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  1. Thomas Little Shell III (c. 1830 – 1901) (Anishinaabemowin Esens ("Little Shell" or "Little Clam") and recorded as Ase-anse or Es-sence) was a chief of a band of the Ojibwa (Chippewa) tribe in the second half of the nineteenth century, when the Anishinaabeg (Ojibwa peoples) had a vast territory ranging from southwestern Canada into the northern tier of the United States, from the Dakotas and ...

  2. Little Shell III was born Bet. 1825-1830. He died Bet 1900-1901 in the Turtle Mountain Chippewa Reservation in Rolette County, Belcourt, North Dakota and was buried in St. Anthony's Cemetery, on the Turtle Mountain Chippewa Reservation, Rolette County in rural Belcourt, North Dakota. Es-en-ce or Little Shell; in 1896 gave his name as Ayabe-way ...

  3. Chief Thomas Little Shell was away in Montana with 112 other families hunting buffalo. In their absence, tribal rolls were cut and a million acres of the tribe’s land was sold for .10 cents an acre. When he returned, Little Shell refused to take part in the deal, said Ed Lavenger, an elder with the Little Shell Tribe who lives in Billings.

  4. Thomas Little Shell III (c.1830-1901) ( Anishinaabemowin Esens ("Little Shell" o "Little Clam") y registrado como Ase-anse o Es-sence ), también era conocido como Ayabe-Way-We-Tung Thomas (Peter Cochelle) Wenis, Long Voice, Egec (Apitwewitu), Little Shell III era un jefe de una banda de Ojibwa(Chippewa) en la segunda mitad del siglo XIX, cuando los Anishinaabeg (pueblos Ojibwa) tenían un ...

  5. Thomas Little Shell; Chris La Tray; Spero M. Manson; Further reading. A Brief Historical Overview Of The Little Shell Tribe of Pembina Chippewa, by Deward E. Walker, Jr., July 1990— This historical digest may be obtained from the Little Shell Tribal Offices in Great Falls.

  6. 26 de ene. de 2024 · Genealogy for The Great Pembina Chippewa Nation Grand Chief Little Shell III Thomas (Peter Cochelle) Wenis, Long Voice, Egec (Ayabe-Way-We-Tung Apitwewitu), Little Shell III (c.1830 - c.1903) family tree on Geni, with over 255 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.

  7. Thomas Little Shell, resisted the McCumber agreement and was leader of Plains Ojibwe. He left his Montana home and moved to the Turtle Mountain Reservation. He died and was buried there in 1901. [citation needed] Leonard Peltier, a leader of the American Indian Movement, grew up here.