AIS 180 Introduction to American Indian StudiesAIS 280 American Indian Soveriegnty and the CourtsAIS 380 Contemporary Issues of American Indian NationsAIS 420 American Indian Studies Research MethodsAIS 494 American Indian RightsAIS 494 American Indians in Cinema, Arts and MediaARS 498 Material Culture Analysis and InterpretationARS 498 Shaping Native American Art in the SouthwestENG 359 American Indian LiteratureENG 457 Indigenous PoetryENG 461 Native American Women's LiteratureENG 465 Studies in Film/The American Indian in Film and Video: Reel or Real?EPA 691 Indigenous Knowledges in EducationLAW 691 Indian Legal ResearchEarly Childhood EducationARS 498 Native American Women ArtistsHow to Avoid Googling the Same-Old Mojave Pictures: Efficiently Searching for and Successfully Finding Mojave Archival MaterialsAIS 494 Cultural ProfessionalismARS 498/598 Native American AdornmentHST 498 Western WomenAEC 95 Native American Culture
American Indian ArchitectureAmerican Indian Child Welfare ActAmerican Indian Economic DevelopmentAmerican Indian Education: Education History, Boarding Schools, Mission SchoolsAmerican Indian GenealogyAmerican Indian LanguagesAmerican Indian SovereigntyAmerican Indian StereotypesAmerican Indian TheatreAmerican Indian WomenAutobiography and Primary SourcesBibliography on RepatriationEnvironmental IssuesFive Southeastern TribesHistorical and Contemporary American Indian GamingReligion and Origin StoriesVeterans with an Emphasis on Code Talkers
Native Americans and Education in Phoenix, 1941-1984Oral History - Listening to IndiansOral History Subject GuideOral History Tapes of Ralph CameronPonca Oral History CollectionThe American Indian Oral History Collection
American Indian Manuscript CollectionsCarlos Montezuma Guide to CollectionsCherokee Phoenix and Indian's AdvocateMicroform Publications
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American Indian Studies   Tags: american_indians  

This page is a starting point for all students researching American Indian issues. This guide is created by the Labriola National American Indian Data Center.
Last update: Feb 9, 2012 URL: http://libguides.asu.edu/content.php?pid=3897  Print Guide   RSS Updates ShareThis

Carlos Montezuma Guide to CollectionsPrint Page
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Article Databases

      
     

    Microform Collections

     

    Manuscript Collections

    NOTE: Paper guides to the following collections are available both in the Arizona and Labriola collections in the Department of Archives & Special Collections, ASU Libraries. However, full guides from both ASU and the University of Arizona, may be printed from “Arizona Archives Online” at http://aao.lib.asu.edu/index.html

     

    • Carlos Montezuma Collection, 1887-1980 (bulk 1887-1922) - Carlos Montezuma
      Call Number: MS CM MSS 60
      Composed of correspondence, speeches, printed material and financial records documenting the life of an urban physician and Indian rights activist. The bulk of the collection deals with Montezuma’s activism from1887-1992. Copies of his periodical, Wassaja: Freedom’s Signal for the Indians, are included in the collection.

    • Peter Iverson Collection, 1898-2002, - Peter Iverson
      Call Number: MS LAB MSS-165
      Contains research materials used for his books on Carlos Montezuma (see above). Included are numerous photographs and copies of Wassaja.

     

    Books

    Carlos Montezuma , physician and Indian rights activist, was born near Four Peaks in the Superstition Mountains of Central Arizona about 1866. He was the son of Yavapai Indians, Co-cu-ye-va and Thil-ge-ya, but was captured by Pima Indians and then sold to Carlos Gentile, who gave him his Anglo name. Gentile took him to Washington, DC and then to Chicago, where he received a public school education, and later was awarded a degree from the University of Illinois. He received his medical education from Northwestern University, and established a private practice in Chicago. He founded the journal, Wassaja, in 1916, which addressed issues dealing with Indian rights. He ultimately returned to Fort McDowell Indian Reservation, where he died in 1923.

    • Carlos Montezuma - Peter Iverson
      Call Number: E99 .Y5 M6533 1993
      Here is a children’s version of the Yavapai Indian who became and important advocate of Indian rights, earned a medical degree, and founded the Society of American Indians.

    • Carlos Montezuma and the Changing World of American Indians - Peter Iverson
      Call Number: E99 .Y5 M6534 1982
      Iverson was first to write a full-length biography on this Indian activist. He noted that Montezuma stressed adaptation to the cultural mainstream, an approach that could often stir controversy. He wrote a good deal about his work in the field of water rights.

    • Carlos Montezuma, M.D.: A Yavapai American Hero: The Life and Times of an American Indian, 1866-1923 - Leon Speroff
      Call Number: R696 .M66 S66 2003
      Here is the most recent of the many publications covering Montezuma’s life. The author has gone into great detail and has included for the first time, original material held by Leon Summit of New York. The material was ultimately microfilmed as Supplement to the Papers of Carlos Montezuma, M.D.

    • Wassaja: Freedom’s Signal for the Indians - Peter Iverson Collection
      Call Number: MS LAB MSS-165
      Chicago’s Newberry Library has the only known original copies of Montezuma’s periodical, Wassaja. Photocopies of issues of Wassaja are included in both the Iverson Collection (LAB MSS-165, Labriola Center, ASU Libraries) and the Montezuma Collection (CM MSS-60, Archives & Special Collections, ASU Libraries).

      Microfilm versions are located at
      Northern Arizona University, FILM #460, reel 5;
      University of Arizona, FILM 6948.

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