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Wigwam

Index Wigwam

A wigwam, wickiup or wetu is a domed dwelling formerly used by certain Native American and First Nations tribes, and still used for ceremonial purposes. [1]

174 relations: A wigwam for a goose's bridle, Abenaki, Alder Gulch, Alfred, Maine, Algonquian peoples, Algonquin people, American English, American English vocabulary, American Indian Stories, Anne Grant, Antioch, Illinois, Apache, Architecture of Canada, Aroostook Band of Micmac, August Sangret, Avon, Ohio, Bakersfield, California, Battle of Cibecue Creek, Battle of Mount Gray, Baxter Estates, New York, Beehive burner, Bell tent, Bender tent, Big Wapwallopen Creek, Birch, Birch bark, Block Island, Bone Sharps, Cowboys, and Thunder Lizards, Bruce Museum of Arts and Science, Building material, Burpee Museum of Natural History, California State Route 88, Canadian Canoe Museum, Carolina Algonquian language, Catawissa Township, Columbia County, Pennsylvania, Chato's Land, Chippewa Nature Center, Cobmoosa, Conner Prairie, Conway, New Hampshire, Cooper Site (Lyme, Connecticut), Cree, Crown Heights, Brooklyn, Davenport Neck, Dildo Island, Dix Hills, New York, Dome, Fidelia Fielding, First Nations in Alberta, Fort Ninigret, ..., Fox Chapel, Pennsylvania, Gabriel Acquin, Hanging Rock (Wabash River), Hankley Common, Hartley Outdoor Education Center, Hermione Darnborough, Hide (skin), History of Baddeck, History of cities in Canada, History of Cumberland, Maryland, History of early and simple domes, History of hide materials, History of Massachusetts, History of the Hudson River, History of Troy, New York, Hogan, Hualapai, Hudson River, Hudson Valley, Humphrey Atherton, Illinois Confederation, Improved Order of Red Men, Indian Outlaw, Indian Will, Indigenous architecture, Indigenous music of Canada, Irishtown, California, John Gorham (military officer), John Lovewell, Kanawha Valley people, Karankawa people, Kechemeche, Kechewaishke, Kickapoo Tribe of Oklahoma, Kitch-iti-kipi, Kucadikadi, Lake Pleasant, New York, Lili Lakich, List of architectural styles, List of brand name food products, List of English words from indigenous languages of the Americas, List of human habitation forms, List of museums in Minnesota, List of Narnian creatures, List of New Netherland placename etymologies, Lodge, Longhouse, Longhouses of the indigenous peoples of North America, Lower Shawneetown, Maliseet, Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Research Center, Massachusetts, Massachusetts Bay Colony, Maude Kegg, Mazinibaganjigan, Menominee, Mi'kmaq, Michigan Heritage Park, Midewiwin, Midwestern United States, Minutemen, Mohave Museum of History and Arts, Mont Saint-Hilaire, Myles Standish, Native American contributions, Nauset Archeological District, Neverland, New Glarus, Wisconsin, Noah Hamilton Rose, O-gi-maw-kwe Mit-i-gwa-ki, Queen of the Woods (1899), Ojibwe, Old Abe, Old Wadena Historic District, Otoe-Missouria Tribe of Indians, Outline of Colorado prehistory, Padre Canyon incident, Patuxent River, Peterview, Pioneer Village (Salem, Massachusetts), Podunk people, Praying Indian, Prehistory of West Virginia, Quinnipiac, Samuel Hearne, Shakori, Shingebis, Simsbury, Connecticut, Sissipahaw, Skegemog Point Site, Speculator, New York, Springfield, Missouri, Star Carr, Starhaven, Starved Rock State Park, Suisun people, Tammany Hall, Tavastia Club, Tent, The Life of Josiah Henson, Formerly a Slave, Now an Inhabitant of Canada, as Narrated by Himself, The Panther (Sam Brushell), Tipi, Tockwogh, Tonto Apache, Tower Rock State Park, Tree, Truman Lowe, Twiglets, U.S. Route 66 in California, Ute Mountain Ute Tribe, Vera Brown Starr, Vernacular architecture, Waban, Washington, New Hampshire, Water rail, Wickiup, Wigham, Wigwam (Chicago), Wigwam (disambiguation), Wigwam Motel, Wigwam Stores Inc., Wiigwaasabak, Woodland Cree, World's Columbian Exposition, 157th Field Artillery Regiment. Expand index (124 more) »

A wigwam for a goose's bridle

A wigwam for a goose's bridle is a phrase, meaning something absurd or a nonsense object, or latterly "none of your business".

