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๐๐€๐“๐ˆ๐•๐„ ๐’๐“๐‘๐Ž๐๐†!๐™”๐™š๐™ก๐™ก๐™ค๐™ฌ ๐™€๐™ฎ๐™š๐™จ (๐™„๐™จ๐™๐™ฉ๐™–๐™ฏ๐™ž) , of the Lakota Nation, photo by Frank Fiske 1906. Yellow Eyes was an informant for ...
04/22/2023

๐๐€๐“๐ˆ๐•๐„ ๐’๐“๐‘๐Ž๐๐†!
๐™”๐™š๐™ก๐™ก๐™ค๐™ฌ ๐™€๐™ฎ๐™š๐™จ (๐™„๐™จ๐™๐™ฉ๐™–๐™ฏ๐™ž) , of the Lakota Nation, photo by Frank Fiske 1906. Yellow Eyes was an informant for Chief Sitting Bull and was with him at the Battle of Little Big Horn. She and her family escaped with him to Canada and returned with him when he surrendered in 1881. She went on to Fort Peck with her son and husband and the other warriors. Information obtained from one of her descendants, Dorothy Eiken.One summer Chief Sitting Bull had a Sun Dance for the people in which Yellow Eyes was present, it was a very harsh winter in Canada and the people were without food and on the verge of starvation. The spirits gave Chief Sitting Bull a sacred song that is still sung at Sun Dance to this day. It gave them courage, following the Sun Dance the Buffalo were plentiful even if it was for a short time. Without the Buffalo we would not have survived and without us they would not have survived, we are connected by blood and spirit. The Buffalo give us strength and courage in the hardest of times, the old Buffalo Nation Man said โ€œwe will live.โ€

๐‚๐ก๐ž๐ฒ๐ž๐ง๐ง๐ž ๐ฐ๐š๐ซ๐ซ๐ข๐จ๐ซ ๐œ๐ก๐ข๐ž๐Ÿ ๐จ๐ง ๐ก๐จ๐ซ๐ฌ๐ž๐›๐š๐œ๐ค, ๐ฉ๐จ๐ฌ๐ž๐ ๐ซ๐ž๐œ๐ซ๐ž๐š๐ญ๐ข๐จ๐ง, ๐œ๐ข๐ซ๐œ๐š ๐Ÿ๐Ÿ—๐ŸŽ๐Ÿ“In Wyoming, a thousand Cheyenne warriors attack the imm...
04/21/2023

๐‚๐ก๐ž๐ฒ๐ž๐ง๐ง๐ž ๐ฐ๐š๐ซ๐ซ๐ข๐จ๐ซ ๐œ๐ก๐ข๐ž๐Ÿ ๐จ๐ง ๐ก๐จ๐ซ๐ฌ๐ž๐›๐š๐œ๐ค, ๐ฉ๐จ๐ฌ๐ž๐ ๐ซ๐ž๐œ๐ซ๐ž๐š๐ญ๐ข๐จ๐ง, ๐œ๐ข๐ซ๐œ๐š ๐Ÿ๐Ÿ—๐ŸŽ๐Ÿ“
In Wyoming, a thousand Cheyenne warriors attack the immigrant transport link at Platte Bridge.
07/25/1865 - 07/26/1865
Following the massacre at Sand Creek, Cheyenne rage forged alliances and an effective force of more than two thousand mounted warriors. They had launched a series of attacks in Colorado, burning out ranches and even attacking smaller towns. They made an assault on the garrison at Platte Bridge, Wyoming, an important link on the immigrant trail. Beaten off, the next day they attacked and wiped out a military wagon train approaching the fort. Troop losses were 28 killed. Cheyenne losses were not accurately counted. (By John Osborne)
Source Citation
Thomas Goodrich, Scalp Dance: Indian Warfare on the High Plains, 1865-1879 (Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books, 1997), 11-15.

๐‚๐ก๐ข๐ž๐Ÿ ๐๐ฅ๐ž๐ง๐ญ๐ฒ ๐‚๐จ๐ฎ๐ฉ๐ฌPlenty Coups was born into the Mountain Crow tribe in 1848 at the-cliffs-that-have-no-name (possibly n...
04/19/2023

๐‚๐ก๐ข๐ž๐Ÿ ๐๐ฅ๐ž๐ง๐ญ๐ฒ ๐‚๐จ๐ฎ๐ฉ๐ฌ
Plenty Coups was born into the Mountain Crow tribe in 1848 at the-cliffs-that-have-no-name (possibly near Billings, Montana), to his father Medicine-Bird and his mother Otter-woman. He was given the birth name Chรญilaphuchissaaleesh, or "Buffalo Bull Facing The Wind".

During the first decades of Plenty Coups' life, he led the life of a Crow warrior, which involved warring with other major tribes such as the Sioux and Cheyenne over territory, hunting rights, prestige, and the other parts of the traditional warrior way of life.

