Cecile Black Boy

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PronunciationKills Before pronounced (Is-sah-ni-nik-ki).
BornOctober 10,1895
Browning, Glacier County, Montana, United States
DiedFebruary 19, 1966 (age 69)
Blackfoot Reservation, Browning, Glacier County, Montana, United States.
Burial placeBlackfoot Reservation, Browning, Glacier County, Montana, United States.
Cecile Black Boy
Noomohtsiistaapitapi Sstaniiniki
Cecile Black Boy in 1940.
PronunciationKills Before pronounced (Is-sah-ni-nik-ki).
BornOctober 10,1895
Browning, Glacier County, Montana, United States
DiedFebruary 19, 1966 (age 69)
Blackfoot Reservation, Browning, Glacier County, Montana, United States.
Burial placeBlackfoot Reservation, Browning, Glacier County, Montana, United States.
Other namesKills Before, Kills Instead, Cecile Short Robe, Cecile Last Star, Cecile Boy, and Noomohtsiistaapitapi Sstaniiniki.
OccupationsArtist, writer, author, Native American Activist
Notable workPublished in Painted Tipis By Contemporary Plains Indians and Blackfeet Tipi Legends
SpouseOscar Boy -1938

Reuben Black Boy 1938-1953

Theodore Last Star 1953-1966
ChildrenCalvin Boy (son), Margeret Vivian Ledeau (daughter), James Lewis Boy (son), and Joeseph Boy (son).
Parents
  • Short Robe (father)
  • Going After Water (mother)
RelativesEmma Short Robe (sister), William Short Robe (brother), and Mike Short Robe (brother)

Cecile Black Boy (October 10, 1895 - February 19, 1966) was a Native American member of the Blackfoot Nation in the United States who contributed a large number of myths, information, and stories from her people to expose general knowledge about the Blackfeet peoples.[1] She was a writer, artist, author and Native American Activist.[2] Cecile is also referred to as Kills Before / Kills Instead, Cecile Last Star, Cecile Boy, and Noomohtsiistaapitapi Sstaniiniki in her native Blackfoot language, Siksiká.[1] Cecile was included in several exhibits by the Museum of the Plains Indian to recognize her work she did for her people.[3] Cecile Black Boy created historical records of tribal culture espically regarding tipi legends.[4] She also described as a "Blackfeet ambassador" with great knowledge of Blackfoot histories, language, culture, and ceremony.[5]

She was published through two books: Painted Tipis by Contemporary Plains Indian Artists and Blackfeet Indian Tipis Legend.[4][6] In Blackfeet Indian Tipis Legend she composed this entire book of short stories that elders in her community provided to her. Black Boy collected hundreds of Blackfeet stories for the Montana Writer's Project from 1939 to 1942 under the Federal Writers' Project, a part of the Works Progress Administration (WPA).[4] Cecile Black Boy obtained stories of Blackfoot culture through hundreds of interviews with the Elders of her tribe and legendary stories that have never been previously recorded.[7]

Career

References

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