Showing posts with label chiefs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chiefs. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 26, 2016

About the Cheyenne Indian Tribe

ABOUT THE CHEYENNE INDIAN 


A Short History of the Cheyenne Indians
    This nation has received a variety of names from travellers and the neighboring tribes, as Shyennes, Shiennes, Cheyennes, Chayennes, Sharas, Shawhays, Sharshas, and by the different bands of Dakotas, Shaí-en-a or Shai-é-la. With the Blackfeet, they are the most western branch of the great Algonkin family. When first known, they were living on the Chayenne or Cayenne River, a branch of the Red River of the North, but were driven west of the Mississippi by the Sioux, and about the close of the last century still farther west across the Missouri, where they were found by those enterprising travelers Lewis and Clark in 1803. On their map attached to their report they locate them near the eastern face of the Black Hills, in the valley of the great Sheyenne River, and state their number at 1,500 souls." Their first treaty with the United States was made in 1825, at the mouth of the Teton River. They were then at peace with the Dakotas, but warring against the Pawnees and others. Were then estimated, by Drake, to number 3,250.
     During the time of Long's expedition to the Rocky Mountains, in 1819 and 1820, a small portion of the Cheyennes seem to have separated themselves from the rest of their nation on the Missouri, and to have associated themselves with the Arapahoes who wandered about the tributaries of the Platte and Arkansas, while those who remained affiliated with the Ogalallas, these two divisions remaining separated until the present time. Steps are now being taken, however, to bring them together on a new reservation in the Indian Territory.
    Up to 1862, they were generally friendly to the white settlers, when outbreaks occurred, and then for three or four years a costly and bloody war was carried on against them, a notable feature of which was the Sand Creek or Chivington massacre, November 29, 1864. "Since that time there has been constant trouble. * * * In '67, General Hancock burned the village of the Dog Soldiers, on Pawnee Fork, and another war began, in which General Custer defeated them at Washita, killing Black Kettle and 37 others." The northern bands have been generally at peace with the whites, resisting many overtures to join their southern brethren.
Cheyenne Indian Chief Three Fingers

Young Cheyenne Indian Woman

Cheyenne Indians Destroying a Railroad

Captured Cheyenne Indians

Cheyenne Indian Woman Drying Meat

Cheyenne Indian Photo

Cheyenne Indian Warrior

Cheyenne Indian Tree Burials

Cheyenne Indian Tipi or House

Cheyenne Indian Summer Camp

Cheyenne Indian Pow Wow

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Great Indian Chiefs of the Past

Great Indian Chiefs of the Past




Thursday, March 24, 2016

Historic Photos of the Blackfoot Indians

Historic Photos of the Blackfoot Indians

Painting When Blackfoot And Sioux Meet by Char...
Painting When Blackfoot And Sioux Meet by Charles Marion Russell (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Piegan Blackfoot
Piegan Blackfoot (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Tribal territory of Blackfoot
Tribal territory of Blackfoot (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
English: Blackfoot American Indian
English: Blackfoot American Indian (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Bear Bull, Blackfoot
Bear Bull, Blackfoot (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
A Blackfoot indian on horseback
A Blackfoot indian on horseback (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Blackfoot teepees, Glacier National Park, 1933
Blackfoot teepees, Glacier National Park, 1933 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Blackfoot Indians chasing buffalo, Three Butte...
Blackfoot Indians chasing buffalo, Three Buttes, Montana, 1853 - NARA - 531080 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
English: The Blackfoot chief Mehkskeme-Sukahs
English: The Blackfoot chief Mehkskeme-Sukahs (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Part of a series of pictures depicting Frances...
Part of a series of pictures depicting Frances Densmore at the Smithsonian Institution in 1916 during a recording session with Blackfoot chief Mountain Chief for the Bureau of American Ethnology. Library of Congress caption: "Blackfoot Chief, Mountain Chief making phonographic record at Smithsonian, 2/9/1916." National Geographic caption: "This 1916 image of Frances Densmore and Blackfoot leader Mountain Chief listening to a cylinder recording has become a symbol of the early songcatcher era." (Photo credit: Wikipedia)Historic Photos of the Blackfoot Indians



Blackfoot Indian girl with doll

Monday, January 13, 2014

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