<p class=ql-align-justify><strong style=color: rgb(51 51 51);>This two-volume work (see also&nbsp;Volume&nbsp;II-Navajo) was originally transcribed by Jeff&nbsp;Bowen in April 1997 from&nbsp;National Archives microfilm M-595 Roll 192. The&nbsp;information in Volume I which&nbsp;was gathered by the staff of the Bureau of&nbsp;Indian Affairs includes the 1932&nbsp;census of the Hopi Indians a divisional&nbsp;group of the Pueblo people. Also&nbsp;contained in Volume I are year-by-year lists&nbsp;of Hopi births and deaths between&nbsp;1925 and 1931. The Navajo (also spelled&nbsp;Navaho) Indians of the Southwest are&nbsp;covered in Volume II. Both tribes&nbsp;inhabited reservations in northeastern&nbsp;Arizona while Navajo living areas also&nbsp;adjoined New Mexico and Utah. Hopi&nbsp;people were known as diligent agriculturists&nbsp;as well as very talented artisans.&nbsp;The Navajo who early on occupied lands that&nbsp;had once been home to the ancient&nbsp;Anasazi became herdsmen raising sheep and&nbsp;horses; Navajo women became weavers&nbsp;of the finest blankets. Today the Navajo&nbsp;Reservation is the largest one in the&nbsp;United States; in fact it is larger than&nbsp;the state of West Virginia. The Navajo&nbsp;are members of the Eight Northern Indian&nbsp;Pueblos Council.</strong></p><p class=ql-align-justify><br></p><p class=ql-align-justify><span style=color: rgb(51 51 51);> </span><strong style=color: rgb(51 51 51);>&nbsp;The volumes in this series follow a similar arrangement. First comes the&nbsp;persons named in the 1932 census which is arranged alphabetically by surname&nbsp;and thereunder by household unit. Each person named is identified by age at&nbsp;last&nbsp;birthday sex marital status relationship to head of household degree&nbsp;of&nbsp;blood and the family's resident village at the time of the census. The&nbsp;birth&nbsp;and death rolls are arranged by year and thereunder alphabetically by&nbsp;surname.&nbsp;Each entry gives in the case of births the full name of the newborn&nbsp;date of&nbsp;birth and the mother's and father's degree of blood; in the case of&nbsp;deaths it&nbsp;gives the full name date of death age at death and in most cases&nbsp;the cause of&nbsp;death. A full-name index at the back of each volume makes it easy&nbsp;to find every&nbsp;Hopi or Navajo named anywhere in the work.</strong></p><p><br></p>
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