
Address To The Graduating Class Of The United States Military Academy at West Point, 1974
Man's Rise to Civilization (1968)
Address To The Graduating Class Of The United States Military Academy at West Point, 1974
Man's Rise to Civilization (1968)
Context: By the seventeenth century, observers had reached the firm conclusion that American Indians were in no way inferior to Whites, and many writers took special pains to salute the Noble Red Man. The Jesuit missionary Bressani... reported that the inhabitants "are hardly barbarous, save in name.... marvelous faculty for remembering places, and for describing them to one another."... can recall things that a White "could not rehearse without writing." Another Jesuit enthusiastically corroborates... "nearly all show more intelligence in their business, speeches, courtesies, intercourse, tricks and subtleties, than do the shrewdest citizens and merchants in France."
Source: Responsibility and Response (1967), p. 29
As quoted in "Vine Deloria Jr." by Melissa Lorenz EMuseum @ Minnesota State University, Mankato (2008) https://web.archive.org/web/20080925082716/http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/history/mncultures/vinedeloriajr.htm
Interview en-route to Iceland, March 24 2005 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QryuMf8qZ0g
2000s
“I believe the Indian then to be in body and mind equal to the white man.”
1780s, Letter to the Marquis de Chastellux (1785)
Saturday Pioneer (3 January 1891)
The Aberdeen Saturday Pioneer (1890 and 1891)
The Conquest of a Continent (1933)