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Tales from Wide Ruins: Jean and Bill Cousins, Traders

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09/1996. xx, 244 pages.
0896723682
978-0-89672-368-9

$29.95 cloth



Coming soon: online ordering! In the meantime, please call 800.832.4042 or 806.742.2982 to order.

Tales from Wide Ruins: Jean and Bill Cousins, Traders

By Mary Tate Engels
Foreword by Sallie Lippincott Wagner

Mary Tate Engels's account of the lives of the Cousins is a valuable addition to the literature of Western Americana and an astute insight into the rich and complex Navajo culture."—Tony Hillerman

Only a few crumbling structures remain of the once thriving community of families who lived at the Wide Ruins Trading Post. Only the stories of Bill and Jean Cousins, their photos and letters remain to validate the history of a corner of the Navajo Indian Reservation in the early twentieth century.

And theirs is a unique history. The Cousins spent a lifetime in the Indian trading business at Cousins Brothers Post, Thunderbird Post, Borrego Post, Wide Ruins Post, then Cousins Indian Jewelry and Jean's All Indian Pawn Shop in Gallup. In the 1930s and 1940s, they managed the Wide Ruins Post, known to the Navajos as Kin-Teel, or "wide house." They aided in the development of the Wide Ruins rug, encouraging the area Navajo weavers to use entirely vegetal dyes to recreate in their rugs the glorious natural colors of the desert.

But more importantly, Jean and Bill Cousins were part of the beginning of a new era of relations between the Native Americans of this remote area and the Anglos. They helped to forge a basis for commerce—and for mutual respect. Working with both Zunis and Navajos to market handmade items for modern trade, the Cousins became both their advisers and their friends.


Roots
Chin Lee, Whitewater
Thunderbird Post, Chin Lee
Borrego Pass Post
God's Little Acre
Wide Ruins
California
Wide Ruins: Tales and Times
Gallup Business
A Life Well-Lived




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