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Its Origin from One Tribe or Region
Col. Richard I. Dodge, United States Army,
whose long experience among the Indians entitles his opinion
to great respect, says in a letter:
"The embodiment of signs into a systematic language is, I
believe, confined to the Indians of the Plains. Contiguous
tribes gain, here and there, a greater or less knowledge of
this language; these again extend the knowledge, diminished
and probably perverted, to their neighbors, until almost all
the Indian tribes of the United States east of the Sierras
have some little smattering of it. The Plains Indians
believe the Kiowas to have invented the sign language, and
that by them its use was communicated to other Plains
tribes. If this is correct, analogy would lead us to believe
that those tribes most nearly in contact with the Kiowas
would use it most fluently and correctly, the knowledge
becoming less as the contact diminishes. Thus the Utes,
though nearly contiguous (in territory) to the Plains
Indians, have only the merest 'picked up' knowledge of this
language, and never use it among themselves, simply because,
they and the Plains tribes having been, since the memory of
their oldest men, in a chronic state of war, there has been
no social contact."
In another communication Colonel Dodge is still more
definite:
"The Plains Indians themselves believe the sign language was
invented by the Kiowas, who holding an intermediate position
between the Comanches, Tonkaways, Lipans, and other
inhabitants of the vast plains of Texas, and the Pawnees,
Sioux, Blackfeet, and other northern tribes, were the
general go-betweens, trading with all, making peace or war
with or for any or all. It is certain that the Kiowas are at
present more universally proficient in this language than
any other Plains tribe. It is also certain that the tribes
farthest away from them and with whom they have least
intercourse use it with least facility."
Dr. William H. Corbusier, assistant surgeon United States
Army, a valued contributor, gives information as follows:
"The traditions of the Indians point toward the south as the
direction from which the sign language came. They refer to
the time when they did not use it; and each tribe say they
learned it from those south of them. The Comanches, who
acquired it in Mexico, taught it to the Arapahoes and Kiowas,
and from these the Cheyennes learned it. The Sioux say that
they had no knowledge of it before they crossed the Missouri
River and came in contact with the Cheyennes, but have quite
recently learned it from them. It would thus appear that the
Plains Indians did not invent it, but finding it adapted to
their wants adopted it as a convenient means of
communicating with those whose language they did not
understand, and it rapidly spread from tribe to tribe over
the Plains. As the sign language came from Mexico, the
Spaniards suggest themselves as the introducers of it on
this continent. They are adepts in the use of signs. Cortez
as he marched through Mexico would naturally have resorted
to signs in communicating with the numerous tribes with
which he came in contract. Finding them very necessary, one
sign after another would suggest itself and be adopted by
Spaniards and Indians, and, as the former advanced, one
tribe after another would learn to use them. The Indians on
the Plains, finding them so useful, preserved them and each
tribe modified them to suit their convenience, but the signs
remained essentially the same. The Shoshones took the sign
language with them as they moved northwest, and a few of the
Piutes may have learned it from them, but the Piutes as a
tribe do not use it."
Mr. Ben. Clarke, the respected and skillful interpreter at
Fort Reno writes to the same general effect:
"The Cheyennes think that the sign language used by the
Cheyennes, Arapahoes, Ogallala and Brulé Sioux, Kiowas, and
Comanches originated with the Kiowas. It is a tradition
that, many years ago, when the Northern Indians were still
without horses, the Kiowas often raided among the Mexican
Indians and captured droves of horses on these trips. The
Northern Plains Indians used to journey to them and trade
for horses. The Kiowas were already proficient in signs, and
the others learned from them. It was the journeying to the
South that finally divided the Cheyennes, making the
Northern and Southern Cheyennes. The same may be said of the
Arapahoes. That the Kiowas were the first sign talkers is
only a tradition, but as a tribe they are now considered to
be the best or most thorough of the Plains Indians."