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Abenaki

The Abenaki (Abnaki, Abinaki, Alnôbak) are a Native American tribe and First Nation.

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Alder Gulch

Alder Gulch (alternatively called Alder Creek) is a place in the Ruby River valley, in the U.S. state of Montana, where gold was discovered on May 26, 1863, by William Fairweather and a group of men including Barney Hughes, Thomas Cover, Henry Rodgers, Henry Edgar and Bill Sweeney who were returning to the gold fields of Grasshopper Creek, Bannack, Montana.

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Alfred, Maine

Alfred is a town in York County, Maine, United States.

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Algonquian peoples

The Algonquian are one of the most populous and widespread North American native language groups.

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Algonquin people

The Algonquins are indigenous inhabitants of North America who speak the Algonquin language, a divergent dialect of the Ojibwe language, which is part of the Algonquian language family.

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American English

American English (AmE, AE, AmEng, USEng, en-US), sometimes called United States English or U.S. English, is the set of varieties of the English language native to the United States.

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American English vocabulary

The United States of America has given the English lexicon many thousands of words, meanings, and phrases.

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American Indian Stories

American Indian Stories is a collection of childhood stories, allegorical fictions and essays written by Sioux writer and activist Zitkala-Ša. First published in 1921, American Indian Stories details the hardships encountered by Zitkala-Ša and other Native Americans in the missionary and manual labour schools designed to "civilize" them.

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Anne Grant

Anne Macvicar Grant often styled Mrs Anne Grant of Laggan (21 February 1755 – 7 November 1838) was a Scottish poet and author best known for her collection of mostly biographical poems Memoirs of an American Lady as well as her earlier work Letters from the Mountains.

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Antioch, Illinois

Antioch is a village in Antioch Township, Lake County, Illinois, United States.

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Apache

The Apache are a group of culturally related Native American tribes in the Southwestern United States, which include the Chiricahua, Jicarilla, Lipan, Mescalero, Salinero, Plains and Western Apache.

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Architecture of Canada

The architecture of Canada is, with the exception of that of Canadian First Nations, closely linked to the techniques and styles developed in Canada, Europe and the United States.

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Aroostook Band of Micmac

The Aroostook Band of Micmac is a federally recognized tribe of Mi'kmaq people in Aroostook County, Maine.

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August Sangret

August Sangret (28 August 1913 – 29 April 1943) was a French-Canadian soldier, convicted and subsequently hanged for the September 1942 murder of 19-year-old Joan Pearl Wolfe in Surrey, England.

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Avon, Ohio

Avon is a city in Lorain County, Ohio, United States.

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Bakersfield, California

Bakersfield is a city in and the county seat of Kern County, California, United States.

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Battle of Cibecue Creek

The Battle of Cibecue Creek was an engagement of the Apache Wars, fought in August 1881 between the United States and White Mountain Apaches in Arizona, at Cibecue Creek on the Fort Apache Indian Reservation.

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Battle of Mount Gray

The Battle of Mount Gray was a little-known engagement of the Apache Wars fought at the foothills of Gray Mountain, then known as Mount Gray on April 7, 1864.

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Baxter Estates, New York

The Village of Baxter Estates (also known as VBE) is a village in Nassau County, New York, United States, in the town of North Hempstead.

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Beehive burner

A wood waste burner, known as a teepee burner or wigwam burner in the United States and a beehive burner in Canada, is a free-standing conical steel structure ranging from 30 to 60 feet in height.

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Bell tent

A bell tent is a human shelter for inhabiting, traveling or leisure.

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Bender tent

A bender tent is a simple shelter.

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Big Wapwallopen Creek

Big Wapwallopen Creek (also known as Wapwallopen Creek or Big Wap) is a tributary of the Susquehanna River in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, in the United States.

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Birch

A birch is a thin-leaved deciduous hardwood tree of the genus Betula, in the family Betulaceae, which also includes alders, hazels, and hornbeams.

