Back on their ancestral
homelands, the Navajo people continued their traditional way of life. When America joined World War I, many Navajos fought for their country. When they returned to the reservation, most resumed their normal lives. It was a lifestyle largely unknown by other Americans:
- Navajo sheep owners, especially in the southern portions of the reservation, lived in "hogans." Most families had several, including a summer and a winter hogan, allowing them to follow their grazing sheep.
- The Navajo hogan evolved during the years from
piles of
dirt and pieces of wood, providing
shelter, to the hogan of the 1930s, with its log walls and
dirt roof. By the late 1930s, many Navajo were also living in log and stone houses.
- In ancient times people also constructed
houses in
or near
shallow
caves on
Navajo land. One such four-story tower house, built about 800 years ago, still exists in a Navajo Canyon shallow cave.
- In the mid-1930s, Navajo sheep fed on over-grazed land.
- Navajo farms did not have irrigation systems. People had to depend on flood waters.
- By 1937, however, deep wells were providing grazing range in previously unusable areas.
- Most of the farms had primitive fencing which was being replaced by 1936.
The Navajo people have a deep respect for their ancestors and for their families. America’s national archives give outsiders an opportunity to examine Navajo family life in the decades before America’s involvement in World War II.
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