Letters from the Rocky Mountain Indian Missions reveals the life of
an Italian Jesuit as he worked at three missions in the northern
Rocky Mountains from 1874 to 1878. Meticulously translated and
carefully annotated, the letters of Father Philip Rappagliosi
(1841�78) are a rare and rich source of information about the daily
lives, customs, and beliefs of the many Native peoples that he came
into contact with: Nez Perces, Kootenais, Salish Flatheads, Coeur
d'Alenes, Pend d'Oreilles, Blackfeet, and Canadian M�tis. These
never-before-translated letters reveal the shifting, sometimes
volatile relationship between the missionaries and the Native
Americans and also provide a window into the complex lives of the
Jesuits.�After requesting to work among the Native peoples of the
American West, Rappagliosi arrived at Saint Mary's Mission in the
Bitterroot Valley of Montana in 1874, where he spent much time
among already converted members of the Salish Flathead Nation. The
energetic Rappagliosi journeyed next to Canada to visit some
Kootenai Indian bands and then was reassigned to Saint Ignatius
Mission, where he interacted with the Upper Pend d'Oreilles
Indians. Rappagliosi's final and most difficult assignment was at
Saint Peter's Mission among the Blackfeet in Montana, who were not
converts. There he became embroiled in disputes with a
controversial former Oblate priest, and foul play was suspected in
his death at the age of thirty-seven.