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1920s Iñupiaq traditional healer becomes a midwife Della Keats, an Iñupiaq from Kotzebue, Alaska, is a traditional healer, locally called a doctor. Born ... |
1920 Wounded Knee survivor dies of influenza, syphilis Zinkala Nuni, Lakota, who survived the Wounded Knee Massacre as a baby, dies at age 29 from influenza, ... |
1919 Native Hawaiian herbalists told to aid researchers The territorial legislature authorizes a Hawaiian Medicine Board to license Native Hawaiian herbalists, ... |
1918–19 ‘Spanish Influenza’ claims millions of lives American Indians and Alaska Natives are among the tens of millions who die in the Spanish Influenza ... |
1917 More Indians are born than die For the first time in 50 years, more Indians are born than die, as federal appropriations for medical ... |
1917 American Indians volunteer for WWI Though not yet U.S. citizens, more than 10,000 American Indians serve in the U.S. Army and more than ... |
1915 Federally funded hospital planned for Alaska Natives Congress appropriates funding for a 25-bed hospital in Juneau to provide care for Alaska Native patients. |
1915 Alaska Natives must renounce cultures to become citizens Chapter 24, Session Laws of Alaska, recognizes Native peoples as citizens of the Territory of Alaska ... |
1915 The Alaska Native Sisterhood is established Following the formation of the Alaska Native Brotherhood in 1912, Alaska Native women meet in the Tlingit ... |
1915 Schools must keep children healthy, Commissioner states American Indian parents grow anxious about the safety of sending their children to government boarding ... |