Benson Latin American CollectionRare Books and
ManuscriptsInventory
Latorre Collection on the Kickapoo Indians of Mexico
Prepared by the Mexican Archives Project
November 1994
Introduction
The Latorre Collection on the Kickapoo Indians of Mexico was donated to
the Benson Latin American Collection by Felipe A. and Dolores L. Latorre
in 1983. The Latorres made additional gifts of material in 1993 and
1994. The collection was described by the Benson's Mexican Archives
Project in August 1994.
The collection's physical extent comprises 16 linear feet. Its materials
are primarily in English with bulk dates of 1960-1975.
The following publications were based upon the collection, as were
several articles:
Latorre, Felipe A. and Dolores L. Latorre. The Mexican
Kickapoo Indians. Austin, University of Texas Press, 1976.
Latorre, Dolores L. Cooking and curing with Mexican herbs :
recipes and remedies gathered in Múzquiz, Coahuila. Austin,
Encino Press, 1977.
The suggested citation for the collection is "Latorre Collection on the
Kickapoo Indians of Mexico, 1898-1986, Benson Latin American Collection,
General Libraries, University of Texas at Austin."
Table of Contents
Biographical Sketch
Scope and Contents Note
Series List
Container List
Biographical
Sketch
Anthropologists Felipe Latorre (born 1907 in Chile) and Dolores Latorre
(born 1903 in Spain) graduated from the Institute of Latin American
Studies at The University of Texas at Austin (1953); they also studied at
Columbia University (1951) and the School of Anthropology of the National
University of Mexico (1957). From 1960 to 1972 they lived in
Múzquiz, Mexico, and conducted an ethnological field study of
Kickapoo Indians in the Mexican state of Coahuila; they published The
Mexican Kickapoo Indians in 1976.
Scope and
Contents Note
Field notes, manuscripts and galley proofs, correspondence, photographs,
travel diaries, clippings, and assorted materials, primarily about
Kickapoo Indian culture in El Nacimiento, Mexico. Field notes and card
files record the Latorres' observations during their study of the
Kickapoo; they include a roll of tribe members from 1960-1972 and a
Kickapoo dictionary. Photographs (1898-1973) depict the Kickapoo in
Coahuila and their homes in Shawnee, Oklahoma, with scenes of their daily
life, traditions, and artifacts. Correspondence from 1928 to1976
illustrates Indian life and efforts by the Latorres and earlier
researchers to document it; correspondents include Sarah McKellar, Bessie
Williams, and Kenneth W. Porter. Other correspondence includes that of
the Kickapoo with the Mexican government, some documenting efforts to
oust renters from Kickapoo lands (1961-1968); other correspondence of the
Kickapoo and by the Latorres with and for the Kickapoo (1961-1971); and
the Latorres' general correspondence (1962-1986), some concerning their
publications.
Manuscripts and galley proofs are mostly from the The Mexican Kickapoo
Indians; others are from Mrs. Latorre's book, Cooking and curing
with Mexican herbs and several articles. Research materials include
microfilm, articles, clippings, and printed material about Kickapoo and
other North American Indians. Travel diaries record trips to South
America in 1958-1959 and Spain in 1978 and 1979. Materials about Chile
consist primarily of letters and newspaper clippings. The collection
also holds college term papers by the Latorres and assorted materials,
including a bust of the Kickapoo chief, Papícoano.
Series
List
The Latorre Collection on the Kickapoo Indians of Mexico was arranged
into nine series by the staff of the Mexican Archives Project. The
processing of the collection was completed by the project staff in August
1994. The series are:
I. | Ethnological study of Kickapoo Indians in
Mexico, 1960-1972, 3.8 linear feet. |
- Subseries, Field notes, 1960-1968, 1.4 linear feet. Thirty-three
stenographic notebooks comprising the Latorres' daily record of Kickapoo
research; typescripts of information from stenographic notebooks numbers
1.3 and 6-24; and notes and dictionaries kept by Dolores Latorre.