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Birch bark

Birch bark or birchbark is the bark of several Eurasian and North American birch trees of the genus Betula.

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Block Island

Block Island is located off the coast of the U.S. state of Rhode Island, named after Dutch explorer Adriaen Block.

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Bone Sharps, Cowboys, and Thunder Lizards

Bone Sharps, Cowboys, and Thunder Lizards: A Tale of Edward Drinker Cope, Othniel Charles Marsh, and the Gilded Age of Paleontology (2005) is a graphic novel written by Jim Ottaviani and illustrated by the company Big Time Attic.

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Bruce Museum of Arts and Science

The Bruce Museum is a museum in downtown Greenwich, Connecticut with both art and natural history exhibition space.

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Building material

Building material is any material which is used for construction purposes.

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Burpee Museum of Natural History

The Burpee Museum of Natural History is located along the Rock River in downtown Rockford, Illinois, United States, at 737 North Main Street.

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California State Route 88

State Route 88 (SR 88), also known as the Carson Pass Highway, is a California State Highway that travels in an east–west direction, from Stockton, crossing the Sierra Nevada at Carson Pass, and ending at the border with Nevada, whereupon it becomes Nevada State Route 88, eventually terminating at U.S. Route 395.

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Canadian Canoe Museum

The Canadian Canoe Museum is a museum dedicated to canoes located in Peterborough, Ontario, Canada.

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Carolina Algonquian language

Carolina Algonquian (also known as Pamlico, Croatoan, or Lumbee) is an extinct Algonquian language of the Eastern Algonquian subgroup formerly spoken in North Carolina, United States.

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Catawissa Township, Columbia County, Pennsylvania

Catawissa Township is a township near the borough of Catawissa, Columbia County, Pennsylvania, United States.

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Chato's Land

Chato's Land is a 1972 western Technicolor film directed by Michael Winner, starring Charles Bronson and Jack Palance.

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Chippewa Nature Center

Chippewa Nature Center (CNC) is both a 501(c)(3) non-profit educational organization and a protected wildlife area in the Lower Peninsula of Michigan, encompassing over of forest, rivers and wetlands.

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Cobmoosa

Cobmoosa (1768 - 1866), or Weebmossa meaning "Great Walker", was an Odawa leader who lived in a Native American village at the mouth of the Flat River at the present-day city of Lowell, Michigan until 1858.

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Conner Prairie

Conner Prairie is an interactive history park, or living history museum, in Fishers, Indiana, United States, that preserves the William Conner home, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and recreates part of life in Indiana in the 19th century on the White River.

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Conway, New Hampshire

Conway is a town in Carroll County, New Hampshire, United States.

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Cooper Site (Lyme, Connecticut)

The Cooper Site is an archaeological site in Lyme, Connecticut.

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Cree

The Cree (script; Cri) are one of the largest groups of First Nations in North America, with over 200,000 members living in Canada.

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Crown Heights, Brooklyn

Crown Heights is a neighborhood in the central portion of the New York City borough of Brooklyn.

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Davenport Neck

Davenport Neck is a peninsula in New Rochelle, New York, extending southwesterly from the mainland into Long Island Sound, and running parallel to the main shore.

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Dildo Island

Dildo Island is an island in the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador.

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Dix Hills, New York

Dix Hills is a hamlet and census-designated place (CDP) on Long Island in the town of Huntington in Suffolk County, New York, United States.

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Dome

Interior view upward to the Byzantine domes and semi-domes of Hagia Sophia. See Commons file for annotations. A dome (from Latin: domus) is an architectural element that resembles the hollow upper half of a sphere.

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Fidelia Fielding

(1827–1908), also known as Dji'ts Bud dnaca ("Flying Bird"), was the daughter of Bartholomew Valentine Smith (c. 1811-1843) and Sarah A. Wyyougs (1804-1868), and granddaughter of Martha Shantup Uncas (1761-1859).

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First Nations in Alberta

First Nations in Alberta are indigenous peoples who live in the Canadian province of Alberta.

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Fort Ninigret

Fort Ninigret is a historic fort and trading post site at Fort Neck Road in Charlestown, Rhode Island, built and occupied by European settlers in the seventeenth century.

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Fox Chapel, Pennsylvania

Fox Chapel is a borough in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, USA, and is a suburb of Pittsburgh located northeast of downtown.

