Background
Wilson was born on October 14, 1930, near Shields on the Standing Rock Indian Reservation in North Dakota. Her mother Helen Margaret See The Bear, was a midwife and her grandfather, Tall Manitoba See The Bear herded sheep.
Wilson was born on October 14, 1930, near Shields on the Standing Rock Indian Reservation in North Dakota. Her mother Helen Margaret See The Bear, was a midwife and her grandfather, Tall Manitoba See The Bear herded sheep.
From a young age, Wilson was surrounded by the storytelling of her Dakotah speaking family. In 1954, Wilson became the second Mission Indian America. Wilson held administrative jobs with Native American related government agencies before returning to the reservation in 1976.
In the 1980s, she taught tribal culture and language at Sitting Bulletin College in Fort Yates, North Dakota.
In 1999, Wilson released her first spoken word album, The Elders Speak. The value of storytelling, Wilson says, is "Civilization means trying to understand ourselves as human beings, what we are born with.
The Dakotah believe that all human beings born into this world have certain primitive characteristics and people have to be careful otherwise those will dominate that human being.".
National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts H. Councill Trenholm Memorial Award from the National Education Association for Human and Civil Rights Best Spoken Word Album, Native American Music Awards (2002), for My Relatives Say Community Spirit Award (2009) from First Peoples Fund Enduring Vision Award (2009).