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THERE WERE FEMALE WARRIORS TOO:Shown here is Moving Robe Woman, a Hunkpapa (Sitting Bull's branch of the Sioux).INSP exp...
03/04/2024

THERE WERE FEMALE WARRIORS TOO:
Shown here is Moving Robe Woman, a Hunkpapa (Sitting Bull's branch of the Sioux).
INSP explains:
Moving Robe Woman was no stranger to battle. At age 17, she took part in a war party against the Crow. In July 1876, now at about age 23, she was among the Sioux and Lakota who camped at the Greasy Grass (Little Big Horn). On this fateful day, she was digging turnips when a warrior rode by warning women to take their children to the hills. General Custer was about to attack. Moving Robe Woman raced back to her lodge where she learned that her brother, One Hawk, was killed in an earlier battle with Custer’s men. Now, in deep mourning and fueled by revenge, Moving Robe braided her hair, painted her face red, mounted her horse, and with her brother’s war staff in hand, galloped into battle. “I was a woman,” she reportedly said, “But I was not afraid.” Her determination emboldened the male warriors to fight ferociously for their way of life, in what would end up an overwhelming victory for the Native Americans. Custer’s entire cavalry, 268 men, himself included, were killed—at least one at the hands of Moving Robe. She may have gotten her vengeance, but it was bitter, and it came at a cost. She later said, “[No one] staged a victory dance that night. They were mourning their own dead.” Moving Robe Woman died in 1935 at Standing Rock Reservation in South Dakota. She was about 81 years old.

-INSP

Chief Duck, his wife and his granddaughter of the Blackfoot tribe, 1925Many Native American tribes lives on small pieces...
03/04/2024

Chief Duck, his wife and his granddaughter of the Blackfoot tribe, 1925
Many Native American tribes lives on small pieces of land, but the Blackfoot tribe did not. They lived on a very stretched out area of North America, from Montana to the Saskatchewan valley, Canada. In the 18th century, the Blackfoot tribe moved on foot to the West, using their dogs to move their belongings.

The tribe was more progressive than others, having used fi****ms and horses dating back as early as 1750. This was how the tribe won battles over smaller, weaker groups.

Photographs of American Indians : Hawk That Hunts Walking
02/04/2024

Photographs of American Indians : Hawk That Hunts Walking

Pictures of Native Americans show an ancient culture on the edgeSitting Bull's picture is among 127 rare images collecte...
02/04/2024

Pictures of Native Americans show an ancient culture on the edge
Sitting Bull's picture is among 127 rare images collected by English adventurer Charles Alston Messiter through the latter third of the 19th century, about to go under the hammer.

If you’re a fan of Native American can I get a big YES...❤️
01/04/2024

If you’re a fan of Native American can I get a big YES...❤️

Amazing Natice American Old Picture
01/04/2024

Amazing Natice American Old Picture

Native American man wearing a headdress, hairpipe breast plate, beaded leggings and moccasins stands in staging area in ...
31/03/2024

Native American man wearing a headdress, hairpipe breast plate, beaded leggings and moccasins stands in staging area in front of Buffalo Bill and 101 Ranch Wild West Combined backdrop. Date Created 1916 Creator Burke-Koretke.

SMOKE EYES AND WATERBone Neck Lace, Oglala Lakota - Heyn Photo - 1899/1900
31/03/2024

SMOKE EYES AND WATER
Bone Neck Lace, Oglala Lakota - Heyn Photo - 1899/1900

Spotted Tail (Siŋté Glešká) ("Jumping Buffalo"); born c. 1823–died August 5, 1881 was a Brulé Lakota tribal chief. Altho...
30/03/2024

