Lone Bull's Mistake: A Lodge Pole Chief Story (1918)
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Lone Bull's Mistake: A Lodge Pole Chief Story (1918)
J. W. Schultz (1859–1947) was an author, explorer, and historian known for his historical writings of the Blackfoot Indians in the late 1800s, when he lived among them as a fur trader. In 1907, Schultz published My Life as an Indian, the first of many future writings about the Blackfeet that he would produce over the next thirty years. Schultz lived in Browning, Montana.
"Lone Bull's Mistake,"' a stirring tale of the Blackfeet Indians, by James Willard Schultz, was pronounced the best of all Mr. Schultz's Indian stories. It is the story of an Indian "man without a country." It tells of the adventures of a rebellious Blackfoot Indian and his family after his punishment for a breach of the tribe's hunting laws. It is the account of the wanderings and misfortunes of a Blackfoot Indian who rebels at the tribal hunting laws and with his family leaves the camp of his people.
The family wander homeless from tribe to tribe until the man's better nature asserts itself and he rejoins his people when an opportunity comes to save them from an enemy. The author is one of our most famous old-time frontiersmen and Indian fighters, and an Indian by adoption into the Blackfoot tribe.
Originally published in 1918; reformatted for the Kindle; may contain an occasional imperfection; original spellings have been kept in place.