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Gabriel Acquin

Gabriel Acquin (c. 1811 – 2 October 1901) was known by a variety of names; Sachem Gabe and Noel Gabriel being the most verifiable.

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Hanging Rock (Wabash River)

Hanging Rock is a natural sandstone rock formation overhanging the Wabash River in Wabash County, Illinois, in the United States.

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Hankley Common

Hankley Common is a common near Elstead, Surrey, England.

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Hartley Outdoor Education Center

Hartley Outdoor Education Center is a member of the Saginaw Intermediate School District located northwest of St. Charles, Michigan in Saginaw County.

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Hermione Darnborough

Hermione Maria Louise Darnborough (1915 – 29 October 2010), later Hermione Mathieson, was an English principal ballerina who made her name at Sadler's Wells in the 1930s.

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Hide (skin)

A hide or skin is an animal skin treated for human use.

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History of Baddeck

Baddeck, Nova Scotia is a village founded in 1908, with a history stretching back to early Mi'kmaq, French and British settlements.

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History of cities in Canada

Canada's cities span the continent of North America from east to west, with many major cities located relatively close to the border with the United States.

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History of Cumberland, Maryland

Cumberland, Maryland is named after the son of King George II, Prince William, the Duke of Cumberland.

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History of early and simple domes

Cultures from pre-history to modern times constructed domed dwellings using local materials.

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History of hide materials

Humanity has used animal hides since the Paleolithic, for clothing as well as mobile shelters such as tipis and wigwams, and household items.

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History of Massachusetts

Massachusetts was first colonized by principally English Europeans in the early 17th century, and became the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in the 18th century.

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History of the Hudson River

The Hudson River is a river in New York.

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History of Troy, New York

The history of Troy, New York extends back to the Mohican Indians.

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Hogan

A hogan (or; from Navajo) is the primary, traditional dwelling of the Navajo people.

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Hualapai

The Hualapai (pronounced Wa-la-pie) is a federally recognized Indian tribe in Arizona with over 2300 enrolled members.

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Hudson River

The Hudson River is a river that flows from north to south primarily through eastern New York in the United States.

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Hudson Valley

The Hudson Valley comprises the valley of the Hudson River and its adjacent communities in the U.S. state of New York, from the cities of Albany and Troy southward to Yonkers in Westchester County.

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Humphrey Atherton

Major-General Humphrey Atherton, (ca.1608 – September 16, 1661) an early settler of Dorchester, Massachusetts, held the highest military rank in colonial New England.

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Illinois Confederation

The Illinois Confederation, sometimes referred to as the Illiniwek or Illini, was a group of 12–13 Native American tribes in the upper Mississippi River valley of North America.

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Improved Order of Red Men

The Improved Order of Red Men is a fraternal organization established on North America in 1834.

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Indian Outlaw

"Indian Outlaw" is a song written by Tommy Barnes, Jumpin' Gene Simmons and John D. Loudermilk, and performed by American country music artist Tim McGraw.

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Indian Will

Indian Will was a well-known Native American who lived in a former settlement of the Shawnee Indians at the site of present day Cumberland, Maryland in the 18th century.

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Indigenous architecture

The recent field of Indigenous Architecture refers to the study and practice of architecture of, for and by Indigenous people.

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Indigenous music of Canada

Indigenous music of Canada encompasses a wide variety of musical genres created by Canada's Indigenous people.

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Irishtown, California

Irishtown (also, Irish Town) is a former settlement in Amador County, California.

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John Gorham (military officer)

John Gorham (Goreham, Gorum) was a New England Ranger and was the first significant British military presence on the frontier of Nova Scotia and Acadia to remain in the region for a substantial period after the Conquest of Acadia (1710).

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John Lovewell

John Lovewell (October 14, 1691 – May 9, 1725) was a famous Ranger in the 18th century who fought during Father Rale's War (also known as Lovewell's War).

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Kanawha Valley people

The Kanawha Valley prehistoric people were an ancestor group for today's modern American Indian.

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Karankawa people

The Karankawa (also known as Carancahuas, Carancahuases, Carancouas, Caranhouas, Caronkawa) were a Native American people concentrated in southern Texas along the coast of the Gulf of Mexico.

