D'Arcy McNickle


D'Arcy McNickle was a writer, Native American activist, college professor and administrator, and anthropologist. Of Irish and Cree-Métis descent, he later enrolled in the Salish Kootenai nation, as his mother has come to Montana with the Métis as a refugee.

Biography

D'Arcy McNickle was an enrolled Salish Kootenai on the Flathead Indian Reservation. He was born on January 14, 1904, to William McNickle, ethnic Irish, and Philomene Parenteau, Cree Métis. His mother was among numerous Métis who had fled to Montana in the late 19th century to escape the aftermath of suppression following the 1885 Riel Rebellion, also known as the Northwest Rebellion. She eventually found refuge at the Flathead reservation. McNickle grew up on the reservation in St. Ignatius. He attended mission schools there and boarding schools located elsewhere, off the reservation.
At the age of seventeen, McNickle entered the University of Montana, graduating with the class of 1925. His study of Greek and Latin inspired his love for language, and he began to explore writing.
After graduating, in 1925 McNickle sold his land allotment on the Flathead Reservation in order to raise money to study abroad at Oxford University and the University of Grenoble. After returning to the United States, McNickle lived and worked for a time in New York City. In 1936 he published his first novel, The Surrounded.
That year he was hired as an administrative assistant at the Bureau of Indian Affairs and moved to Washington, DC. McNickle worked under John Collier, Commissioner of Indian Affairs, during the 1930s and 1940s. During this period, Collier encouraged reorganization of self-government among the Native American tribes, and many began to assert more direction for their peoples. McNickle developed expertise in a wide range of areas related to Native American policies. He helped found the National Congress of American Indians in 1944. By 1950, he had been promoted to chief of the tribal relations branch at the BIA. He also began to publish non-fiction works on Native American history, cultures, and governmental policies.
In 1952 McNickle was selected as director of American Indian Development, Inc., which was affiliated with the University of Colorado at Boulder. He was also active with other Native American organizations, as tribes began to assert their drive for civil rights and to work more closely together as an ethnic group. He was instrumental in drafting the "Declaration of Indian Purpose" for the 1961 American Indian Chicago Conference.
Continuing his academic work, in 1966 McNickle moved to what is now the University of Regina, to develop a new anthropology department. In 1972, McNickle helped create the Center for the History of the American Indian in Chicago's Newberry Library.

Personal life

McNickle was married three times: First to Joran Jacobine Birkeland from 1926–1938; they had a daughter Antoinette Marie Parenteau McNickle. He next married Roma Kaye Haufman. They had a daughter Kathleen D'Arcy McNickle. Lastly, he was married to sociologist Viola Gertrude Pfrommer, from 1969-1977. He died of a heart attack in October 1977.

Legacy and honors

In addition to his works in Native American history and culture, from early adulthood McNickle has written short stories and novels. His best-known work may be his debut novel, The Surrounded. It tells of Archilde León, a young half-Salish man who returns to the Flathead Indian Reservation and his parents' ranch. He has difficulty dealing with both his ethnic Latino/white father and his traditionalist Indian mother, who has increasingly returned to her culture. The relationship between him and his parents becomes strained when they express their regret that he wants to go away to a big city so far from home.
León begins to find his place on the reservation after Modeste, an elder, teaches him the stories of Salish history. He reconciles with his father and adopts his mother's Salish traditions. At the end of the novel, he is wrongly accused of two murders and surrenders to law enforcement in a scene that represents the book's title.

''The Hawk is Hungry and Other Stories'' (1992)

This collection of sixteen stories demonstrates the range of McNickle's literary style. The compilation contains:

Fiction

June 1961