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Angie
Debo
Activity Sheet
Biography from
Center for Great Plains Studies
Angie Debo was
born on January 30, 1890, less than one year after the Indian
lands in Oklahoma Territory were opened for settlement. The Debo
family did not participate in the Oklahoma land rush of 1889,
but arrived ten years later when Debo was nine. She traveled
to Marshall, Oklahoma Territory, in a covered wagon with her
mother and younger brother, while her father rode ahead with
the farm machinery. Debo wrote in her diary that she was hoping
to see Indians as she reached Oklahoma, but instead only saw
white settlers.
Debo attended a
rural grade school and was taught very little Indian history.
Since there was no high school in Marshall until 1910, Debo obtained
her teacher's certificate at age sixteen and taught in rural
schools near the family farm. She describes this time as miserable,
because she wanted to accomplish something with her life. She
finally graduated from high school at the age of twenty-three,
one of nine members of Marshall's first graduating class.
Debo graduated
with a bachelor's degree in history from the University of Oklahoma
in 1918. She taught history for four years in the Enid High School,
then enrolled in the University of Chicago to work on a master's
degree. Because women were not allowed to enter the history field
at this time, Debo studied International Relations. In 1924,
Debo not only received her master's degree, but also published
her thesis, "The Historical Background of the American Policy
of Isolation," co-authored with J. Fred Rippy, in the Smith
College Studies in History.
From 1924 to 1933,
Debo was on the faculty of the history department in West Texas
State Teachers College and served as curator of the Panhandle-Plains
Historical Museum. During this time, she worked on her doctorate
at the University of Oklahoma. In 1933 Debo received her Ph.D.
and by the next year her dissertation was published by the University
of Oklahoma Press in a book, The Rise and Fall of the Choctaw
Republic. The book was awarded the John H. Dunning Prize
by the American Historical Association, which encouraged her
to pursue research and freelance writing. She returned to Marshall
and signed a book contract with the University of Oklahoma Press
to pursue a new field of study, the history of the American Indian.
Debo felt that a full history of America could not be given without
information about American Indians.
 In 1936 Debo wrote
And Still the Waters Run, a book about the theft from
Indians of their lands in Indian Territory. Because the manuscript
gave an unappealing view of the history of Oklahoma, at least
unappealing to state government officials, and named prominent
citizens and government leaders in the theft, the University
of Oklahoma Press backed out of its contract and refused to publish
the book. Around this time, Debo accepted a job with the Federal
Writers Project to edit their guide on Oklahoma. She was assigned
and wrote the chapter on the state's history. Shke wrote it,
but much to her horror, a different chapter was substituted for
hers by an unknown author. It was published under Debo's name
and contained errors in favor of the settlers.
And Still the
Waters Run was eventually published by Princeton University
Press in 1940, when Debo was fifty. Unable to obtain university
employment, Debo taught in rural Oklahoma schools, and during
World War II she served as pastor at her local Methodist church.
Later she was hired full-time as Maps Librarian at Oklahoma State
University. All her spare time was spent writing. She wrote a
total of nine books and edited others. She also published many
articles in different journals, including Harper's Magazine,
and contributed chapters and forewords to books. Her last book,
Geronimo, was finished when she was 85 years old.
Debo was a leading
scholar of Indian history, and her work has been cited as evidence
in federal court cases involving tribal land rights. However,
the state of Oklahoma did not recognize Debo's lifelong achievements
until the 1980s when she was in her 90s. Her portrait was hung
in the state capital next to humorist Will Rogers, Indian athlete
Jim Thorpe, and many of the state's leaders she had exposed in
her books. In 1993 Debo was inaugurated to the Oklahoma Historians
Hall of Fame. She stated that she had one quality that got her
through her long life and that quality was drive. Debo died in
1988.
Angie Debo: Pioneering
Historian
Book Description from amazon.com
The daughter of
Oklahoma sodbusters and a student of Edward Everett Dale Angie
Debo was an unlikely forerunner of the New Western History. Breaking
with the followers of Frederick Jackson Turner, Debo viewed the
westward movement of European Americans as conquest rather than
settlement. Her studies on the Five Tribes presented the Native
American point of view and incorporated ethnological insights
more than a decade before ethnohistory emerged as a separate
field.
Shirley A. Leckie's
biography of Debo is the first to assess the significance of
Oklahoma's pioneering historian on the historiography of the
American Indian, the writing of regional history, and the development
of national law and court cases involving indigenous people.
Leckie sheds light on Debo's family's background, her personality,
and the impact of gender discrimination on her career. Finally,
Leckie clarifies why Debo became a scholarly pioneer and, later,
a "warrior-scholar" activist working on behalf of Native
Americans during a period of changing Indian policy.
Angie Debo Papers
http://www.library.okstate.edu/scua/debo.htm
Center for Great Plains Studies
http://www.unl.edu/plains/events/resource/debobio.html
Date Nut Bread Recipe
http://poetsandwriters.okstate.edu/outloud/nutbread.html
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