Staff Photo
 
 

In 1930 when campsites were named after Indian Tribes, Pawnee was located roughly where the current dining hall is located.  In 1931 this campsite was closed to make way for the new dining hall.  In the photo below, which is taken from inside the campsite, you can see the river end of the original 100 boy dining hall.
Pawnee Campsite - 1930
(Click image to see it larger)
About Pawnee

The Pawnee are a Native American tribe that historically lived along the Platte, Loup and Republican Rivers in present-day Nebraska and in Northern Kansas. They refer to themselves as "Chaticks-si-Chaticks", meaning "Men of men".

In the 18th century, they were allied with the French and played an important role in halting Spanish expansion onto the Great Plains by defeating the Villasur expedition decisively in battle in 1720.

In the 19th century, epidemics of smallpox and cholera wiped out most of the Pawnee, reducing the population to approximately 600 by the year 1900; as of 2005, there are approximately 5,500 Pawnee.

They were an agricultural people who grew maize, beans, pumpkins and squash. They ate it with meat greased with animal fat. With the coming of the horse culture to the Great Plains they did begin to take on some of the cultural attributes of their cousins, but the buffalo culture remained secondary to the maize culture.

The Pawnee Confederacy was divided into the following four bands:

    * Chaui (Grand)
    * Kitkehahki (Republican)
    * Pitahauerat (Tappage)
    * Skidi (Wolf)

The Chaui are generally recognized as being the leading band although each band was autonomous and, as was typical of many Indian tribes, each band saw to its own, although with outside pressures from the Spanish, French and Americans, as well as neighboring tribes saw the Pawnee drawing closer together.

~Wikipedia




Page design and layout by:
Dean B. Zaharis
Created: November 7, 2008
Last Update: November 16, 2008
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