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Sister Marie Inez Hilger (October 16, 1891 - May 18, 1977) was an American
Benedictine , image = Medalla San Benito.PNG , caption = Design on the obverse side of the Saint Benedict Medal , abbreviation = OSB , formation = , motto = (English: 'Pray and Work') , foun ...
nun and
anthropologist An anthropologist is a person engaged in the practice of anthropology. Anthropology is the study of aspects of humans within past and present societies. Social anthropology, cultural anthropology and philosophical anthropology study the norms and ...
who was the first woman admitted to the
Catholic University of America The Catholic University of America (CUA) is a private Roman Catholic research university in Washington, D.C. It is a pontifical university of the Catholic Church in the United States and the only institution of higher education founded by U.S. ...
in
Washington, D.C. ) , image_skyline = , image_caption = Clockwise from top left: the Washington Monument and Lincoln Memorial on the National Mall, United States Capitol, Logan Circle, Jefferson Memorial, White House, Adams Morgan, ...


Biography

Sister Marie Inez Hilger was born in
Roscoe, Minnesota Roscoe is a city in Stearns County, Minnesota, Stearns County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 102 at the 2010 United States Census, 2010 census. It is part of the St. Cloud, Minnesota, St. Cloud St. Cloud metropolitan area, Metropol ...
, October 16, 1891. According to her obituary from the College of Saint Benedict & Saint John's University, Sister Inez was the second oldest child of at least eight siblings: six sisters and two brothers born to Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Hilger. The Hilgers were the first settlers in Roscoe in 1889 after emigrating from Germany.Register to the Papers of Sister M. Inez Hilger. National Anthropological Archives. Smithsonian Institution. Sister Inez entered Saint Benedict's convent at the age of 17 in 1908 and pronounced her perpetual vows five years later in 1914. She taught for 25 years in elementary, secondary and college levels prior to starting a new career as an anthropologist. When Saint Benedict and Saint John's school planned to expand into a college, Sister Inez decided to pursue higher education. Hilger received her Bachelor's of Arts from the
University of Minnesota The University of Minnesota, formally the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, (UMN Twin Cities, the U of M, or Minnesota) is a public university, public Land-grant university, land-grant research university in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul, Tw ...
in American history and American literature. In 1925, she received her Master's of Arts in sociology and social works from the Catholic University of America. She also later received her Ph.D. from Catholic University in 1936 (or possibly 1939). She is notably the first woman to have matriculated with full privileges at Catholic University while enrolled for her Master's. She received her doctorate in her major fields of sociology, anthropology and psychology. After receiving her education, she embarked on a new career in research focused on the lives of children among several Native American groups of
North America North America is a continent in the Northern Hemisphere and almost entirely within the Western Hemisphere. It is bordered to the north by the Arctic Ocean, to the east by the Atlantic Ocean, to the southeast by South America and the Car ...
and
Latin America Latin America or * french: Amérique Latine, link=no * ht, Amerik Latin, link=no * pt, América Latina, link=no, name=a, sometimes referred to as LatAm is a large cultural region in the Americas where Romance languages — languages derived f ...
, and among the
Ainu people The Ainu are the indigenous people of the lands surrounding the Sea of Okhotsk, including Hokkaido Island, Northeast Honshu Island, Sakhalin Island, the Kuril Islands, the Kamchatka Peninsula and Khabarovsk Krai, before the arrival of the Y ...
in Japan. While at Catholic University,
Margaret Mead Margaret Mead (December 16, 1901 – November 15, 1978) was an American cultural anthropologist who featured frequently as an author and speaker in the mass media during the 1960s and the 1970s. She earned her bachelor's degree at Barnard Co ...
, a famous cultural anthropologist and close friend of Sister Inez, sparked an interest in fieldwork in Sister Inez. Her fieldwork began with comprehensive studies of 12 American Indian tribes starting with the Chippewa Indians of Minnesota (1932-1966). Next she worked with the Arapaho (1935-1942) before she traveled in 1946 to Chile to study the Araucanian Indians. One of her final assignments in fieldwork was in Japan (1962-1963). In 1955, she became a research associate of the Bureau of American Ethnology. At the age of 74 in 1965, the
National Geographic Society The National Geographic Society (NGS), headquartered in Washington, D.C., United States, is one of the largest non-profit scientific and educational organizations in the world. Founded in 1888, its interests include geography, archaeology, and ...
asked Sister Inez to study the Ainu people of Hokkaido while in Japan. She also carried out miscellaneous ethnological studies among several Plains, southwestern and Latin American tribes in her late career. Among them was a collection of "grandmother stories" she collected from the Blackfeet. Sister Inez received eight grants for research, authored 8 books and over 70 essays and articles during the course of her life. Three of her eight books were published by the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., as part of its research series in ethnology. Hilger died in
St. Joseph, Minnesota St. Joseph is a city in Stearns County, Minnesota, Stearns County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 6,534 at the 2010 United States Census, 2010 census and according to 2019 census estimates is now 7,351. It is home to the College of S ...
, May 18, 1977. Sister Inez's papers are at the National Anthropological Archives.


