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Today is the birthday of Esther Burnett Horne, who is
featured in Essies Story: The Life and Legacy of a Shoshone
Teacher. Essie was born in 1909, and the book, which she co-authored
with Sally McBeth, was published in 1998, a year before Horne died.
In 1871, a Scotch-Irishman named Finn Burnett was assigned agricultural
agent for the newly created Wind River Reservation in Wyoming. His job
was to help the Shoshone tribe become farmers. Burnett enjoyed the job
and valued the relationships he formed with tribal members. One day Burnett
came upon a Shoshone girl walking on the reservation road to her home.
Her name was Mildred Large ironically, she was only 52.
Her hair was so long it almost reached her ankles. Burnett knew Millies
family and offered her a ride. As he drove, he said, Millie, I hope
that youre not going to marry one of these young bucks on the reservation
but that youll get an education and eventually marry somebody who
can really give you a good life.
Burnett didnt realize that his blue-eyed son, Finn Jr., was to be
that man. It wasnt an easy situation for Finn and Millie when they
fell in love; Finn would be looked down upon for marrying an Indian woman,
and Mildred would lose the respect of her people for marrying a white
man. They finally eloped. Their parents tried to block the mountain passes,
but Finn and Millie got through, got married and made their home in Idaho
near a town aptly named Eden.
Finn was fourteen years older than his petite teenaged bride and was an
able provider. They had a successful fruit farm in a largely non-Indian
community where Finn was popular and involved. He refused to be in any
group that discriminated against his wife.
Essie was their first child, and she grew up hearing the Shoshone language
only when her parents didnt want her to understand what they were
saying. Ironically, Finn spoke it better than Millie, because her elders
thought she wouldnt reach her full potential unless she spoke English.
Finn and Millie raised their growing family in a large two-story house
with a wraparound porch surrounded by roses; Essie used the petals from
those roses as caps for her dolls. She also recalled Bing cherry trees,
square dances, large gardens of vegetables and flowers, horseback riding,
going to baseball games and listening to her father play the piano.
When Essie was somewhere between 6 and 10, one of Finns friends
embezzled a sizable amount of money from him, and the family had to start
over by homesteading. In the flu pandemic of 1918, the whole family was
infected, except for Finn, who tended his wife and children around the
clock. Essie slipped into a coma for several days, but mercifully, they
all survived.
Sadly, Finn died of a brain tumor four years later. Millie was devastated.
She had four children under the age of 13, as well as an 18-month old
baby, and another one on the way. There was a small life insurance policy,
and Finns brother invested it in oil reserves for her. Unfortunately,
the entire amount was lost in the Teapot Dome scandal.
Millie moved her children back to the Wind River Reservation in Wyoming.
She got a job as a hotel chambermaid, but the stress of holding her family
together was very hard on her. Things went from bad to worse, and out
of desperation, she finally decided to let her three oldest children be
taken to an Indian boarding school in Kansas. Tune in tomorrow for the
rest of Essies story, including her later experience as a teacher
at the Wahpeton Indian School.
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