Without engaging in any controversy on this subject it may
be noticed that the theory advanced supposes a comparatively
recent origin of sign language from one tribe and one
region, whereas, so far as can be traced, the conditions
favorable to a sign language existed very long ago and were
co-extensive with the territory of North America occupied by
any of the tribes. To avoid repetition reference is made to
the discussion below under the heads of universality,
antiquity, identity, and permanence. At this point it is
only desired to call attention to the ancient prevalence of
signs among tribes such as the Iroquois, Wyandot, Ojibwa,
and at least three generations back among the Crees beyond
our northern boundary and the Mandans and other far-northern
Dakotas, not likely at that time to have had communication,
even through intertribal channels, with the Kaiowas. It is
also difficult to understand how their signs would have in
that manner reached the Kutchin of Eastern Alaska and the
Kutine and Selish of British Columbia, who use signs now. At
the same time due consideration must be given to the great
change in the intercommunication of tribes, produced by the
importation of the horse, by which the habits of those
Indians now, but not very anciently, inhabiting the Plains
were entirely changed. It is probable that a sign language
before existing became, contemporaneously with nomadic life,
cultivated and enriched.
As regards the Spanish origin suggested, there is ample
evidence that the Spaniards met signs in their early
explorations north of and in the northern parts of Mexico,
and availed themselves of them but did not introduce them.
It is believed also that the elaborate picture writing of
Mexico was founded on gesture signs.
With reference to the statement that the Kaiowas are the
most expert sign talkers of the Plains, a number of
authorities and correspondents give the precedence to the
Cheyennes, and an equal number to the Arapahos. Probably the
accident of meeting specially skillful talkers in the
several tribes visited influences such opinions.
The writer's experience, both of the Utes and Pai-Utes, is
different from the above statement respecting the absence of
signs among them. They not only use their own signs but
fully understand the difference between the signs regarded
as their own and those of the Kaiowas. On special
examination they understood some of the latter only as words
of a foreign language interpolated in an oral conversation
would be comprehended from the context, and others they
would recognize as having seen before among other tribes
without adoption. The same is true regarding the Brulé
Sioux, as was clearly expressed by Medicine Bull, their
chief. The Pimas, Papagos, and Maricopas examined had a
copious sign language, yet were not familiar with many
Kaiowa signs presented to them.
Instead of referring to a time past when they did not use
signs, the Indians examined by the writer and by most of his
correspondents speak of a time when they and their fathers
used it more freely and copiously than at present, its
disuse being from causes before mentioned. It, however, may
be true in some cases that a tribe, having been for a long
time in contact only with others the dialect of which was so
nearly akin as to be comprehensible, or from any reason
being separated from those of a strange speech, discontinued
sign language for a time, and then upon migration or forced
removal came into circumstances where it was useful, and
revived it. It is asserted that some of the Muskoki and the
Ponkas now in the Indian Territory never saw sign language
until they arrived there. Yet there is some evidence that
the Muskoki did use signs a century ago, and some of the
Ponkas still remaining on their old homes on the Missouri
remember it and have given their knowledge to an accurate
correspondent, Rev. J.O. Dorsey, though for many years they
have not been in circumstances to require its employment.
Perhaps the most salutary criticism to be offered regarding
the theory would be in the form of a query whether sign
language has ever been invented by any one body of people at
any one time, and whether it is not simply a phase in
evolution, surviving and reviving when needed. Criticism on
this subject is made reluctantly, as it would be highly
interesting to determine that sign language on this
continent came from a particular stock, and to ascertain
that stock. Such research would be similar to that into the
Aryan and Semitic sources to which many modern languages
have been traced backwards from existing varieties, and if
there appear to be existing varieties in signs their roots
may still be found to be sui generis. The possibility
that the discrepancy between signs was formerly greater than
at present will receive attention in discussing the
distinction between the identity of signs and their common
use as an art. It is sufficient to add now that not only
does the burden of proof rest unfavorably upon the attempt
to establish one parent stock for sign language in North
America, but it also comes under the stigma now fastened
upon the immemorial effort to name and locate the original
oral speech of man. It is only next in difficulty to the old
persistent determination to decide upon the origin of the
whole Indian "race," in which most peoples of antiquity in
the eastern hemisphere, including the lost tribes of Israel,
the Gipsies, and the Welsh, have figured conspicuously as
putative parents.
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Sign Language
Among North American Indians Compared with
that Among Other Peoples and Deaf-Mutes,
1881
Indian Sign
Language
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