- Subseries, Other notes and compilations of study information,
2.4linear feet. Notes on the Kickapoo, including notes for the Kickapoo
dictionary and tribal roll; censuses of Kickapoo by age, livestock
ownership, and automobile ownership; Kickapoo dictionary. Card files
contain the Kickapoo tribal roll, listing members from 1960-1872; the
"Kickapoo plant file"; and the "Mexican plant file."
II. | Correspondence, 1923-1986, 10
inches. |
- Subseries, Correspondence between Kickapoo/other Indians and other
parties, 1961-1971, 16 folders.
- Subseries, Correspondence between the Latorres and the Kickapoo,
other Indians, and persons related to Indians, 1961-1970, 8 folders.
- Subseries, Correspondence and supporting documents relating to the
effort to oust renters from Kickapoo lands, 1961-1968, 5 folders.
- Subseries, Williams-McKellar-Latorre correspondence, 1928-1976,
9folders. Major correspondents include Mrs. Clay T. (Bessie) Williams
(daughter of Yakapita), Sarah McKellar, Kenneth W. Porter, and Dolores
Latorre. The letters illustrate Indian life and efforts by the Latorres
and earlier researchers to document it.
- Subseries, Assorted correspondence, 1923-1986, 12 folders. Includes
correspondence between the Kickapoo and government officials; other
Kickapoo correspondence; letters to the Latorres from Gaines Kincaid,
passing on information he had gleaned from the Austin Statesman about the
Kickapoo and other Indians; and the Latorres' correspondence with Dorothy
Reed of the Kickapoo Tribe of Oklahoma, the U.S. Department of Interior,
Nelson C. Reed, Sara Valdes, the Milwaukee Public Museum about the sale
of the Latorres' Kickapoo artifacts, and Troy Crisp.
III. | Photographs and visual material,
1898-1973, 318 items (5 inches). Photographs, negatives, and a few
drawings depicting the Kickapoo in Coahuila and their homes in Shawnee,
Oklahoma, with scenes of their daily life, traditions, and
artifacts. | IV. | Publications resulting from the Kickapoo
study, and associated material, 5 linear feet. |
- Subseries, The Mexican Kickapoo Indians, 4.6 linear feet. Includes
manuscripts, galley proofs, preliminary drafts, correspondence, and
publishers' catalogs featuring The Mexican Kickapoo Indians.
- Subseries, Cooking and curing with Mexican herbs, 2 inches. Contains
the manuscript, correspondence relating to the publication and its
publicity, clippings, and notes pertaining to Cooking and curing with
Mexican herbs.
- Subseries, Other publications and works by the Latorres, 3.5 inches.
Includes manuscripts, reprints, drafts, correspondence, and notes
relating to the following publications:
- "Plants used by the Mexican Kickapoo Indians"
- "The ceremonial life of the Mexican Kickapoo Indians"
- "How to have, to hold, and to free oneself of a lover"
- "A Mexican folk interpretation of schizophrenia and their attempts to
cure it"
- "To what extent have the Kickapoo Indians become integrated into the
folk and modern medicine of Mexico?"
- "A decade and more in Coahuila, Mexico : 1960-1970"
V. | Research materials from archival and
printed sources, and related correspondence, 1832-1972, 13.5 inches and 2
reels of microfilm. Correspondence, articles, photocopies, card files,
microfilm, clippings, printed material, bibliographies, and catalogs.
For further detail please consult the container list which
follows. | VI. | Travel diaries, 3.75 inches, 1958-1959 and
1978-1979. Notebooks recording the Latorres' 1958-1959 tour of all South
American countries except the Guianas, and their trips to Spain in 1978
and 1979. | VII. | Materials about Chile, 1956-1970s, 1.75
inches. Letters, clippings, and articles about Chile. | VIII. | College papers, 1951-1962 and undated,
12 folders (2.25 inches). Term papers, bibliographies, syllabi,
articles, and essays from the Latorres' student days. | IX. | Assorted materials, 7 folders (1.75
inches) plus 1 artifact box and a bust. Clippings, printed material,
maps, essays, and a bust of the Kickapoo chieftain,
Papícuano. |
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