Home > Carnegie Center > Arizona Women's Hall of Fame > Inductees > Wetherill, Louise Wade
Louise Wade Wetherill
1877 - 1945
Inducted in 1985

”As a guest in a land where most white people are regarded with
suspicion, always remember that your acceptance by The People will depend
on your ability to accept with dignity, sympathy and honesty the
Navajo way of life.”
-- Louisa Wetherill, giving advice to a visiting journalist
Louisa Wetherill was not a trained linguist or ethnologist, yet she pursued
her interest in the Navajo culture with diligence and a passion that attracted
both scientists and artists. In the early 1900s, she researched a history
of Navajo blanket designs; she translated tribal legends and songs; she
collected 300 medicinal and ceremonial herbs used by the Navajo; she compiled
a list of the 56 tribal clans she had identified; and she amassed an impressive
collection of sand-painting drawings. Today, she is given credit for being
one of the first people who recognized the need to understand and preserve
the culture of the Navajo people.
Mary Louise Wade, who would later be known as Louisa, was born September
2, 1877, in Wells, Nevada, the daughter of U.S. Army Captain Jack Wade
and his wife, Julia France Rush Wade. When she was about two years old,
Louisa traveled with her family through Kayenta, Arizona, located about
20 miles south of the Utah border on the Navajo Indian reservation. She
could not have known it at the time, but Kayenta was to be her home for
most of her adult life.
The family continued on to Mancos, Colorado, where they established their
home. About the same time, another family, the Wetherills, also moved to
Mancos. ”It was there that the destinies of the two families
became intertwined – the Quaker Wetherills from Pennsylvania and
the military Wades originating in Virginia,” wrote Mary Apolline
Comfort in her book, Rainbow to Yesterday: The John and Louisa Wetherill
Story.
On March 17, 1896, 18-year-old Louisa married John Wetherill. A son,
Benjamin, was born on December 26, 1896, and a daughter, Georgia Ida, followed
13 months later on January 17, 1898. In 1900 the young couple took over
the management at the Ojo Alamo trading post on the Navajo Reservation,
thus beginning a period of 45 years in which they traded and associated
with the Navajos. At this isolated trading post, Louisa Wetherill
began to learn the Navajo language – first to ensure that she was
not cheated by the traders, and later because she had a genuine interest
in the people, according to Comfort’s biography.
Mr. Wetherill was often away, and Louisa, along with her young children,
explored the desert around the trading post and became acquainted with
the Indians. Unfortunately, a severe drought badly affected business
at the Ojo Alamo trading post, and soon Mr. Wetherill began looking for
a location where they might establish a post of their own. In 1906 the
Wetherills set up a trading post at Oljato, or “Place of the Moonlight
Water” near the Arizona-Utah border.
In 1910, the couple moved south to Kayenta, where they opened another
trading post and began doing business from a rather unsubstantial-looking
collection of tents and wagons. The Wetherills later built a lodge
at Kayenta, and it became a stopping off place for many important visitors.
”The Wetherills’ guest books at Kayenta during the 1920s
and 30s were filled with the names of scientists and students, writers
and artists, Easterners getting glimpses of the last frontier, and other
persons intensely interested in Indian lore,” Comfort said. Teddy
Roosevelt and Zane Grey were among their visitors.
Louisa’s knowledge of the Navajos attracted the attention of the
general public as well as scholars. She became a popular speaker, and her
lectures on the Navajos were in demand on the West Coast.
Around 1906, she began her collection of herbs, which eventually numbered
more than 300 specimens. She made notes about which plants the Navajos
used for food, healing purposes or in sacred ceremonies.
She also collected sand paintings, and by 1909 had amassed a considerable
collection. Louisa Wetherill had befriended a medicine man named Yellow
Singer and persuaded him to reproduce the paintings on paper, using crayons.
Louisa Wetherill also collected and translated the legends and folk tales
of the Navajos. ”Relatives have told that it was not an uncommon
sight in the summer to see as many as one hundred Indians sitting on the
lawn under the trees at Kayenta, telling stories, with Louisa in their
midst, laughing and chatting as volubly as any of them,” Comfort
wrote.
Among her original translations was “Prayer to the Big Black Bear,” a
prayer to ward off evil. The folk tales she translated include “The
Woman Whose Nose Was Cut off Twelve Times,” “How the Raven
Got His Coat,” “Story of the First Lie,” and “Creation
of the Burro.” It is not surprising that her children preferred these
stories to Mother Goose rhymes.
Louisa’s knowledge of the language helped her to become an intermediary
between the military, the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the Navajos. The
Indians trusted her, and because they believed she would be fair, they
abided by her judgment.
In 1918, Louisa won national recognition for the drive she made on the
reservation to help the Red Cross war effort overseas. Although the Navajos
had no money to donate, they gave a sheep or a goat from their flocks as
their contribution to the war effort.
Beginning in 1921, Louisa made a number of trips to Mexico, intent on
proving a theory that certain Navajo clans had migrated northward. Although
she intended to write a history of the Navajo people, she never completed
the project and whatever material she collected on her trips has been lost.
From the 1920s on, Louisa suffered from a variety of illnesses and was
unable to continue life at her old pace. Her husband died in November 1944;
lonely and unhappy, she died less than a year later, on September 18, 1945,
in Prescott.
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