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Kechemeche

Kechemeche is the name of a Lenape tribe of Native Americans that lived in the area generally known today as the southern portion of Cape May County, New Jersey, an area bounded on one side by the Atlantic Ocean, and the Delaware River Bay on another.

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Kechewaishke

Chief Buffalo (Ojibwe: Ke-che-waish-ke/Gichi-weshkiinh – "Great-renewer" or Peezhickee/Bizhiki – "Buffalo"; also French, Le Boeuf) (1759? – September 7, 1855) was a major Ojibwa leader born at La Pointe in the Apostle Islands group of Lake Superior, in what is now northern Wisconsin, USA.

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Kickapoo Tribe of Oklahoma

The Kickapoo Tribe of Oklahoma is one of three federally recognized Kickapoo tribes in the United States.

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Kitch-iti-kipi

Kitch-iti-kipi ("KITCH-i-tee-KI-pee" with short "i"s) is Michigan's largest natural freshwater spring.

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Kucadikadi

The Kucadikadi are a band of Northern Paiute people who live near Mono Lake in Mono County, California.

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Lake Pleasant, New York

Lake Pleasant is a town in Hamilton County, New York, United States.

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Lili Lakich

Liliana Diane Lakich (born June 4, 1944) is an American artist best known for her work in neon sculpture.

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List of architectural styles

An architectural style is characterized by the features that make a building or other structure notable and historically identifiable.

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List of brand name food products

This article is a list of brand name food products, organized by the type of product.

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List of English words from indigenous languages of the Americas

This is a list of English language words borrowed from indigenous languages of the Americas, either directly or through intermediate European languages such as Spanish or French.

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List of human habitation forms

This is a list of (semi)-permanent, mobile and misc.

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List of museums in Minnesota

This list of museums in Minnesota encompasses museums which are defined for this context as institutions (including nonprofit organizations, government entities, and private businesses) that collect and care for objects of cultural, artistic, scientific, or historical interest and make their collections or related exhibits available for public viewing.

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List of Narnian creatures

Narnian creatures are any non-human inhabitants of Narnia, the fantasy world created by C. S. Lewis as a setting for his The Chronicles of Narnia.

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List of New Netherland placename etymologies

Nieuw-Nederland, or New Netherland, was the seventeenth-century colonial province of the Republic of the Seven United Netherlands on northeastern coast of North America.

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Lodge

Lodge is originally a term for a relatively small building, often associated with a larger one.

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Longhouse

A longhouse or long house is a type of long, proportionately narrow, single-room building built by peoples in various parts of the world including Asia, Europe, and North America.

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Longhouses of the indigenous peoples of North America

Longhouses were a style of residential dwelling built by Native American tribes and First Nation band governments in various parts of North America.

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Lower Shawneetown

Lower Shawneetown (15Gp15), also known as the Bentley Site, Shannoah and Sonnontio, is a Late Fort Ancient culture Madisonville horizon (post 1400 CE) archaeological site overlain by an 18th-century Shawnee village; it is located near South Portsmouth in Greenup County, Kentucky.

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Maliseet

The Wolastoqiyik, or Maliseet (also spelled Malecite), are an Algonquian-speaking First Nation of the Wabanaki Confederacy.

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Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Research Center

The Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Research Center is a museum of Native American culture in Mashantucket, Connecticut, owned and operated by the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation.

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Massachusetts

Massachusetts, officially known as the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, is the most populous state in the New England region of the northeastern United States.

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Massachusetts Bay Colony

The Massachusetts Bay Colony (1628–1691) was an English settlement on the east coast of North America in the 17th century around the Massachusetts Bay, the northernmost of the several colonies later reorganized as the Province of Massachusetts Bay.

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Maude Kegg

Maude Kegg (Ojibwa name Naawakamigookwe, meaning "Centered upon the Ground Woman"; 1904–1996) was an Ojibwa writer, folk artist, and cultural interpreter.

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Mazinibaganjigan

Mazinibaganjigan (plural: mazinibaganjiganan) or birch bark biting is an ancient folk art made by the Ojibwe (Anishinaabe),.

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Menominee

The Menominee (also spelled Menomini, derived from the Ojibwe language word for "Wild Rice People;" known as Mamaceqtaw, "the people," in the Menominee language) are a federally recognized nation of Native Americans, with a reservation in Wisconsin.