Change of name
In accordance with tradition, as a young man his birth name was changed: his grandfather predicted that he would become chief of the Crow Tribe, live a very long life, and accomplish many great deeds, thus christening him Alaxchiiaahush, meaning "many achievements". Plenty Coups is the English translation of his name, coming from the word coup, or act of bravery. Over the course of his life, he would live up to his name and his grandfather's prediction.

Visions of the future

Early in his life, Plenty Coups started having prophetic dreams and visions. Many seemed so far-fetched that no one believed them, but when they started coming true, his fellow tribe members began to revere him and listened to him carefully.

After the death of his beloved older brother when he was nine years old, he had a vision in which one of the Little People of the Pryor Mountains told him that to develop his senses and wits, and that if he used them well, he would become a chief. As he later said:

I had a will and I would use it, make it work for me, as the Dwarf-chief had advised. I became very happy, lying there looking up into the sky. My heart began to sing like a bird, and I went back to the village, needing no man to tell me the meaning of my dream. I took a sweat-bath and rested in my father's lodge. I knew myself now."

Later, when he was 11 years old, Plenty Coups (along with other young men of the Crow Nation) was challenged to have a vision which might guide his people's future. After fasting and spending several days in the Crazy Mountains, he had a vision in which he saw many buffalo coming out of a hole. They spread over the plains, then disappeared. Surreal buffalo with weird tails, different colors (even spots), and odd bellows then came out of the hole and covered the plains. He saw himself as an old man, living near a cold spring in the foothills of the Arrowhead Mountains. He also saw a forest; strong winds blew down the trees in the forest until only one tree was left standing. In it was the home of the chickadee.

His vision was interpreted by tribal elders to mean that the white man would take over the Native American lands and their way of life, like the wind that blew down the trees in the forestโ€”all except one, which represented the Crow people. The Crow tribe would be spared if they could learn how to work with the white man. His spirit guide then became the chickadee, and he would carry a pair of chickadee legs in a medicine bag he used for protection and spiritual power. This vision would guide his actions (and that of the Crow People) for the remainder of his life.

Young warrior
Plenty Coups started learning early in life the ways of an Indian warrior. Constant attacks by neighboring tribes provided many opportunities to prove his valor, and he quickly started earning coups. He spent his youth fighting and learning alongside many other young warriors, including Medicine Crow (Sacred Raven), who would also become a chief. Many times he would cover himself with a gray wolf hide, and sneak alone into an enemy camp and scout about. He would return to his fellow warriors and devise a plan of attack. They would execute the attack, and Plenty Coups would seek to touch an enemy with his coup stick or take a weapon or horse, then return without being killed or captured. This was considered a greater act of bravery than actually killing an enemy.

He soon gained a reputation for being fearless and cunning, like the wolf. He became a member of the elite warriors of his tribe. They would do everything backwards, in a fashion that was bizarre to onlookers, which helped create fear in hearts of their enemies because of their reputation.

Young diplomat

As a young man, Plenty Coups also gained a reputation for being a wise and eloquent speaker. He was often looked to for guidance and advice, and spoke out often during tribal councils regarding their neighboring enemies, and their interaction with the encroaching white population and their government.

Last great chief
Plenty Coups was named a Bacheeรญtche (โ€ณgood manโ€ณ, i.e. chief) of a local group of the Mountain Crow at age 28. As a young man and chief, he was a fierce and well-respected warrior. He was thought to have between 50-100 feathers on his coup stick, each one representing an act of valor. Many times over, he had fulfilled the four requirements for becoming a chief, later he would therefore become first the Ashbacheeรญtche (โ€ณChief Of The Campโ€ณ, band chief) of all Mountain Crow and later even the last traditionally elected Ashakรฉe (โ€ณOwner Of The Lodgesโ€ณ, chiefs of all chiefs) of the Crow Nation.

Fighting to protect a nation
Plenty Coups became a chief in 1876, the same year as the Battle of the Little Bighorn. Six Crow warriors worked as scouts for General Custer at this time, and were allied with the white man in order to fight their own primary enemies during this period: the Lakota, Sioux and Cheyenne. According to the interpretation of Plenty Coups' vision, cooperating with the white man was the only way to ensure the Crow's future survival in a white man's world.

Speaking to protect a people
He was selected to represent the Crow in Washington, D.C., where he fought successfully against U.S. senators' plans to abolish the Crow nation and take away their lands. He made many trips to Washington over ten years to protect his people.

He was fairly successful in doing so, and managed to keep the Crows' original land (although it amounted to only 80% of what they originally were allotted), despite many foreigners' desire to take the land for gold prospecting and other uses. Many other Native Americans tribes were relocated to reservations on entirely different land than where they had lived their lives.

Plenty Coups told about his trip to Washington in 1880 to William Wildschut. The travel east was by Fast Wagon or train. It was described as "a big black horse with his belly nearly touching the ground".

Dedication of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier
Chief Plenty Coups was selected as the sole representative of Native Americans for the dedication of the Tomb Of The Unknown Soldier and gave a short speech in his native tongue in honor of the soldier and the occasion. He placed his war-bonnet and coup stick upon the tomb, and they are preserved in a display case there.

