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  1. Sarah Winnemucca (née vers 1844 à Thocmentony et morte le 17 octobre 1891) est une écrivaine amérindienne, de la tribu des Païutes de langue anglaise.

  2. Sarah (née Winnemucca) Hopkins (c. 1844 – October 17, 1891) was a Northern Paiute writer, activist, lecturer, teacher, and school organizer. Her Northern Paiute name was Thocmentony , also spelled Tocmetone , [1] which translates as " Shell Flower ."

  3. Sarah Winnemucca (born c. 1844, Humboldt Sink, Mexico [now in Nevada, U.S.]—died October 16, 1891, Monida, Montana, U.S.) was a Native American educator, lecturer, tribal leader, and writer best known for her book Life Among the Piutes: Their Wrongs and Claims (1883).

  4. Sarah Winnemucca, born in 1844 and called Thocmetony (Shell Flower) by her family, was a member of the Paiute tribe in present-day Nevada. Winnemucca worked as both an interpreter and negotiator between American Indian tribes and the U.S. Army during the “Indian wars” that occured throughout the American West in the decades after the Civil War.

  5. 27 juil. 2016 · Sarah Winnemucca, the first Indian woman to write a book highlighting the plight of the Indian people. Materialscientist via Wikicommons. For the first few years of her life, Sarah Winnemucca,...

  6. “Sarah Winnemucca will always be remembered as a dedicated Native American woman who belonged to two cultures. With one foot in the Indian Nation and the other in the white man’s world, she sped across the plains like a blazing arrow only to fall short of her target.

  7. Sarah Winnemucca was born around the year 1844. She was the daughter of Tuboitone, a Northern Paiute woman, and Winnemucca, a Shoshone man who was adopted into the Northern Paiute community through marriage.