Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
Good in Good jacket. 1st Printing. 8vo-over 7¾-9¾" tall. pp. 274. Minor edge and corner wear; lightly scuffed and scratched; price-clipped; corners are lightly bumped and rubbed; some shelf wear; ex-library with the usual library markings; overall a nice used copy! Black boards with blue lettering on the spine. 274 informative and historical pages nicely enhanced by black and white photographs and illustrations! "In the forests of northern Wisconsin live an Indian people, the Menominees, who have survived three hundred years of Anglo-European encroachments upon their lands. Speaking the Algonquian language, their hunters once ranged along the shores of Lake Michigan from the Escanaba River to Milwaukee and westward to the Mississippi. As with other tribes, during the nineteenth century Menominee tribal lands shrank in the face of white encroachment to the point of disappearance. However, unlike other tribes of the Old Northwest, the Menominees avoided removal to west of the Mississippi, and, primarily through the stubborn efforts of Chief Oshkosh, retained ten townships along Wolf River in Wisconsin as their reservation......"