prefer
a narrow base. Again, the Crow use very long poles, the ends projecting out
above like a great funnel.
It is important to note that the use of the tipi is not confined to the plains.
The Ojib way along the Lakes used it, but covered it with birch bark as did also
many of the Cree and tribes formerly established in eastern Canada and New
England. Even the Eastern Dakota in early days used birch bark for tipi covers.
A tipi-like skin-covered tent was in general use among the Indians of Labrador
and westward throughout the entire Mackenzie area of Canada. To the west, the
Plains tipi was found among the Nez Perce, Flathead, Cayuse, and Umatilla; to
the southwest, among the Apache. It is well nigh impossible to determine what
tribes first originated this type of shelter, though a comparison of the details
of structure might give some definite clues. Yet, one thing is clear; viz., that
it was especially adapted to the roving life of the Plains tribes when pursuing
the buffalo.
Earth Lodges. Before going
further, we must needs recall that the tipi was not the only type of shelter
used by these Indians. The Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara lived in more or less
permanent villages of curious earth-covered lodges. The following description of
a Hidatsa house may serve as a type:
On the site of a proposed lodge, they often dig down a foot or more in order to
find earth compact enough to form a good floor; so, in some lodges, the floors
are lower than the general surface of the ground on which the village stands.
The floor is of earth, and has in its center a circular depression, for a
fire-place, about a foot deep, and three or four feet wide, with an edging of
flat rocks. These dwellings, being from thirty to forty feet in diameter, from
ten to fifteen feet high in the center, and from five to seven feet high at the
eaves, are quite commodious.
The frame of a lodge is thus made: A number of stout posts, from ten to fifteen,
according to the size of the lodge, and rising to the height of about five feet
above the surface of the earth, are set about ten feet apart in a circle. On the
tops of these posts, solid beams are laid, ex tending from one to another. Then,
toward the center of the lodge, four more posts are erected, of much greater
diameter than the outer posts, and rising

Fig. 8. Setting up a Crow Tipi. (Tetzold
photo.)
to the height of ten or more
feet above the ground. These four posts
stand in the corners of a square of about
fifteen feet, and their tops are connected
with four heavy logs or beams laid
horizontally. From the four central beams to
the smaller external beams, long poles, as
rafters, are stretched at an angle of about
30 with the horizon; and from the outer
beams to the earth a number of shorter poles
are laid at an angle of about 45. Finally a
number of saplings or rails are laid
horizontally to cover the space between the
four central beams, leaving only a hole for
the combined skylight and chimney. This
frame is then covered with willows, hay, and
earth, as before mentioned; the covering
being of equal depth over all parts of the
frame. (Matthews, 4-5).
Houses of approximately the same type were
used by the Pawnee, Omaha, Ponca, Kansa,
Missouri, and Oto. The Osage, on the other
hand, are credited with the use of
dome-shaped houses covered with mats and
bark, like the jib way and other Woodland
tribes. The Hidatsa type of lodge is, unlike
the tipi, definitely localized along the
Missouri and the Platte, giving one the
impression that it must have originated
within this territory. The Omaha claim to
have originally used tipis and to have
learned the use of earth-lodges from the
Arikara; likewise the Skidi-Pawnee claim the
tipi as formerly their own dwelling.
However, all these tribes used tipis when on
summer and winter trips after buffalo (p.
21).
Some of the Eastern Dakota lived for a part
of the year in rectangular cabins of bark
and poles as did some of the Woodland
tribes. On the west, an oval or conical
brush or grass shelter seems to have
preceded the tipi. The Comanche were seen
using both this western type of brush lodge
and the tipi in 1853. The Northern Shoshoni
have also been observed with brush lodges
and tipis in the same camp. These instances
are probably examples of a transition in
culture. Thus, we see how even among the
less civilized 1 peoples all are prone to be
influenced by the culture of their neighbors
and that in consequence, cultures grade into
one another according to geographical
relations.

Fig. 9. Hidatsa Village in 1868.
(The low earth-covered
lodges are obscured by the poles of
drying-frames. Morrow photo reproduced by F.
N. Wilson.)
Another curious thing is that all the tribes
raising maize used earth or bark houses, but
as a rule lived in them only while planting,
tending, and harvesting the crop. At other
times, they took to tipis. Even in
mid-winter the Omaha and Eastern Dakota
lived in tipis.
A unique and exceptional type of shelter was
used by the Wichita and the related Caddoan
tribes of the Southeastern culture area.
This is known as a grass lodge. It consists
of a dome-shaped structure of poles thatched
with grass and given an ornamental
appearance by the regular spacing of extra
bunches of thatch. Formerly, each of these
houses had four doors, east, west, north,
and south, and four poles projected from the
roof in the respective directions.
North American Indians of
the Plains
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includes some historical materials that may imply negative stereotypes
reflecting the culture or language of a particular period or place. These
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North American Indians Of The Plains, Clark Wissler, 1920
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