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Nancy Raven

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Nancy Raven
Born
Nancy Chunestudy

c. (1868-12-25)December 25, 1868
DiedMarch 25, 1957(1957-03-25) (aged 88)
Other namesNancy Chunestudy Taylor Waters Raven
Occupation(s)homemaker, storyteller, language consultant
Known forlast fluent speaker of Natchez language[1]

Nancy Raven (c. December 25, 1868–March 25, 1957),[2] also known as Nancy Taylor, was a Natchez storyteller from Braggs, Oklahoma and one of the last two fluent speakers of the Natchez language.[3]

Her father was Cherokee and her mother Natchez, and she learned Natchez at home. A full-blood,[4] she never learned English, but was trilingual in Natchez, Cherokee and Muscogee.[5]

In 1907 she worked with anthropologist John R. Swanton who collected information about Natchez religion, and in the 1930s she worked extensively with linguist Mary R. Haas who collected grammatical information and texts using an interpreter.[1] Among the stories she told Mary Haas was one called "The Woman Who Was a Fox".[5] Sometimes she used the surname Taylor, which she had taken from her second husband.[5]

Family

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She married four times. She had one son Adam Levi from her first marriage, with her second husband Will Taylor (Cherokee, d. 1905).[4] She was soon widowed, then married a man named Waters, and by 1920 was again widowed and married Albert Raven, a man about whom little is known. In the 1930s she appears to have been once again widowed.[5]

She was the biological cousin of the other last speaker of Natchez, Watt Sam (Natchez, 1876–1944), who in Natchez kinship terminology was her classificatory nephew.[6][7] Among the Natchez, the language was generally passed down matrilineally, but at her death Nancy Raven had no surviving children, her only son Adam Levi having died from tuberculosis at age 20 in 1915.[3]

Allotment

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In 1907, she received land allotments from the Cherokee Nation, divided into individual allotments by the Dawes Commission. In 1930 she sold her land allotment.[5]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Natchez (Naacee)". Omniglot. Retrieved 27 August 2024.
  2. ^ "Nancy Raven". Findagrave.com. Retrieved 2013-10-14.
  3. ^ a b Kimball, Geoffry (2005). "Natchez". In Janine Scancarelli; Heather Kay Hardy (eds.). Native Languages of the Southeastern United States. University of Nebraska Press. pp. 385–453. ISBN 978-0803242357.
  4. ^ a b "Cherokee (by Blood), Card 9217". Dawes Rolls, 1989–1914. Oklahoma Historical Society. Retrieved 27 August 2024.
  5. ^ a b c d e Kimball, G. (2013). "The Woman Who Was a Fox: The Structure of a Natchez Oral Narrative". International Journal of American Linguistics. 79 (3): 421–437. doi:10.1086/670925. JSTOR 670925. S2CID 144512594.
  6. ^ Galloway, Patricia Kay; Jason Baird Jackson (2004), "Natchez and Neighboring Groups", in Raymond D. Fogelson (ed.), Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 14: Southeast, Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, pp. 598–615, ISBN 978-0160723001
  7. ^ Martin, Jack B. (2004), "Languages", in Raymond D. Fogelson (ed.), Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 14: Southeast, Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, pp. 68–86
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