Showing posts with label park ranger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label park ranger. Show all posts

Wide Ruins: Memories from a Navajo Trading Post Review

Wide Ruins: Memories from a Navajo Trading Post
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"Wide Ruins" is a wonderful reading experience on an interesting topic. Sallie Wagner weaves a personal tale of her experiences as the trader at Wide Ruins, Arizona, in the 1940's. Her story progresses quickly and she seems to provide enough detail of her experiences without lingering too long on any one topic. She vividly describes the role of the trading post and of the traders. The trading post was a general store, a pawn shop, and a safety deposit box. The traders were resourceful businessmen who could conduct business without any actual money trading hands. They were esteemed residents who helped the Navajo people survive a difficult time in America's history.
This memoir is a significant piece of literature because it was written by one who actually lived in a world that few non-Navajos ever get to see. She decribes the Navajo people and the Navajo culture in a way that makes their time and place real. It is not an academic study by a distant scholar of the culture. It is a personal account of a world that no longer exists, and as such, it is a treasure. I would also recommend "Navajo Trader" by Cladwell Richardson in addition to "Wide Ruins".

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Newlyweds Sallie Wagner and Bill Lippincott came to the Navajo Reservation in 1938. Before they knew it, they owned a trading post at Wide Ruins, Arizona. The years they spent there were the best of their lives, and this lively, honest memoir recalls them in detail. Trading post life combined business with the kinds of experiences generally associated with anthropological field work. Like many traders, Sallie Wagner influenced the weavers whose rugs she purchased. She was one of the traders who persuaded weavers to use vegetal dyes, leaving a permanent legacy in Navajo weaving. Tourists discovered Indian reservations in the 1930s, and the Lippincotts were visited often by friends and strangers alike, many unable to navigate reservation roads.
"This story is a must read for those interested in the Navajo people in the early days. Sallie Wagner has managed to catch and retain the essence of what it meant to be white in a Navajo world that was unbelievably different."--Edward T. Hall

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The Case of the Indian Trader: Billy Malone and the National Park Service Investigation at Hubbell Trading Post Review

The Case of the Indian Trader: Billy Malone and the National Park Service Investigation at Hubbell Trading Post
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Thank you to the author, Paul Berkowitz, for sharing his experience with us. For those of us that know Billy Malone, we are grateful for the details of his ordeal. It is truly sad that within our own National Park System, such a tragedy was allowed and fostered by those in control. Of all of our governmental agencies, we expected our National Park System to be honorable and trustworthy ... heroic. What a disappointment to discover that this agency is corrupt and selfserving. Bill Malone was the reason so many of us went to the Hubbell Trading Post. He has always treated his customers and his community with nothing less than high respect. His devotion to the trading post and it's renouned profile within the Navajo Arts and Crafts world were priceless.
What happened to him was wrong ... not only wrong, but criminal.

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This is the story of Billy Gene Malone and the end of an era. Malone lived almost his entire life on the Navajo Reservation working as an Indian trader; the last real Indian trader to operate historic Hubbell Trading Post. In 2004, the National Park Service (NPS) launched an investigation targeting Malone, alleging a long list of crimes that were similar to Al Capone. In 2005, federal agent Paul Berkowitz was assigned to take over the year-and-a-half-old case. His investigation uncovered serious problems with the original allegations, raising questions about the integrity of his supervisors and colleagues as well as high-level NPS managers. In an intriguing account of whistle-blowing, Berkowitz tells how he bypassed his chain-of-command and delivered his findings directly to the Office of the Inspector General.

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