Showing posts with label Images. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Images. Show all posts

Monday, March 21, 2016

Image Gallery of Iroquois Indian Long Houses


Iroquois Indian Long House Gallery


Daily life in an Iroquois Indian village.


Iroquois Indian long house.



Iroquois Indian women cooking and sewing in the long house


Iroquois chief speaks to his people

Sunday, March 6, 2016

Pueblo Indian Women and Pottery Photo and Image Gallery


Pueblo Indian Women and Pottery Photo Gallery


Image is from an old postcard showing Pueblo Indian women making pottery for the tourist trade.


Pueblo Indian women selling pottery to tourist at the train station in Albuquerque, New Mexico.


Pueblo Indian photographed with her pottery


Pueblo Indian woman photographed in 1900 with pottery.


Pueblo Indian woman photographed with her pottery.


This type of undecorated  Pueblo pottery is rarely photographed. 

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Mandan Sioux Indian Photos, Pictures and Images

Mandan Sioux Indian Photoa and Pictures

Mandan Sioux skull circle as part of their ancestral worship

Mandan Sioux Indian Boy

Mandan Sioux Indian Woman's Dress Clothes

Mandan Sioux Indian Princess

Mandan Sioux Indian Chief with Headress

Mandan Sioux Indian Village

Mandan Sioux Indian Games

Mandan Sioux Indian Warrior

Mandan Sioux Indian Warrior
Mandan Sioux Indian Earth Lodges or Hidastas

The Mandan Sioux Indian Village does the Buffalo Dance

Mandan Sioux Indian Chief Shahaka

Mandan Sioux Indians on the North Dakota Reservation



Friday, February 8, 2013

Life and Culture of the Eskimo Revealed in Photo Essay

Eskimo Indian Pictures

Eskimo Indian Ice Fishing in Nome Alaska

Eskimo Indian Children in a Kayak

Eskimo Indian Woman with Child

Eskimo Indian Girl

Eskimo Indian Family

Eskimo Indians in Their Igloo

Young Eskimo Mother with Baby

Young Eskimo Family

Eskimo Indian Girls

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

About The Algonkins (Algonquin) Indians with PIcs and Images


ALGONKINS.

Algonkin or Algonquin Woman
Early in the seventeenth century, the Algonkins were the largest family of North American Indians within the present limits of the United States, extending from Newfoundland to the Mississippi, and from the waters of the Ohio to Hudson's Bay and Lake Winnipeg. Northeast and northwest of them were the Eskimos and the Athabascas; the Dakotas bounded them on the west, and the Mobilian tribes, Catawbas, Natchez, &c., on the south. Within this region also dwelt the Iroquois and many detached tribes from other families. All the tribes of the Algonkins were nomadic, shifting from place to place as the fishing and hunting upon which they depended required. There has been some difficulty in properly locating the tribe from which the family has taken its name, but it is generally believed they lived on the Ottawa River, in Canada, where they were nearly exterminated by their enemies, the Iroquois. The only remnant of the tribe at this time is at the Lake of the Two Mountains.
Algonquin or Algonkin wigwam house
Of the large number of tribes forming this family, many are now extinct, others so reduced and merged into neighboring tribes as to be lost, while nearly all of the rest have been removed far from their original hunting-grounds. The Lenni Lenape, from the Delaware, are now leading a civilized life far out on the great plains west of the Missouri, and with them are the Shawnees from the south and the once powerful Pottawatamies, Ottawas, and Miamis from the Ohio Valley. Of the many nations forming this great family, we have a very full representation in the following catalogue, about equally divided between the wild hunters and the civilized agriculturists.
                                                                  Algonquin (Algonkin) Warrior
                                                         Algonkin (Algonquin) Male Indian

                                                                Algonquin Food and Culture

                                                    Algonquin Indian Woman and Girl

                                                                         Photo of an Algonquin Village

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Natchez Indian Pictures and Images

Color Photo of Natchez Pow Wow.  More on the Natchez Indian Tribes and Languages Here
The Natchez Indians were known mound builders and may have been a part of the Adena Hopewell dynasty of the Ohio River Valley  More on the Natchez mound builders here

The Great Sun Chief of the Natchez may have been similar to what was known in the Ohio Valley when the Sun temples were being constructed.

Early image of the Natchez Indians

Natchez Indian Woman and Girl

Early depiction of a Natchez warrior

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Shawnee Indian Pictures


Shawnee Indian Chief

Shawnee Indian Chief

Shawnee Woman in a wigwam

Shawnee Indians in Ceremonial Dress

Shawnee Indians with captured settlers in Ohio