Warren, William Whipple, 1825-1853
Contributed to
ng06History of the Ojibways, based upon traditions and oral statements
History of the Ojibways, based upon traditions and oral statementsBook 1885
- Summary
- William Whipple Warren was a historian, interpreter, and legislator in the Minnesota Territory. The son of Lyman Marcus Warren, an American fur trader and Mary Cadotte, the mixed ancestry daughter of fur trader Michel Cadotte, he was of Ojibwe and French descent. William lived in two cultures, because his father was white, he was not considered Ojibwe, but an Ojibwe "relative", because in the Ojibwe patrilineal culture, inheritance and property were passed through the paternal line. His mother was Ojibwe and he learned her culture from her family. He is the first historian of the Ojibwe people in the European tradition. Wikipedia
- Gender or Sex
- Male [1][2][3][4]
- Born
- 1825 [2]
- 1825-05-27 [4]
- Birth Place
- La Pointe [4]
- Died
- 1853 [2]
- 1853-06-01 [4]
- Death Place
- Saint Paul [4]
- Country
- United States [2]
- Occupation
- writer [4]
- politician [4]
- historian [4]
- translator [4]
- Profession
- Journalist [2]
- Educated at
- Bates College [4]
- Country of Education
- United States [4]
- Yale LUX
- Entity [4]
- American National Biography
- Biography (requires subscription) [4]
- Sources
- 1. VIAF
- 2. Deutsche Nationalbibliothek (Germany)
- 3. Library of Congress
- 4. Wikidata
autorenewLast updated Dec 22, 2025