Bibliography

*''Methods for the Promotion of Medical Social Service to Catholic Hospitals''. 1934. Hospital Progress (October), Catholic Hospital Association, Milwaukee. *''Indian Women Preparing Bulrush Mats.'' 1935. Indians at Work 2(2):41. *''Indian Women Making Birch-bark Receptacles''. 1935. Indians at Work 3(3): 19–21. *''A “Peace and Friendship” Medal''. 1935. Minnesota History (September). *''Chippewa Hunting and Fishing Customs.'' 1935. Minnesota Conservationist, No. 2-3 (April), pp. 17–19. *''In the Early Days of Wisconsin, an Amalgamation of Chippewa and European Cultures''. Wisconsin Archaeologist, n.s. 16:32-49. *''Chippewa Prenatal Food and Conduct Taboos''. 1936. Primitive Man 9:46-48. *''Letters and Documents of Bishop Baraga extant in the Chippewa Country American Catholic Historical Society,'' ''Records'', 47:292-302. 1936. *''Chippewa Interpretation of Natural Phenomena''. 1937. Scientific Monthly 45:178-179. *''A Social Survey of One Hundred Fifty Chippewa Indian Families on the White Earth Reservation of Minnesota''. 1939. Catholic University Press, Washington, D.C. (Doctoral dissertation, 251 pp.) *''Human Relations in the Sickroom''. Trained Nurse and Hospital Review (November 1940.) *''Why Teach the Social Sciences in Schools of Nursing''. Trained Nurse and Hospital Review (March 1941). *''Review of "Professional Adjustments in Nursing"'', ''by Eugenia Spalding''. Trained Nurse and Hospital Review (May 1942). *''Ahsahwaince, His Hundred Years.'' Mid-America (April 1943). *''Ahsahwaince, His Hundred Years.'' Catholic Digest (June 1943). *''Review of "Principles of Ethics", by Thomas Verner Moore''. Trained Nurse and Hospital Review (September 1943). *''Father de Smet.'' Christian Family (February 1944). Techny, Illiniois. *''Ceremonia para dar nombre a un niño indio chippewa.'' 1944 América Indigena 4:237-242. *''Chippewa Burial and Mourning Customs''. 1944 American Anthropologist 46:564-568. *''The Catholic Sociologist and the American Indian''. American Catholic Sociological Review (December 1945). *''Notes on Cheyenne Child Life.'' 1946. American Anthropologist 48: 60–69. *''Narrative of Oscar One Bull, a Sioux Indian''. Mid-American (July 1946). *''Ethnological Field Study...the Araucanian Indian Child of Chile.'' 1946 Year Book of the American Philosophical Society. Pp. 202–205. *''Ceremonia para dar nombre a un niño chippewa''. Sociedad de Geografia e Historia. 1947 Anales 22: 166–171. *''Research Organizations Interested in Ethnic Sociology: Addresses, Spheres of Interest and Types of Assistance Given.'' American Catholic Sociological Review (October 1949). *''Review of "Culture in Crisis: A Study of the Hopi Indians" by Laura Thompson''. American Catholic Sociological Review (June 1951). *''To the Nurse: A Challenge''. 1951. Nursing World (June). *''In the Interest of Chilean Archaeology''. 1951. American Anthropologist 53: 429. *''Some Customs Related to Arikara Indian Child Life''. 1951. Primitive MAn 24: 67–71. *''Menomini Child Life.'' 1951. Journal de la Societe des Americanistres de Paris 40: 163–171. *''Chippewa child life and its cultural background''. 1951. ''Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin'', 146: 204. *''Arapaho child life and its cultural background''. 1952. ''Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin'', 148: 253. *''Cien Anos de Vida Benedictina en los Estados Unidos''. 1952. In Revista Liturgica Argentina. Ano 17, No. 153. Pp. 88–90. (Trans. from the English into Spanish by Sister Amanda of St. Scholastica, Argentina.) *''Ethnological Field Study of the Beliefs, Customs, and Traditions in the Development, Rearing, and Training of the Araucanian Indian Child in Chile''. 1952 Year Book of the American Philosophical Society. *''Review of "Anthropology Today: An Encyclopedic Inventory" and "An Appraisal of Anthropology Today."'' 1953. American Catholic Sociological Review (October). *''Contributions to Indian Rights and Resources, an Eight-state Conference at the University of Minnesota, November 9–10, 1953''. Pp 107–109, 116, 119. University of Minnesota Press. *''Review of "Primitive Man and his World Picture" by Wilhelm Koppers.'' 1953. American Benedictine Review. Pp 375–376. *''An Ethnographic Field Method.'' 1954. In Method and Perspective in Anthropology, Papers in Honor of Wilson D. Wallis. Robert F. Spencer, ed. Pp. 25–42. University of Minnesota Press. *''Araucanian Child Life and its Cultural Background.'' 1957. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections 133: 439. *''Naming a Chippewa Child.'' 1958. Wisconsin Archaeologist 39: 120–126. *''Some Customs of the Chippewa on the Turtle Mountain Reservation of North Dakota.'' 1959. North Dakota History 26: 123–132. *''Review of "Indian Villages of the Illinois Country: Historic Tribes" by Wayne C. Temple''. 1959. American Anthropologist 61: 146–147. *''Review of "Introduction to Cultural Anthropology" by Mischa Titiev''. 1959. American Catholic Review. Pp 167–168. *''Review of "Indians of the High Plains: From the Prehistoric Period to the Coming of the Europeans", by George E. Hyde.'' 1960. American Anthropologist 62: 704–705. *Hilger, Sister Marie Inez and Mondloch, Margaret. ''Emelia, an Araucanian of the Andes.'' 1960. American Benedictine Review (March–June). Pp 83–98. *''Una Araucana de los Andes.'' 1960. Notas del Centro de Estudiados Antropologicos 4: 5-17. Universidad de Chile, Santiago de Chile. *''Some Early Customs of the Menomini Indians.'' 1960. Journal de la Societe des Americanistes 49: 45–68. *''Field Guide to the Ethnological Study of Child Life.'' 1960. Behavior Science Field Guides, Vol. 1. Human Relations Area Files Press, New Haven. *''Review of "Children of their Fathers: Growing Up among the Ngoni of Nyasaland", by Margaret Read.'' 1961. American Catholic Sociological Review (Spring). Pp 58–59. *''Review of "Ojibwa Myths and Legends", by Sister Bernard Coleman, Ellen Frogner, and Estelle Eich.'' 1962. Minnesota History (December). Pp. 192–193. *Hilger, Sister Marie Inez and Mondloch, Margaret. ''Rock Paintings in Argentina''. 1962. Papers in Honor of Martin GUsinda. S.V.D. Anthropos 27: 514–523. *''Culture and Human Behavior''. 1963. The Mainichi Daily News. February 3 & 4. Tokyo, Japan. *''Culture Changes in Japan.'' 1964. American Benedictine Review 15:4. *''Araucanian Customs: An Afternoon with an Araucanian Family on the Coastal Range of Chile''. 1966. Journal de la Societe des Americanistes 55:1. *Hilger, Sister Marie Inez and Mondloch, Margaret. ''Huenun Namku: An Araucanian Indian of the Andes Remembers the Past.'' 1966. University of Oklahoma Press. *''Japan's "Sky People." The Vanishing Ainu''. 1967. National Geographic (February). *Hilger, Sister Marie Inez and Mondloch, Margaret. ''The Araucanian Weaver.'' 1967. Boletin del Museo Nacional e Historia Natural 30: 291–298. Santiago, Chile. *''Mysterious "Sky People": Japan's Dwindling Ainu''. 1968. Vanishing Peoples of the Earth. National Geographical Society, Washington. *''The Ainu of Japan.'' 1969. National Geographic Research Report. 1964 Projects. pp. 91–103. National Geographic Society, Washington. *''Notes on Crow Indian Culture.'' 1970. Baessler-Archiv 18: 253–295. *''Review of "Canoes of the Ainu", by American Educational Films and the Hokkaido Educational Commission.'' 1970. American Anthropologist 72: 1576. *(ed.) ''Die Reise nach Amerika,'' by Frederick William Hilger. 1970. Zeitschrift fur Kulturaustausch, (January–March). Institut fur Auslandsbeziehungen, Stuttgart, Germany. *''Together with the Ainu, a Vanishing People.'' 1971. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman.