Spotted Tail (Siŋté Glešká) ("Jumping Buffalo"); born c. 1823–died August 5, 1881 was a Brulé Lakota tribal chief. Although a great warrior in his youth, and having taken part in the Grattan massacre, he declined to participate in Red Cloud's War. He had become convinced of the futility of opposing the white incursions into his homeland; he became a statesman, speaking for peace and defending the rights of his tribe. He made several trips to Washington, D.C. in the 1870s to represent his people, and was noted for his interest in bringing education to his people.
The young man took his warrior name, Spotted Tail, after receiving a gift of a raccoon tail from a white trapper; he sometimes wore a raccoon tail in his war bonnet. He took part in the Grattan Massacre.
Two of his sisters, Iron Between Horns and Kills Enemy, were married to the elder Crazy Horse, in what was traditional practice for elite men. Spotted Tail may have been the maternal uncle of the famous warrior Crazy Horse, which meant he was a relative of the notable Touch the Clouds as well.
On August 5, 1881, after a long simmering feud, Crow Dog, a Brulé Lakota shot and killed Chief Spotted Tail on the Rosebud Indian Reservation for reasons that have been disputed. Crow Dog was arrested and tried in a territorial court in Deadwood, Dakota Territory, and found guilty of murder and sentenced to hang. In the case of Ex parte Crow Dog the United States Supreme Court overturned the verdict because the Deadwood Court had no jurisdiction in a case of one Native killing another on reservation lands. Crow Dog was released and returned to the Rosebud.
Sisters: Iron Between Horns and Kills Enemy
Children: Ah-ho-appa (Fallen Leaf)
Father: Cunka or Tangle Hair Mother: Walks with the Pipe

Beautiful Museum of the Rockies Photo Archive
30/03/2024

Beautiful Museum of the Rockies Photo Archive

S. Cole took this photograph of a group of Sioux chiefs in Hot Springs, South Dakota. (Right) Although credited to photo...
29/03/2024

S. Cole took this photograph of a group of Sioux chiefs in Hot Springs, South Dakota. (Right) Although credited to photographer William Henry Jackson, this albumen photograph is believed to have been taken by brothers Henry and Julius Ulke in 1872, when a Crow delegation visited Washington, D.C.

WYANDOTTE Chief Lawrence Zane, Oklahoma, between 1954-1962. Photo by Gibson Studio, Grove, Okla. Real Photo Postcard edi...
29/03/2024

WYANDOTTE Chief Lawrence Zane, Oklahoma, between 1954-1962. Photo by Gibson Studio, Grove, Okla. Real Photo Postcard edited c.1954-1960s.

So Beautiful Chief Family Native Americans Photos
28/03/2024

So Beautiful Chief Family Native Americans Photos

Chief Noise & Family of the Salish Tribe, 1908
28/03/2024

Chief Noise & Family of the Salish Tribe, 1908

The Comanches, who were magnificent horsemen, became known as the "Lords of the Plains". They ascended as a true power o...
27/03/2024

The Comanches, who were magnificent horsemen, became known as the "Lords of the Plains". They ascended as a true power on the Southern Plains to control a 240,000 square mile territory made of vast horizontal vistas and great buffalo herds. The Comanches controlled this region for well over a century.
Once at peace after 1875, the respected leader of the Kwahadas, Quanah Parker, began to help develop and teach ways of goodwill, peace, and kinship to their precious families. In the transition away from the old nomadic days of the Comanches, a commitment was made to participate in a new way of life on the established reservation.
In recognition of the unending legacy of the famed Comanche Chief Quanah Parker, Texas Governor Greg Abbott signed a bill declaring Quanah Parker Day on June 10, 2019. The official day is now to be celebrated on the second Saturday of September. The bill written by Texas Senator Kel Seliger and sponsored by Texas Representative Justin Holland proclaims:
"During one of the greatest social and cultural shifts in American history, Quanah Parker served the Comanche people first as a warrior and then as a statesman, helping them retain their identity while adapting to a different way of life."
Senator Seliger further stated "... he stands as a pivotal figure in the history of the Lone Star State."
Outstanding picture of prominent Comanche Chief Quanah Parker, Wright Studio, Lawton, Oklahoma, circa 1910. Photograph courtesy of the Oklahoma Historical Society Photographic Collection.

