Lexicographical Neighbors of Pembinas
Literary usage of Pembinas
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Descriptive Catalogue of Photographs of North American Indians by William Henry Jackson (1877)
"Head chief of the pembinas, residing at Turtle Mountain, in Dakota. ... His father
was made a chief of the pembinas by tho English and Americans, ..."
2. Decisions of the Department of the Interior and the General Land Office in by United States Dept. of the Interior, United States General Land Office (1905)
"98), when the chief of the Mississippi bands wanted an explanation about the
pembinas having signed and gone home, Rice, chairman, explained. ..."
3. Decisions of the Department of the Interior and the General Land Office in by United States Dept. of the Interior, United States General Land Office (1905)
"There were pembinas residing on one township of the White Earth reservation ...
So it appears that the pembinas were "Men of White Earth," lawfully residing ..."
4. Decisions of the Department of the Interior and the General Land Office in by United States Dept. of the Interior, United States General Land Office (1905)
"There were pembinas residing on one township of the White Earth reservation ...
So it appears that the pembinas were "Men of White Earth," lawfully residing ..."
5. The Magazine of History with Notes and Queries (1916)
"... the late lawyer Jean Baptiste Bottineau, became counselor for the
pembinas (Ojibways), and his granddaughter, Mrs. Mary Louise Bottineau Baldwin, ..."
6. The American Cyclopaedia: A Popular Dictionary of General Knowledge by Charles Anderson Dana (1875)
"The Red Lake band were still chiefly hunters, and cultivated little; the pembinas
were much corrupted by bad whites; the Pillagers and ..."