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Mi'kmaq

The Mi'kmaq or Mi'gmaq (also Micmac, L'nu, Mi'kmaw or Mi'gmaw) are a First Nations people indigenous to Canada's Atlantic Provinces and the Gaspé Peninsula of Quebec as well as the northeastern region of Maine.

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Michigan Heritage Park

The Michigan Heritage Park is an open-air museum that spans 10,000 years of Michigan history.

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Midewiwin

The Midewiwin (also spelled Midewin and Medewiwin) or the Grand Medicine Society is a secretive religion of some of the indigenous peoples of the Maritimes, New England and Great Lakes regions in North America.

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Midwestern United States

The Midwestern United States, also referred to as the American Midwest, Middle West, or simply the Midwest, is one of four census regions of the United States Census Bureau (also known as "Region 2").

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Minutemen

Minutemen were civilian colonists who independently organized to form well-prepared militia companies self-trained in weaponry, tactics, and military strategies from the American colonial partisan militia during the American Revolutionary War.

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Mohave Museum of History and Arts

The Mohave Museum of History and Arts in Kingman, Arizona is a private, not-for-profit organization, which was founded in 1961.

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Mont Saint-Hilaire

Mont Saint-Hilaire (in English: Mount Saint-Hilaire), (see names of mont Saint-Hilaire for other names) is an isolated hill, high, in the Montérégie region of southern Quebec.

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Myles Standish

Myles Standish (c. 1584 – October 3, 1656) was an English military officer hired by the Pilgrims as military adviser for Plymouth Colony.

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Native American contributions

This is an alphabetic list of achievements in science and technology made by Indigenous peoples of the Americas during the 13,500 years or more that they have inhabited the American continent.

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Nauset Archeological District

The Nauset Archaeological District (or "Coast Guard Beach Site,19BN374" or "North Salt Pond Site,19BN390") is a National Historic Landmark District in Eastham, Massachusetts.

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Neverland

Neverland is a fictional island featured in the works of J. M. Barrie and those based on them.

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New Glarus, Wisconsin

New Glarus is a village in Green County, Wisconsin, United States at the intersection of Wisconsin Highways 69 and 39.

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Noah Hamilton Rose

Noah Hamilton Rose (April 9, 1874 – January 25, 1952) was a painter and photographer.

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O-gi-maw-kwe Mit-i-gwa-ki, Queen of the Woods (1899)

O-gi-maw-kwe Mit-i-gwa-ki (Queen of the Woods) is a novel by Simon Pokagon, published in 1899 shortly after his death.

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Ojibwe

The Ojibwe, Ojibwa, or Chippewa are an Anishinaabeg group of Indigenous Peoples in North America, which is referred to by many of its Indigenous peoples as Turtle Island.

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Old Abe

Old Abe (May 27, 1861 – March 26, 1881), a bald eagle, was the mascot of the 8th Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry Regiment in the American Civil War.

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Old Wadena Historic District

The Old Wadena Historic District is a concentration of historical archaeology sites now largely contained within Old Wadena County Park in Thomastown Township, Minnesota, United States.

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Otoe-Missouria Tribe of Indians

The Otoe-Missouria Tribe of Indians is a single, federally recognized tribe, located in Oklahoma.

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Outline of Colorado prehistory

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to the prehistoric people of Colorado, which covers the period of when humans were first thought to have roamed Colorado until the Dominguez-Escalante Expedition in 1776.

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Padre Canyon incident

The Padre Canyon incident was a skirmish in November 1899 between a group of Navajo hunters and a posse of Arizona lawmen.

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Patuxent River

The Patuxent River is a tributary of the Chesapeake Bay in the state of Maryland.

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Peterview

Peterview is a town located in the Exploits Valley area of central Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, where Peters River empties into the Bay of Exploits, just south of Botwood, off Route 350.

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Pioneer Village (Salem, Massachusetts)

Pioneer Village, also known as Salem 1630: Pioneer Village, was created in 1930 as the set for a play, held in Forest River Park in Salem, Massachusetts.

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Podunk people

The Podunk were an indigenous people who spoke an Algonquian language and lived primarily in what is now known as Hartford County, Connecticut, United States.

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Praying Indian

Praying Indian is a 17th-century term referring to Native Americans of New England, New York, Ontario, and Quebec who converted to Christianity.

