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August 27, 2025 7 mins

Buffalo Bird Woman (c. 1839-1932), also known as Maxidiwiac, was a Hidatsa woman whose recollections on traditional Hidatsa culture, customs, and especially agricultural knowledge, were written down and preserved through interviews at the turn of the 20th century.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Hello from Wonder Media Network. I'm Jenny Kaplan, and this
is Womanica. This August, we're bringing back some of our
favorite Womanica episodes you might have missed. All month, we'll
be talking about pink collar workers. These women revolutionized jobs
that have traditionally been called women's work. Through their lives,
they created a more just and humane world for us today.

(00:21):
With that, here's one of our favorite episodes. Hello.

Speaker 2 (00:29):
My name is Malia Agudello and I'm a production assistant
at Wonder Media Network and I'm so excited to be
guest hosting this episode of Womanica. This month, we're talking
about cultivators, women who nurtured, cross pollinated, experimented, or went
to great links to better understand and protect the natural world.

(00:50):
Today's wolmannequin spent her life caring for corn and sunflowers.
An expert in giving back to the very land that
fed her from soil to seed crop, she dedicated her
life to preserving ancestral knowledge to share with future generations.
Let's talk about Buffalo bird Woman. Much of what we

(01:12):
know about Buffalo bird Woman and about Hidatsa Traditional Ways
come from a series of her own recollections interpreted by
her son and written down by a white American ethnographer
in nineteen seventeen. Buffalo bird Woman or Marchidiwilla, was born
in eighteen thirty nine in what is now known as
North Dakota. She was part of the Hidatsa tribe who

(01:34):
inhabited the land at the mouth of the Knife River,
an offshoot of the Missouri River. The word Hidatsa is
said to mean willow, a name given by a powerful
god who promised their villagers would be as numerous as
the willows that lie in the banks of the Missouri River.
The Hidatsa lived in earth lodges durable homes built from grass, dirt,
and timber. Buffalo bird Woman's village thrived along the Missouri River,

(01:59):
cultivating crops and practicing centuries old farming techniques, but this
was a time marked by violence towards Native people. Colonial
expansion threatened the livelihood of the Hidatsa tribe, leading to
frequent relocation and death. A smallpox epidemic decimated the community.
Those who survived the onslaught of sickness moved up the

(02:20):
Missouri River, where they established a new village whose name
translated to like a fish hook. They shared the land
with neighboring Mandan and Arikara villages. Buffalo bird Woman was
just a child at the time of the first relocation
in her village. The lives of girls and boys were different.
Boys grew up learning how to hunt and defend against

(02:42):
enemy attacks. Girls grew up helping their mothers in the garden.
So Buffalo bird Woman began learning the traditions of Hidatsa
agriculture from the women and her family. She learned how
to properly clear fields to create new plots for gardens.
The village's proximity to the river made the soil rich
and fertile for growing. She observed the women gardeners as

(03:05):
they cut and burned fields of long grass. They carried
heavy iron hose and wooden digging sticks made from buffalo
bones and the antlers of black tailed deer. She watched
them dig and soften the soil into rows, readying the
fields to plant corn. She witnessed her relative singing songs
to the corn. This came from the belief that crops

(03:33):
needed love and caring, just as children did. So while
women watched the fields to ensure birds, horses, or other
people didn't disturb the crops. They sang to the growing
corn as they would to growing children. As Buffalo bird
Women grew up, she put her knowledge to use. She
spent intimate time in the sunflower fields, scooping the soil,

(03:56):
using her thumbs to press seedlings into the earth. Every year,
the Hidatsa planted their flowers under the sunflower planting Moon.
They were the first seeds of spring. Day in and
day out, Buffalo bird Woman spent her time in the fields,
tending to crops, processing harvests, and storing food for the
harsh winters ahead. Buffalo bird Woman lived in like a

(04:19):
fish hook into her adult years. In eighteen sixty nine,
she had a son known as Edward Goodbird. In eighteen
eighty five, the Hidatsa were pushed out of their land
and forcibly relocated to Fort Beritold Reservation. The Hidatsa were
forced to leave their homes behind, which meant parting with
the land they had been cultivating for decades. Buffalo Bird

(04:41):
Woman spent the majority of her life on the Fort
Berthold Reservation. Her son was sent to missionary school and
became a pastor. He created a relationship with Gilbert Wilson,
a white American ethnographer from Ohio, Wilson was determined to
document Hidatza life and customs over a series of summers.
Gilbert travel to the reservation to conduct interviews with Buffalo

(05:02):
bird Woman and her son, who served as their translator.
Over their many visits, Buffalo bird Women opened up to Gilbert.
She described methods for cooking fresh green corn, explained Hidatsa
cultural teachings, planting techniques, and how to handle the garden's
first frost. She shared practices for cultivating beans and saving
the season's best seeds for the next year. Worms, tobacco, squash, blossoms,

(05:27):
culinary techniques, and singing in the garden were some of
the many themes that Buffalo bird Women expanded upon in
their interviews. She emphasized how the harsh effects of forced
reservation were reflected agriculturally. She said, seeds were issued to
us of watermelons, big squashes, onions, turnips, and other vegetables.

(05:47):
Some of these we tried to eat, but did not
like them very well. Even the turnips and big squashes
we thought not so good as our own. Moreover, we
did not know how to dry these new vegetables for winter,
so we often did not trouble even to harvest them.
In nineteen seventeen, Gilbert published Buffalo Bird Woman's recollections in

(06:11):
the Social Science's Academic Journal. There is a deep pain
in Buffalo Bird Woman's stories. She stewarded agricultural knowledge for
generations to come, but she also expressed the devastating impacts
of colonial power, forced assimilation, and indigenous erasure. Her narrative
must be seen in all of its layers. Buffalo Bird

(06:32):
Woman's work ensured that the hedatsa agricultural knowledge would not
be lost to time. Buffalo Bird Woman passed away in
nineteen thirty two.

Speaker 1 (06:46):
Thanks for listening to this best of episodeable Manica. For
more information, find us on Facebook and Instagram at Wamanica
Podcast Special thanks to lose Kaplan, my favorite sister and
co creator. Join us tomorrow for another one of our
favorite episodes, honoring pink Collar our workers talk to you then,

(07:08):
mm hmm
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