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Woman of the Sacs, or “Sau-kies,” Tribe of American Indians

Woman of the Sacs, or “Sau-kies,” Tribe of American Indians.jpg Arrow Heads in the National MuseumThumbnailsApache CradleArrow Heads in the National MuseumThumbnailsApache CradleArrow Heads in the National MuseumThumbnailsApache CradleArrow Heads in the National MuseumThumbnailsApache CradleArrow Heads in the National MuseumThumbnailsApache CradleArrow Heads in the National MuseumThumbnailsApache CradleArrow Heads in the National MuseumThumbnailsApache Cradle

The Indian women formed the labouring class. Such a result was inevitable. The warrior would only follow the chase or fight. There was labour to be performed. No men were to be employed for hire. Whatever, therefore, was to be done must be done by the females. The wife is, consequently, her husband’s slave. She plants the maize, tobacco, beans, and running vines; she drives the blackbird from the corn, prepares the store of wild fruits for winter, tears up the weeds, gathers the harvest, pounds the grain, dries the buffalo meat, brings home the game, carries wood, draws water, spreads the repast, attends on her husband, aids in canoe building, and bears the poles of the wigwam from place to place.