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the publications of william n. fenton 1931 “Outdoor Wisdom.” [Review of] The Boy Campers, by William Hillcourt. The Saturday Review of Literature 8 (17): 282. 1935 (With Cephas D. Hill) “Reviving Indian Arts among the Senecas.” Indians at Work 2 (21): 13–15. “The Tonawanda Indian Community Library.” Indians at Work 3 (5): 46–48. 1936 “Guide Posts on Tonawanda Reservation.” Indians at Work 3 (10): 31–32. “Some Social Customs of the Modern Senecas.” Social Welfare Bulletin 7 (1–2):l 4–7. (Also in Indians at Work 3 [21]: 10–14; 4 [6]: 41–42.) An Outline of Seneca Ceremonies at Coldspring Longhouse. Yale University Publications in Anthropology 9. New Haven, ct. (Reprinted: Human Relations Area Files Press, New Haven, ct, 1970.) 1937 “The Seneca Society of Faces.” Scientific Monthly 44 (March): 215–38. 1940 “A Further Quest for Iroquois Medicines.” In Explorations and Field-work of the Smithsonian Institution in 1939, 93–96. Washington, dc. “Problems Arising from the Historic Northeastern Position of the Iroquois.” In Essays in Historical Anthropology of North America. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections 100, 159–251. Washington, dc. “An Herbarium from the Allegany Senecas.” In The Historic Annals of 180 | publications of william n. fenton Southwestern New York, edited by William J. Doty et. al., 787–96. New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company. [Research Report]. In Fifty-sixth (1938–1939) Bureau of American Ethnology, Annual Reports, 5–6. Washington, dc. 1941 “Masked Medicine Societies of the Iroquois.” Annual Report of the Smithsonian Institution for 1940, 397–429. Washington, dc. “Iroquois Suicide: A Study in the Stability of a Culture Pattern.” Bulletin of the Bureau of American Ethnology 128 (14): 80–137. “Tonawanda Longhouse Ceremonies: Ninety Years after Lewis Henry Morgan.” Bulletin of the Bureau of American Ethnology 128 (15): 140–65. Washington, dc. “Museum and Field Studies of Iroquois Masks and Ritualism.” Explorations and Field-work of the Smithsonian Institution in 1940, 95–100. Washington, dc. [Research Report]. In Fifty-seventh (1939–1940) Bureau of American Ethnology, Annual Reports, 6–7. Washington, dc. 1942 “Contacts between Iroquois Herbalism and Colonial Medicine.” Annual Report of the Smithsonian Institution for 1941, 503–26. Washington, dc. “Fish Drives among the Cornplanter Senecas.” Pennsylvania Archaeologist 12 (3): 48–52. “Last Seneca Pigeon Hunts.” Warren County Pennsylvania Almanac, 1943, 4–5, 38. Warren. “Songs from the Iroquois Longhouse. Program Notes for an Album of American Indian Music from the Eastern Woodlands.” Smithsonian Institution Publication 3691. Washington, dc. (Recorder and Editor) “Songs from the Iroquois Longhouse.” Folk Music of the United States, Archive of Folk Song, Album 6. Washington, dc: Library of Congress. [Research Report]. In Fifty-eighth (1940–1941), Bureau of American Ethnology, Annual Reports, 7–8. Washington, dc. 1943 (With Merle H. Deardorff) “The Last Passenger Pigeon Hunts of the Cornplanter Senecas.” Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences 33 (10): 289–315. [Research Report]. In Fifty-ninth (1941–1942) Bureau of American Ethnology, Annual Reports, 5–7. Washington, dc. [18.226.28.197] Project MUSE (2024-04-26 10:05 GMT) publications of william n. fenton | 181 1944 (Editor) “The Requickening Address of the Iroquois Condolence Council, J. N. B. Hewitt.” Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences 34 (3): 65–85. “Samuel Crowell’s Account of a Seneca Dog Sacrifice near Lower Ohio, in 1830: A Commentary.” Northwest Ohio Quarterly 16 (34): 158–63. [Research Report]. In Sixtieth (1942–1943) Bureau of American Ethnology, Annual Reports, 5–6. Washington, dc. [Obituary] “Simeon Gibson: Iroquois Informant, 1889–1943.” American Anthropologist, n.s., 46 (2): 231–34. [Obituary] “Simeon Gibson (1889–1943), Informant in the Iroquois Ritual of Condolence.” Cranbrook Institute of Science News Letter 13 (6): 5–7. 1945 (With J. N. B. Hewitt) “Some Mnemonic Pictographs Relating to the Iroquois Condolence Council.” Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences 35 (10): 301–15. “A Day on the Allegheny Ox-Bow.” The Living Wilderness 10 (13): 1–8. “Place Names and Related Activities of the Cornplanter Senecas, I: State Line to Cornplanter Grant: Northern Approaches.” Pennsylvania Archaeologist 15 (1): 25–29. “Place Names and Related Activities of the Cornplanter Senecas, II: Cornplanter Grant: The Place Where Handsome Lake Rose to Preach.” Pennsylvania Archaeologist 15 (2): 42–50. “Place Names and Related Activities of the Cornplanter Senecas, III: Burnt House at Cornplanter Grant.” Pennsylvania Archaeologist 15 (3): 88–96 “Place Names and Related Activities of the Cornplanter Senecas, IV: Cornplanter Peak to Warren.” Pennsylvania Archaeologist 15 (4): 108–18. “Pennsylvania’s Remaining Indian Settlement.” Pennsylvania Park...

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