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Other editions of book The Horse and the Plains Indians: A Powerful Partnership

  • The Horse and the Plains Indians: A Powerful Partnership

    Dorothy Hinshaw Patent, William Muñoz

    Hardcover (Clarion Books, July 10, 2012)
    The image of a Native American on horseback has become ingrained in the American consciousness. But the Plains Indians and the horse were not always inseparable. Once, Native Americans used dogs to help carry their goods, and even after the Spaniards introduced the horse to the Americas, horses were considered so valuable that the Spanish would not allow the Indians to have them. But soon horses escaped from Spanish settlements, and Native Americans quickly learned how valuable the horse could be as a hunting mount, beast of burden, and military steed. Follow the story of this transformative partnership, starting in the early sixteenth century and continuing today.
    W
  • The Horse and the Plains Indians: A Powerful Partnership

    Dorothy Hinshaw Patent, William Muñoz

    eBook (Clarion Books, July 10, 2012)
    The image of a Native American on horseback has become ingrained in the American consciousness. But the Plains Indians and the horse were not always inseparable. Once, Native Americans used dogs to help carry their goods, and even after the Spaniards introduced the horse to the Americas, horses were considered so valuable that the Spanish would not allow the Indians to have them. But soon horses escaped from Spanish settlements, and Native Americans quickly learned how valuable the horse could be as a hunting mount, beast of burden, and military steed. Follow the story of this transformative partnership, starting in the early sixteenth century and continuing today.
  • The Horse and the Plains Indians: A Powerful Partnership by Dorothy Hinshaw Patent

    Dorothy Hinshaw Patent

    Hardcover (Clarion Books (2012-07-10), Aug. 16, 1656)
    None
  • The Horse and the Plains Indians: A Powerful Partnership

    Dorothy Hinshaw Patent, William Munoz

    Hardcover (Clarion Books, July 10, 2012)
    The image of a Native American on horseback has become ingrained in the American consciousness. But the Plains Indians and the horse were not always inseparable. Once, Native Americans used dogs to help carry their goods, and even after the Spaniards introduced the horse to the Americas, horses were considered so valuable that the Spanish would not allow the Indians to have them. But soon horses escaped from Spanish settlements, and Native Americans quickly learned how valuable the horse could be as a hunting mount, beast of burden, and military steed. Follow the story of this transformative partnership, starting in the early sixteenth century and continuing today.
    S