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Prehistory of West Virginia

The Prehistory of West Virginia spans ancient times until the arrival of Europeans in the early 17th century.

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Quinnipiac

The Quinnipiac—rarely spelled Quinnipiack—is the English name for the Eansketambawg (meaning “original people”; c.f., Ojibwe: Anishinaabeg and Blackfoot: Niitsítapi), a Native American nation of the Algonquian family who inhabited the Wampanoki (i.e., “Dawnland”; c.f., Ojibwe: Waabanaki, Abenaki: Wabanakiyik) region, including present-day Connecticut.

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Samuel Hearne

Samuel Hearne (1745–1792) was an English explorer, fur-trader, author, and naturalist.

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Shakori

The Shakori were an indigenous people of the Southeastern Woodlands.

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Shingebis

Shingebis in North American Indian mythology, is a diver who dared the North Wind to single combat.

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Simsbury, Connecticut

Simsbury is a town in Hartford County, Connecticut, United States.

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Sissipahaw

The Sissipahaw or Haw Tribe were most likely a Siouan tribe of North Carolina.

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Skegemog Point Site

The Skegemog Point Site, also known as the Samels Field Site or Samels Site and designated 20GT2, is an archaeological site located on the property of the Samels Farm at 8298 Skegemog Point Road, near Williamsburg, Michigan.

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Speculator, New York

Speculator is a village in Hamilton County, New York, United States.

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Springfield, Missouri

Springfield is the third-largest city in the state of Missouri and the county seat of Greene County.

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Star Carr

Star Carr is a Mesolithic archaeological site in North Yorkshire, England.

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Starhaven

Starhaven is a fictional planet first depicted in stories of DC Comics' Legion of Super-Heroes set in the 30th and 31st Centuries, and described as being located near the core of the Milky Way galaxy.

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Starved Rock State Park

Starved Rock State Park is a state park in the U.S. state of Illinois, characterized by the many canyons within its.

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Suisun people

The Suisunes (also called the Suisun and the "People of the West Wind") were a tribe of Native Americans that lived in Northern California's Suisun Marsh regions of Solano County, California between what is now Suisun City, Vacaville and Putah Creek around 200 years ago.

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Tammany Hall

Tammany Hall, also known as the Society of St.

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Tavastia Club

The Tavastia Club (Tavastia-klubi) is a popular rock music club in Helsinki, Finland.

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Tent

A tent is a shelter consisting of sheets of fabric or other material draped over, attached to a frame of poles or attached to a supporting rope.

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The Life of Josiah Henson, Formerly a Slave, Now an Inhabitant of Canada, as Narrated by Himself

The Life of Josiah Henson, Formerly a Slave, Now an Inhabitant of Canada, as Narrated by Himself is a slave narrative written by Josiah Henson, who would later become famous for being the basis of the title character from Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel Uncle Tom's Cabin.

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The Panther (Sam Brushell)

The Panther was a Mohegan Indian who lived in the Town of Richfield in Otsego County, New York in the beginning to mid 1800s.

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Tipi

A tipi (also teepee) is a cone-shaped tent, traditionally made of animal skins upon wooden poles.

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Tockwogh

The Tockwogh were an Algonquian tribe first discovered by Captain John Smith's party after being informed about them by the Massawomekes (Iroquois).

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Tonto Apache

The Tonto Apache (Dilzhę́’é, also Dilzhe'e, Dilzhe’eh Apache) is one of the groups of Western Apache people.

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Tower Rock State Park

Tower Rock State Park is a state park near the community of Cascade in the U.S. state of Montana in the United States.

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Tree

In botany, a tree is a perennial plant with an elongated stem, or trunk, supporting branches and leaves in most species.

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Truman Lowe

Truman Tennis Lowe is a Ho-Chunk sculptor and installation artist living in Wisconsin.

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Twiglets

Twiglets are a wheat-based snack with a "distinctive knobbly shape" similar to that of a small twig.

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U.S. Route 66 in California

U.S. Route 66 (US 66, Route 66) is a part of a former United States Numbered Highway in the state of California that ran from the west in Santa Monica on the Pacific Ocean through Los Angeles and San Bernardino to Needles at the Arizona state line.

