Showing posts with label Crow Indians. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crow Indians. Show all posts

Monday, September 21, 2020

Historic Picture Gallery of the Crow Indian Tribe

 

Historic Picture Gallery of the Crow Indian Tribe



Colorized photo of a Crow Indians


1870 photograph of the Crow Indian called Two Moons

1880 photograph of the Crow Indian called Big Medicine

1873 photo of Pretty Medicine Pipe and her husband Old Crow

Crow Indians photographed in 1873, the woman was called Stay with Horses and her husband was Bear Wolf 

Sunday, September 13, 2020

Crown Indian Dancer

Crown Indian Dancer


Color tinted historic photograph of a Crow Indian dancer.

Monday, August 24, 2020

Best Color Photos and Prints of Native Americans

 Best Color Photos and Prints of Native Americans


Early 1900s print of a Native American woman looking over a large lake. The tribal affiliation was not specified, but my guess is that she is Ojibwa.

This is an Ojibwa woman next to the shoreline of a lake.  It is hard to determine if this is the same woman in the previous photo.

1908 photo of an Ojibwa Indian woman named She Who Travels the Sky

Blackfeet Indian children photographed in the 19th century showing colorful clothing and dress

Blackfeet Indian overlooking the Montana plains 

 A group of Crow Indians photographed in Montana



Oglala Sioux Indian family photo taken in 1899. Man in the left is Chief Little Wound

Rare colorized photo of Kiowa Indians that was taken in the late 1800s

Siksisa Indian tipis on the plains

Thursday, January 19, 2017

Crow Indian Chief Plenty Coups

Crow Indian Chief Plenty Coups


Chief Plenty Coups

Chief Plenty Coups

Chief Plenty Coups, chief of the Crow Nation, was exalted to the head of all the Crows because of his untarnished valour on the field of battle, because of the supremacy of his statesmanship, and his loyalty to the interests of his tribe. He derived his name, “many coups,” from the fact that he was able to add eagle feather after eagle feather to his coup stick, counting coups in victory. When a lad of sixteen his brother was killed by the Sioux. The boy, bewildered with grief, climbed for two days, struggling to reach the summit of some high peak in the Crazy Mountains, there to give vent to his grief and pray for revenge. While he prayed to the sun he mutilated his body. Upon those lonely heights, never 
before desecrated by human footsteps, he dedicated his life to battle. Before he was twenty-six he had counted a coup of each kind and was made a chief, and named “Many Achievements.” At sixty-three years of age he stands as erect as a solitary pine on a lonely hill crest. He has the bearing and dignity of a royal prince and wears his honours and war dress with all the pride and courtliness of a patrician. He glories in the fact that from his earliest days he has never fought the white man, but his life has been a long series of conflicts with other Indian nations. Before the white man ever placed his footsteps upon Indian soil his days were filled with struggle in warding off the blows of hostile tribes who sought the women and the horses of his own people. Then, to use his own expression: “The Great Father ordered that we should stop fighting and live in peace, and since that time we have had allotments of land, schools have been built for the education of our children, and as an illustration of the feelings of my heart to-day, I am at peace with all the tribes, they are all my brothers, and I meet them all as one man. I shall live for my country and shall remain in peace, as I feel peaceful toward my country.” The reign of this great chief over his tribe is one of benignity and beneficence. He is greatly concerned in his last days to raise up young men who shall know the rights and opportunities of his people 
and who shall thus have influence at Washington, which he has many times visited and where he is always welcome. The smile of Chief Plenty Coups is worth crossing many miles of prairie to see. It was eminently fitting that this great chief on the grounds of his own Indian tribe should receive the chiefs attending the last Great Indian Council.

Saturday, December 10, 2016

Crow Native American Dancers

Crow Native American Dancers


Crow Indian dancer photographed in 1880.

Native American Crow Indian tribe dancers

Crow Indian ceremonial dancers


1903 Photograph of Crow Indian dancers.


Saturday, March 5, 2016

A collection of my favorite Crow Indian portraits


Best of, Crow Indian Portraits


White Bull photographed in 1880.


Crow Indian, Lone Wolf photographed in 1880 in Niles City, Montana


1908 photograph of Crow Indian, Bull Goes Hunting


Crow Indian, Hunts the Enemy taken in 1908


Crow Indian, Clara White Hip taken in 1905


Crow Indian woman, date unknown.


Crow Indian girl photographed with her doll.

