George E. Hyde Explained

George Elmer Hyde
Birth Date:1882 6, df=yes
Birth Place:Omaha, Nebraska, United States
Death Place:Omaha, Nebraska, United States
Occupation:historian, ethnologist, author
Nationality:American
Genre:Native Americans

George Elmer Hyde (1882–1968) was the "Dean of American Indian Historians."[1] He wrote many books about Indian tribes, especially the Sioux and Pawnee plus a life of the Cheyenne warrior and historian, George Bent.

Life

Hyde was born in Omaha, Nebraska and lived there all his life. He was educated only to the eighth grade. His interest in American Indians was excited by a visit to an Indian encampment at the Trans-Mississippi Exposition in Omaha in 1898. At eighteen he became totally deaf and nearly blind as a result of rheumatic fever. Despite his modest means, this did not discourage him from pursuing his Indian studies. In fact, he went a step further and even owned a bookstore to support himself. He led a reclusive life, and as he grew older, he relied on a powerful magnifying glass to aid his reading. Hyde communicated with the world almost entirely through his letters and books.[2]

Hyde began a correspondence with George Bent in 1904 and, at Bent's recommendation, became a salaried researcher for George Bird Grinnell about 1908. Hyde, with extensive contributions from Bent, claimed to be the ghost writer for Grinnell's classic book The Fighting Cheyennes. Grinnell and Hyde are both distinguished for emphasizing the importance of Indians in the history of the Western frontier.[3]

Works

Hyde was an opinionated and sardonic writer and his books are highly readable. As an outsider in the anthropological fraternity he had difficulty getting his works published. This was especially true of his Life of George Bent based on the 340 letters he received from Bent between 1904 and 1918. Life of George Bent had to wait for 50 years before being published, but it is invaluable as the most detailed eye-witness account we have from the Indian point of view about the Cheyenne wars with the United States in the 1860s. Collaborators Hyde and Bent never met in person.[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: George E. Hyde, 1882-1968 . History Nebraska . 15 December 2023.
  2. Official Nebraska Government Website. "George E. Hyde, 1882-1968." http://www.nebraskahistory.org/lib-arch/research/manuscripts/family/hyde-george.htm, accessed 10 May 2011
  3. Faller, Lincoln B. "Making Medicine against 'White Man's Side of Story," American Indian Quarterly, Winter 2000, Vol 24, Issue 1, Academic Search Premier, p.5, 18
  4. Faller, pp. 3, 17