Eric SchweigEric Schweig (born Ray Dean Thrasher; 19 June 1967) is an Indigenous Canadian actor best known for his role ...
27/03/2024

Eric Schweig

Eric Schweig (born Ray Dean Thrasher; 19 June 1967) is an Indigenous Canadian actor best known for his role as Chingachgook's son Uncas in The Last of the Mohicans (1992).
Schweig was born in Inuvik, Northwest Territories. He is of mixed race (Inuvialuk, Chippewa-Dene and German). He is the oldest of seven children, who were all adopted out as part of the Canadian government's failed attempt at forcing Inuit and First Nations children to assimilate into white society. Schweig's biological mother died of alcoholism in 1989. He never met her. "She didn’t drink a drop of alcohol until we were taken away," says Schweig. "We were part of the whole assimilation program—forcibly taken away, although my adoptive parents told me I wasn't." Schweig was adopted at six months of age by an English-speaking German-French family. He spent his childhood in Inuvik until he was six, when his family moved to Bermuda. They later moved back to Canada.

"I eventually grew tired of living in a prison without walls and ran away when I was 16. What transpired between then and now has been a roller coaster of alcohol, drugs, violence, failed relationships, despair and confusion. Who am I? Where do I come from? Where is my family? Where do I belong? When life's mystery has been shattered by strangers watching over you, a lot of these questions are lost."

Schweig ran away to Toronto, Ontario, where he supported himself by framing houses. In 1985, he was part of the cast of The Cradle Will Fall, an experimental adaptation of Frank Wedekind's Spring Awakening produced by Theatre of Change at the Actor's Lab; this was his first experience as an actor. In 1987, at twenty years old, he was approached by a producer who suggested he audition for a role in the movie called The Shaman's Source (1990). With little formal education or experience he won the role. The film launched his career in the film industry.

A Sioux Chief, probably taken at Standing at the Rock reservation in vicinity of Isabel, South Dakota in 1912.
26/03/2024

A Sioux Chief, probably taken at Standing at the Rock reservation in vicinity of Isabel, South Dakota in 1912.

Great Native American Chief Picture Little-Wound-Oglala-1877
26/03/2024

Great Native American Chief Picture Little-Wound-Oglala-1877

Portraits of American Indians You Might Not Have Seen (No Curtis!)
25/03/2024

Portraits of American Indians You Might Not Have Seen (No Curtis!)

An unidentified Native American Lakota Sioux man - 1880/1891
25/03/2024

An unidentified Native American Lakota Sioux man - 1880/1891

In the second part of Native Americans through the 19th-century lens, we delve deeper into the ambivalent messages withi...
24/03/2024

In the second part of Native Americans through the 19th-century lens, we delve deeper into the ambivalent messages within the images.

SIOUX oglala Daniel Black Horn from Pine Ridge Reservation & friend, c.1920-1930. Daniel Black Horn called the shirt he ...
24/03/2024

SIOUX oglala Daniel Black Horn from Pine Ridge Reservation & friend, c.1920-1930. Daniel Black Horn called the shirt he wears his "Many Hands" shirt, it represented all the people with whom he had shaken hands during his travels in Europe with Buffalo Bill's Wild West Shows.

Chase in the Morning (Anpao Wakuwa), Oglala Lakota. 1899. Photo by Frank A. Rinehart, at Pine Ridge, S.D.
23/03/2024

Chase in the Morning (Anpao Wakuwa), Oglala Lakota. 1899. Photo by Frank A. Rinehart, at Pine Ridge, S.D.

Chief Joseph and two Nez Perce men.
23/03/2024

Chief Joseph and two Nez Perce men.

Stunning portraits of Native Americans who performed in "Buffalo Bill's Wild West"-1898 | The Vintage News
22/03/2024

Stunning portraits of Native Americans who performed in "Buffalo Bill's Wild West"-1898 | The Vintage News

Beautiful Chief Native American Old Picture
22/03/2024

Beautiful Chief Native American Old Picture

Little Soldier was the head chief of the Yankton Dakota. He was a member of a delegation that signed a treaty with the U...
21/03/2024

Little Soldier was the head chief of the Yankton Dakota. He was a member of a delegation that signed a treaty with the United States government on June 22, 1825.

So Amazing Native American Umatilla warriors, Oregon
20/03/2024

So Amazing Native American Umatilla warriors, Oregon

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