Sound Recordings

Ainu:
Ainu Bear Festival, 1952

Ainu 1 (Original), June 22, 1965

Ainu 1 [edit
June 22, 1965">dit">Ainu 1 [edit
June 22, 1965

Ainu 2 (Original), August 4, 1965

Ainu 2 [edit
July 9, 1965]
Ainu 3 (Original), August 4, 1965

Ainu 3 [edit
August 4, 1965">dit">Ainu 3 [edit
August 4, 1965

Ainu 4 (Original), September 14, 1965

Ainu 4 [edit
August 19, 1965]
Ainu 5 (Original), September 14, 1965

Ainu 5 [edit
1965">dit">Ainu 5 [edit
1965

Ainu 6 (Original), August 12, 1965

Ainu 6 [edited
June 17, August 12, 1965]
Ainu 7 (Original), June 17, 1965
Blackfeet:
Blackfoot Interviews

Blackfoot Auntie Wetzel Interview

Blackfoot Auntie Wetzel Interview

Blackfoot Auntie Wetzel Interview

Blackfoot Auntie Wetzel (TDK C-60)

Blackfoot Skunk and Coyote Story

Blackfoot Auntie Interview, August 6, 1972

Blackfoot Interviews, January 24, 1973

Blackfoot Conversation
Chippewa:
Chippewa Mille Lacs Reservation I-II

Chippewa Mille Lacs Reservation III-IV
General:
Sister Marie Inez Hilger Sound Recordings, 1952-1973

Interview of Sister Marie Inez Hilger

Interview of Sister Marie Inez Hilger


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Hilger, Sister Marie Inez 1891 births 1977 deaths American Benedictines Catholic University of America alumni People from Stearns County, Minnesota American anthropology writers Writers from Minnesota 20th-century American anthropologists 20th-century American Roman Catholic nuns