Saturday, October 25, 2014

Faces of the Crow Indian Tribe

Faces of the Crow Indian Tribe

1880 Photo of Crow Indian, Yellow Dog.


Crow Indian man photographed in 1900, the color was added in 1903


Crow Indian labeled, "Wolf."


Crow Indian, Red Wing, photographed in 1908


Crow Indian tribe photo of Bull Tongue, 1908

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Sioux Lodge Burials


Sioux Indian


LODGE-BURIAL.

Our attention should next be turned to sepulture above the ground, including lodge, house, box, scaffold, tree, and canoe burial, and the first example which may be given is that of burial in lodges, which is by no means common. The description which follows is by Stansbury, and relates to the Sioux:
I put on my moccasins, and, displaying my wet shirt like a flag to the wind, we proceeded to the lodges which had attracted our curiosity. There were five of them pitched upon the open prairie, and in them we found the bodies of nine Sioux laid out upon the ground, wrapped in their robes of buffalo-skin, with their saddles, spears, camp-kettles, and all their accoutrements piled up around them. Some lodges contained three, others only one body, all of which were more or less in a state of decomposition. A short distance apart from these was one lodge which, though small, seemed of rather superior pretensions, and was evidently pitched with great care. It contained the body of a young Indian girl of sixteen or eighteen years, with a countenance presenting quite an agreeable expression: she was richly dressed in leggins of fine scarlet cloth elaborately ornamented; a new pair of moccasins, beautifully embroidered with porcupine quills, was on her feet, and her body was wrapped in two superb buffalo-robes worked in like manner; she had evidently been dead but a day or two, and to our surprise a portion of the upper part of her person was bare, exposing the face and a part of the breast, as if the robes in which she was wrapped had by some means been disarranged, whereas all the other bodies were closely covered up. 153It was, at the time, the opinion of our mountaineers, that these Indians must have fallen in an encounter with a party of Crows; but I subsequently learned that they had all died of the cholera, and that this young girl, being considered past recovery, had been arranged by her friends in the habiliments of the dead, inclosed in the lodge alive, and abandoned to her fate, so fearfully alarmed were the Indians by this to them novel and terrible disease.
It might, perhaps, be said that this form of burial was exceptional, and due to the dread of again using the lodges which had served as the homes of those afflicted with the cholera, but it is thought such was not the case, as the writer has notes of the same kind of burial among the same tribe and of others, notably the Crows, the body of one of their chiefs (Long Horse) being disposed of as follows:
The lodge poles inclose an oblong circle some 18 by 22 feet at the base, converging to a point, at least 30 feet high, covered with buffalo-hides dressed without hair except a part of the tail switch, which floats outside like, and mingled with human scalps. The different skins are neatly fitted and sewed together with sinew, and all painted in seven alternate horizontal stripes of brown and yellow, decorated with various lifelike war scenes. Over the small entrance is a large bright cross, the upright being a large stuffed white wolf-skin upon his war lance, and the cross-bar of bright scarlet flannel, containing the quiver of bow and arrows, which nearly all warriors still carry, even when armed with repeating rifles. As the cross is not a pagan but a Christian (which Long Horse was not either by profession or practice) emblem, it was probably placed there by the influence of some of his white friends. I entered, finding Long Horse buried Indian fashion, in full war dress, paint and feathers, in a rude coffin, upon a platform about breast high, decorated with weapons, scalps, and ornaments. A large opening and wind-flap at the top favored ventilation, and though he had lain there in an open coffin a full month, some of which was hot weather, there was but little effluvia; in fact, I have seldom found much in a burial-teepee, and when this mode of burial is thus performed it is less repulsive than natural to suppose.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Native American Religion Illustrated

Native American Religion and Shamans
American Plains Indian Eagle Dance


Native American Shaman Healing the Sick


Native American Religion of the Pipe Ceremony by Crow Indians


Native American Religion: Paiute Indians


Returning the dead to the sky and the eagle


More articles and photos of Native American Religions


Sacred Stones on the Wabash and Eel Rivers in Indiana
Native American Religious Symbolism
Native American Religion: Sacred Numbers

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Indian Pictures: Crow Indian Tribe

Crow Indians


Crow Indian Tipis


Crow Indians


Crow Indians at Fort Laramie


Crow Indian Women and Children


Crow Indian Brave


Crow Indian Tipi


Crow Indians Dancing


Crow Indians in front of a tipi


Crow Indians Photographed on a Reservation


Crow Indian Chief