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Ute Mountain Ute Tribe

The Ute Mountain Ute Tribe is one of three federally recognized tribes of the Ute Nation, and are mostly descendants of the historic Weeminuche Band who moved to the Southern Ute reservation in 1897.

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Vera Brown Starr

Vera Brown Starr (May 23, 1924 – March 4, 1985) was the first woman elected as chair of the Yavapai-Apache Nation and served two years in the office, as well as serving over fifteen years on the council.

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Vernacular architecture

Vernacular architecture is an architectural style that is designed based on local needs, availability of construction materials and reflecting local traditions.

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Waban

Waban (16041685) was a Native American of the Nipmuc group and was the first Native American to be converted to Christianity in Massachusetts.

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Washington, New Hampshire

Washington is a town in Sullivan County, New Hampshire, United States.

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Water rail

The water rail (Rallus aquaticus) is a bird of the rail family which breeds in well-vegetated wetlands across Europe, Asia and North Africa.

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Wickiup

Wickiup may refer to.

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Wigham

Wigham may refer to.

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Wigwam (Chicago)

The Wigwam was a convention center and meeting hall that served as the site of the 1860 Republican National Convention.

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Wigwam (disambiguation)

A wigwam is single-room Native American dwelling.

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Wigwam Motel

The Wigwam Motels, also known as the "Wigwam Villages", is a motel chain in the United States built during the 1930s and 1940s.

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Wigwam Stores Inc.

Wigwam Stores Inc. was an American chain of discount department stores that was based in Seattle and operated across five states: Washington, Hawaii, Oregon, California and Arizona.

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Wiigwaasabak

Wiigwaasabak (Ojibwe language, plural: wiigwaasabakoon) are birch bark scrolls, on which the Ojibwa (Anishinaabe) people of North America wrote complex geometrical patterns and shapes.

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Woodland Cree

The Sakāwithiniwak or Woodland Cree, are a Cree people, calling themselves Nîhithaw in their own dialect of the language.

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World's Columbian Exposition

The World's Columbian Exposition (the official shortened name for the World's Fair: Columbian Exposition, also known as the Chicago World's Fair and Chicago Columbian Exposition) was a world's fair held in Chicago in 1893 to celebrate the 400th anniversary of Christopher Columbus's arrival in the New World in 1492.

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157th Field Artillery Regiment

The 157th Field Artillery Regiment (First Colorado) is a United States Army Regimental System field artillery parent regiment of the United States Army National Guard, represented in the Colorado Army National Guard by the 3rd Battalion, 157th Field Artillery Regiment, part of the 169th Field Artillery Brigade at Colorado Springs. The regiment was first constituted in 1917 during World War I from the 1st Colorado Infantry Regiment. The regiment was an infantry regiment as part of the 40th Infantry Division. It was again an infantry regiment of the 45th Infantry Division during and after World War II. In 1950 it was relieved from assignment from the 45th Division and after the Korean War assigned to the artillery. During the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, the 1st and 2nd Battalions of the regiment operated the M110 howitzer. The retirement of the M110 system left many National Guard units without a mission. In 2002, the battalions transitioned to the M270 Multiple Launch Rocket System, and later in 2009 to the M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) system. 1st and 2nd Battalions (MLRS), 157th Field Artillery Regiment were disbanded in 2006 during the U.S. Army's restructuring from divisional organizations to the modular Brigade Combat Team model. Members from the two battalions were reorganized to form the 3rd Battalion (HIMARS), 157th Field Artillery (3-157 FA), part of the 169th Field Artillery Brigade of the Colorado Army National Guard. Meanwhile, the 1st Battalion, 157th Infantry Regiment was reconstituted, also in the Colorado Army National Guard. The 157th Infantry was constituted on 1 October 2007, and activated on 1 September 2008; it is technically a completely new regiment with no lineage connection to the 157th Field Artillery, though it inherits campaign participation credit and a decoration from Colorado field artillery units. As of 30 October 2016 1st Battalion, 157th Infantry Regiment was reassigned to the 86th Infantry Brigade Combat Team (Mountain), Vermont National Guard, itself aligned with the 10th Mountain Division. It was also redesignated as a Mountain Battalion, becoming one of only three Mountain Infantry battalions in the Army National Guard.

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Redirects here:

Tomogani, Whigwam, Wickiups, Wigwams, Wiigiwaam, Wikiup.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wigwam

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