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Having trouble viewing this email? Click here Touch History June, 2011 Emma Big Bear Statue Dedication . . . . Save the Date: July 16, 2011 Ho-Chunk songs and a drum big enough to accommodate five performers will beckon visitors to the Mississippi River Sculpture Park in Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin, on July 16, when the statue of Emma Big Bear is dedicated. "Without a drum, you have no music," says lead singer, Lance Blackdeer.. The group will sing a variety of songs including an honor song to thank the sculpture park board for "taking the time to see the project to fruition, and for having a feeling toward Emma Big Bear and our people," Blackdeer says. One or two of the songs will have verses alternating between the Ho-Chunk language and English. These are social dance songs with a double beat. At a powwow, women ask men to dance to these songs that Blackdeer calls "easy listening to" music. Emma Big Bear was a very well-known Ho-Chunk woman who lived in Marquette, Iowa, across the Mississippi from Prairie du Chien. She earned her keep with traditional crafts, particularly basket weaving. Stories about her life, from relatives and others who remember her, will add to the entertainment at the dedication ceremony. There will also be an opportunity to record stories, and to show off Emma's baskets. The program is scheduled to begin at 4 p.m. on Saturday, July 16, in the Sculpture Park on St. Feriole Island,, with the Ho-Chunk drum circle providing music as people enter. SCULPTOR'S CORNER

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History in the Making, Mississippi River Sculpture Park, St. Feriole Island, Prairie du Chien, Wi.

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Touch HistoryJune, 2011

Emma Big Bear Statue Dedication . . . .

Save the Date: July 16, 2011

Ho-Chunk songs and a drum big enough to accommodate five performerswill beckon visitors to the Mississippi River Sculpture Park in Prairie du Chien,Wisconsin, on July 16, when the statue of Emma Big Bear is dedicated. "Without a drum, you have no music," says lead singer, LanceBlackdeer.. The group will sing a variety of songs including an honor song tothank the sculpture park board for "taking the time to see the project to fruition,

and for having a feeling toward Emma Big Bear and our people," Blackdeer says. One or two of the songs will have verses alternating between the Ho-Chunk language and English. These are social dance songs with a double beat. At a powwow, women ask men to dance to these songsthat Blackdeer calls "easy listening to" music. Emma Big Bear was a very well-known Ho-Chunk woman who lived in Marquette, Iowa, across theMississippi from Prairie du Chien. She earned her keep with traditional crafts, particularly basket weaving. Stories about her life, from relatives and others who remember her, will add to the entertainment atthe dedication ceremony. There will also be an opportunity to record stories, and to show off Emma'sbaskets. The program is scheduled to begin at 4 p.m. on Saturday, July 16, in the Sculpture Park on St. FerioleIsland,, with the Ho-Chunk drum circle providing music as people enter.

SCULPTOR'S CORNER

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I was asked to write about my experience ofgetting to know Emma Big Bear as I was workingon her portrait. That experience is nearly impossibleto put into words, because it was an intuitive sensethat I felt while I was modeling her face. The deepset eyes and wrinkles that comewith a long life seemed to express her life strugglesand triumphs and tragedies. Her expressionsuggests to me concentration, and patience overlyingdeep life experiences. I also have learned about some of herhistory. She was married twice, lost a child, and stillchose her own life of independence and survival,making baskets and beaded jewelry by her belovedbig river. I can only imagine her feelings andperceptions about the world-changing events thathappened during her long life. She lived to be 99years old (1869 - 1968) during the time of transitionfrom a tribal existence through the European contactperiod and into our modern-day community life.There is much to learn about this remarkable iconicwoman.

Florence Bird

Hidden Treasures . . . .

Historic Island Trees

Florence Bird wondered who had walked on the land at the confluence of the Mississippi andWisconsin Rivers and she developed the idea of sculptures in a park to tell their stories. On St. Feriole Islandin Prairie du Chien, a new project with a similar theme, Trees with a History, uses the entire island to recallvisitors to the area. Prairie du Chien has always had famous people visit, live and work in the area. Trees with aHistory matches each one with a tree that is his favorite, that he has written about or that he has becomeinvolved with somewhere. The first tree planted was a Canadian Hemlock for Joyce Kilmer, the poet who wrote, "I think that Ishall never see a poem lovely as a tree". Mr. Kilmer was a friend to a priest at Campion Boys School in theearly 1900's. He came to Prairie du Chien many times to visit the school and his friend. In May of 2011, a Sugar Maple tree from Ben Logan's Seldom Seen Farm was dug up, then plantedat the front of St. Feriole Island Gardens. Mr. Logan wrote The Land Remembers, a book about growing upin the early 1900's on a rural farm. A Red Cedar tree will be planted for John Muir. He loved the tree so much that he requested itsboughs be buried with him. Mr. Muir lived in Prairie du Chien for a few years before heading westward andestablishing Yosemite National Park in California. Pine trees dug at Aldo Leopold's "Shack" in Baraboo, Wisconsin, will make a small forest on theisland. Leopold visited Prairie du Chien often to work on conserving area prairies.

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Jack Foley Horkheimer, who had family in Prairie du Chien, was a Campion graduate. He was onPBS for over 35 years as creator, writer, and star of "Star Hustler/Star Gazer," seen every Saturday Night. He will be getting a Star Magnolia. Henry David Thoreau came to Prairie du Chien in 1861 by boat and stayed overnight. After amonth, he made the return trip, again spending a night in town. In an earlier journal entry, he had written,"May I ever be in as good spirits as a willow! How tenacious of life! How soon it gets over its hurts!" Awillow will be planted to recall his visit. Two male Ginkgo Trees growing in the sculpture park are noteworthy. They are referred to as"living fossils," because they also show up in prehistoric fossils. The Common Red Cedar Tree shades The Voyageur asleep in the park. The cedar tree seemed anobvious choice when our major donor asked to have the statue located under a tree. After the statue was inplace, research indicated that the cedar tree was valuable to voyageurs: the cones were used for medicineand the wood became staves in the canoes. Stroll around St. Feriole Island after you visit the sculpture park, and see how many of these treesyou can find.

for more information, contact Cathie Nelson at [email protected]

Emma Big Bear's Last House

Early in the 21st

century, the winery at Marquette, IA was being developed.The dark brown building behind the flagpole is the former home of Emma Big Bear. Emma Big Bear lived most of her adult life in and around her ancient ancestral home in McGregorand Marquette and northeast Iowa. Departed almost 43 years, but not forgotten, she lives on in our hearts and minds and at a tinymuseum at her former home that honors her heritage and contributions to the river towns up and down the

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Mississippi River in northeast Iowa. Visitors to the winery often come with stories about meeting her, or about how relatives met her. Sometimes they bring baskets to show to the winery's owners. Come and sit a spell on the front porch where Emma Big Bear last sat and wove her Ho-Chunkbaskets and made beaded jewelry for tourists.

Rogeta Halverson

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