Owl Woman was married to an Anglo-American trader named William Bent, with whom she had four children.
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Owl Woman was married to an Anglo-American trader named William Bent, with whom she had four children.
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Owl Woman was inducted into the Colorado Women's Hall of Fame for her role in managing relations between Native American tribes and the Anglo-American men.
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Owl Woman realized that a formal marital alliance with Bent, and in particular the children that would result from such a relationship, would represent another element of the new beginning, of peace for the Cheyenne and indeed the region.
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Owl Woman was renowned for her cooking among fur traders and travelers.
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Owl Woman bravely led a skirmish against a group of Taos Pueblo and other people.
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William Bent, Owl Woman, and their families and business associates, the Arkansas River as border between Mexico and the United States was an abstraction.
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Owl Woman's father was an influential Cheyenne leader who acted as the tribe's "Keeper of the Arrows, " four arrows thought to have a sacred or medicinal role.
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Owl Woman did not prefer to stay the fort, where her room was dark and near the loud, smoky blacksmith shop.
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Owl Woman worked in the fort and often managed the supply trains.
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Owl Woman's position enabled her to deter predatory tribes who might have designs on the trade caravans, this [reputedly] being achieved by her flashing a signal using a mirror.
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Owl Woman put on her handsomest dress in order to sit for me.
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Owl Woman's mother taught the children to be respectful and courteous of their elders.
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From 1854, subsequent to the death of Owl Woman, George was sent away to be educated at a school run by an Episcopalian in Westport, Missouri, causing him to be separated from his family for much of the time.
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Owl Woman, described as "a most estimable good woman of much influence in the tribe", had worked to manage and improve relations between Native American tribes and the white man during her life.
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Owl Woman was inducted into the Colorado Women's Hall of Fame in 1985.
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