Shoshone, Native American Nations by F.A.Bird, Checkerboard Library, and Imprint of Abdo Publishing, North Mankato, Minnesota, 2025.
This is a small book in a series which deals with the Shoshone. The Shoshone had a wide area with many different bands, but shared the same language. There territory extended from Wyoming and Montana, through Idaho and northern Utah and into Nevada and then into the Death Valley area of California. There were many different types of land, desert of the Great Basin and Death Valley, mountains of the Rockies, and Uintahs, valleys and canyons. Those of the easter Shoshone would hunt buffalo, in the north they would catch salmon.
The housing would vary based on season and location. In the summer brush huts would often suffice, and be left up from year to year. However during the winter teepees were more common. They would often make lean-tos to keep off the sun in the summer.
In addition to buffalo and salmon they would eat other small game they would hunt with bows and arrows. They would also hunt smaller animals they would trap with snares. The would also gather nuts and berries as well as camas root which they would make into a flower. Pine nut gathering is an annal tradition among Shoshone where pinyon pine was prevalent.
Craft were are and important activity. Porcupine quill decorations were common. Traditionally they made awls of bone and thread of sinew. Shoshone women would often wear am awl around their neck kept in a leather pouch.
Babies were often kept in cradle boards from which they found comfort when they were wrapped tight. Children had time to play and swim. Older children helped with chores.
Adults would teach children, often through stories about coyote.
Chief Washakie was a chief of the eastern bands. However his influence extended throughout all of Shoshone land. His statue is outside the Wyoming State Capitol.





























