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Alice Cunningham Fletcher

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{{Infobox rai-fellow
| first_name = Alice Cunningham
| name = Fletcher
| honorific_prefix = Miss
| honorific_suffix =
| image = File:Fletcher,_Alice_Cunningham.jpg
| birth_date = 1838
| death_date = 1923
| address =
| occupation = anthropologist
| elected_ESL =
| elected_ASL =
| elected_AI =
| elected_APS =
| elected_LAS =
| membership = paper only
| left =
| clubs =
| societies = American Folklore Society
}}
== Notes ==
=== Office Notes ===

=== House Notes ===

=== Notes From Elsewhere ===
Alice Cunningham Fletcher (March 15, 1838, Havana – April 6, 1923, Washington, D.C.) was an American ethnologist, anthropologist, and social scientist who studied and documented American Indian culture.<br />
== Publications ==
=== External Publications ===
Sun Dance of the Ogallala Sioux. American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1883<br />Observations on the Laws and Privileges of the Gens in Indian Society. (abstract) AAAS, 1884<br />Symbolic Earth Formations of the Winnebagoes. (abstract) AAAS, 1884<br />The White Buffalo Festival of the Uncpapas. 16th Annual Report Peabody Museum, 1884<br />The Elk Mystery or Festival of the Ogallala Sioux. 16th Ann. Rep. Peabody Museum, 1884<br />The Religious Ceremony of the Four Winds as Observed by a Santee Sioux. 16th Ann. Rep. Peabody Museum, 1884<br />The Shadow or Ghost Lodge: A Ceremony of the Ogallala Sioux. 16th Ann. Rep. Peabody Museum, 1884<br />The Wa-Wan, or Pipe Dance of the Omahas. 16th Ann. Rep. Peabody Museum, 1884<br />Historical Sketch of the Omaha Tribe of Indians in Nebraska. Washington, 1885<br />Observations upon the Usage, Symbolism and Influence of the Sacred Pipes<br />Of Friendship among the Omahas. AAAS, 1885<br />Lands in Severalty to Indians; Illustrated by Experience with the Omaha Tribe. AAAS, 1885<br />Indian Education and Civilization. Special Report, U.S. Bureau of Education. 1888<br />On the Preservation of Archaeologic Monuments. AAAS, 1888<br />Report of the Committee on the Preservation of Archaeologic Remains on Public Lands. AAAS, 1889<br />Phonetic Alphabet of the Winnebago Indians. AAAS, 1890<br />Indian Messiah. Journal. American Folk-Lore, 1892<br />Nez Perce Country. (abstract) AAAS, 1892<br />Hal-thu-ska Society of the Omaha Tribe. Jour. Am. Folk-Lore, 1892<br />A Study of Omaha Indian Music. Arch. and Eth. Papers Peabody Museum, 1893<br />Love Songs among the Omaha Indians. International Congress of Anthropologists, 1894<br />Indian Songs: Personal Studies of Indian Life. Century Magazine, 1894<br />Hunting Customs of the Omahas. Century Magazine, 1895<br />Sacred Pole of the Omaha Tribe. AAAS, 1896<br />Indian Songs and Music. AAAS, 1896<br />Tribal Life among the Omahas. Century Magazine, 1896<br />Emblematic Use of the Tree in the Dakotan Group. AAAS, 1897<br />Indian Songs and Music. Jour. Amer. Folk-Lore, 1898<br />A Pawnee Ritual Used When Changing a Man’s Name. American Anthropologist, 1899<br />Indian Story and Song from North America. Boston, 1900<br />Giving Thanks: A Pawnee Ceremony. Jour. Am. Folk-Lore, 1900<br />The “Lazy Man” in Indian Lore. Jour. Am. Folk-Lore, 1901<br />Star Cult among the Pawnee. Am. Anthrop., 1902<br />Pawnee Star Lore. Jour. Am. Folk-Lore, 1903<br />The Hako: A Pawnee Ceremony. 22nd Ann. Rep. Bu. Am. Eth., 1904<br />Tribal Structure: A Study of the Omaha and Cognate Tribes. Putnam Anniversary Volume, 1909<br />The Omaha Tribe. (With Francis La Flesche). 27th Ann. Rep. Bu. Am. Eth., 1911<br />The Problems of the Unity or Plurality and the Probable Place of Origin of The American Aborigines. (A Symposium) Some Ethnological Aspects of the Problem. Am. Anthrop., 1912<br />Wakondagi. Am. Anthrop., 1912<br />Brief History of the International Congress of Americanists. Am. Anthrop., 1913<br />Indian Games and Dances with Native Songs Arranged from American Indian Ceremonials and Sports. Boston, 1915<br />The Study of Indian Music. National Academy of Science, 1915<br />The Indian and Nature: The Basis of His Tribal Organization and Rites. The Red Man, 1916<br />A Birthday Wish from Native America. Washington, 1916<br />Nature and the Indian Tribe. Art and Archaeology, 1916<br />Concepts of Nature among the American Natives. (abstract) 19th Internat. Cong. Amer., 1917<br />Prayers Voiced in Ancient America. Art and Arch., 1920[17]<br />
=== House Publications ===
‘The Significance of the Scalp-Lock. A Study of an Omaha Ritual’, JAI 27 (1898): 436-50. <br />
== Related Material Details ==
=== RAI Material ===

=== Other Material ===
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