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Jerry Lonecloud (July 4, 1854 – April 16, 1930) was an entertainer, ethnographer and medicine man for the Mi'kmaq people in Nova Scotia. His oral memoirs, recorded from 1923 to 1929, which included Mi'kmaw oral histories and legends, were compiled into a 2002 book—Tracking Dr. Lonecloud: Showman to Legend Keeper—by ethnographer and historian, Ruth Holmes Whitehead at the Nova Scotia Museum in Halifax. Because these recordings form the basis of the 2002 biography, it is considered to be the first Mi'kmaq memoir Whitehead wrote that, "ethnographer of the Micmac nation could rightly have been his epitaph, his final honour."

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  • Jerry Lonecloud (en)
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  • Jerry Lonecloud (July 4, 1854 – April 16, 1930) was an entertainer, ethnographer and medicine man for the Mi'kmaq people in Nova Scotia. His oral memoirs, recorded from 1923 to 1929, which included Mi'kmaw oral histories and legends, were compiled into a 2002 book—Tracking Dr. Lonecloud: Showman to Legend Keeper—by ethnographer and historian, Ruth Holmes Whitehead at the Nova Scotia Museum in Halifax. Because these recordings form the basis of the 2002 biography, it is considered to be the first Mi'kmaq memoir Whitehead wrote that, "ethnographer of the Micmac nation could rightly have been his epitaph, his final honour." (en)
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  • Jerry Lonecloud (July 4, 1854 – April 16, 1930) was an entertainer, ethnographer and medicine man for the Mi'kmaq people in Nova Scotia. His oral memoirs, recorded from 1923 to 1929, which included Mi'kmaw oral histories and legends, were compiled into a 2002 book—Tracking Dr. Lonecloud: Showman to Legend Keeper—by ethnographer and historian, Ruth Holmes Whitehead at the Nova Scotia Museum in Halifax. Because these recordings form the basis of the 2002 biography, it is considered to be the first Mi'kmaq memoir Whitehead wrote that, "ethnographer of the Micmac nation could rightly have been his epitaph, his final honour." (en)
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