Legacy

When he died in 1932 at age 84, he was considered by his people to be the last of the great chiefs. The vision he had had when he was younger had come true-he was married (his wife was Strikes-the-iron), but had no children of his own. Bison were almost wholly replaced by cattle. White society and government dominated and had completely changed America. Through diplomacy, foresight and strong leadership, Plenty Coups was able to preserve the Crow Nation land, people and culture much better than most other Native American tribes. After his death, the head men of the Crow council voted unanimously against choosing another chief. The leader of the council saidโ€ฆ"No living man can fill Plenty Coupsโ€™ place.โ€

Autobiography
Author Frank Bird Linderman wrote an autobiography with Chief Plenty Coups when Plenty Coups was 80 years old. Linderman would visit Plenty Coups at his home on the Crow Reservation and ask the chief to recount parts of his life story. Two Crow Indians, Coyote-runs and Braided-scalp-lock (aka Frank Shively), assisted Plenty Coups in recounting his life to Linderman. He told about vision quests, fights with the Cheyennes and the Lakotas and about the history of the Crows. He told what little he knew about the Tongue River massacre on a big Crow camp at Tongue River in 1820. The resulting book of Plenty Coup's life was published as American: The Life Story of a Great Indian: Plenty-coups, Chief of the Crows (New York: John Day, 1930). In 1962, it was reprinted as simply Plenty-Coups: Chief of the Crows (Bison Books) and is still in print under that title.

Chief Plenty Coups State Park and Home
Inspired by a visit to George Washington's Mount Vernon plantation in Virginia in 1928, four years before his death Chief Plenty Coups donated 195 acres (0.79 km2) of his personal land to Big Horn County to create a park for future generations to enjoy. The log cabin he lived in is there and is part of Chief Plenty Coups State Park. He is buried here and park visitors may visit his grave, along with a visitor's center and museum that has more information about Plenty Coups and his legacy. The whole park was renovated in 2003. The park is located near Pryor, Montana.

Quotations
"Education is your most powerful weapon. With education, you are the white man's equal; without education, you are his victim, and so shall remain all your lives."
"The ground on which we stand is sacred ground. It is the blood of our ancestors."
"I hear the white men say there will be no more war. But this cannot be true. There will be other wars. Men have not changed, and whenever they quarrel they will fight, as they have always done."

Lazy Boy (Pah-kops-co-map), chief of the Piegan Blackfeet tribe in Montana, 1914This photo of Lazy Boy was taken by the ...
04/19/2023

Lazy Boy (Pah-kops-co-map), chief of the Piegan Blackfeet tribe in Montana, 1914
This photo of Lazy Boy was taken by the news photo studio Harris & Ewing, and appeared in quite a few newspapers and numerous articles in the year 1914. One of them announced him becoming an Honorary member of the โ€œAdventurers Clubโ€ โ€” quoting the article it was โ€œan organization consisting of well-known war correspondents, military men and scientists. Teddy Roosevelt and Lazy boy were the only two honorary members. Lazy Boyโ€™s qualifications embrace adventures in many battles against the other Indian tribes.โ€
The Kansas City Sun describes one of his adventures:
โ€œ...the one incident he rested his laurels upon was a night attack by himself, his brother, and two Indian companions upon a band of 200 Crows in 1876. They crawled out upon the shelf rock of Mt. Henry, which is nine miles from Glacier park station, Montana, and opened fire upon their enemies, who were sleeping in 20 lodges in the Two Medicine Valley, 1,000 feet below.
Lazy Boyโ€™s brother was killed beside him and his two companions were wounded. Lazy Boyโ€™s shirt was riddled. The Crows came up the mountain side and Lazy boy in retreating dragged the body of his brother with him and hid it among the rocks, so the Crows could not scalp it. He and his two companions escaped to their camp in the Cut Bank country. The next day they returned with reinforcements and drove the Crows over the Divide, compelling them to leave 100 dead behind them. โ€œ
This portrait of Lazy Boy also appears in another article, along with a few other photos taken by Roland W. Reed, which were all part of the "See America First'' promotional tourism campaign. Its aim was to encourage tourists to come to Glacier National Park, which had recently just opened in 1910. I will link the article in comments below โ€“ Please note the language in the article is extremely archaic, in particular the title

"Game of Arrows", 1933.Target practice. A group of Apsaalooke/Crow men in Montana standing in the snow with a cute small...
04/18/2023

"Game of Arrows", 1933.
Target practice. A group of Apsaalooke/Crow men in Montana standing in the snow with a cute small dog, demonsrate skill and have fun throwing arrows toward a cluster of arrows stuck in the ground.

I-ah-to-tonah, or Little Woman Mountain, and son A-last-Sauked, or Looking-away-off, Nez Perce- 1909via Wikimedia Common...
04/17/2023

I-ah-to-tonah, or Little Woman Mountain, and son A-last-Sauked, or Looking-away-off, Nez Perce

- 1909

via Wikimedia Commons, public domain

The tipi represents our family system, the rope that binds is our mothers, grandmothers and sisters.When we lose that ro...
04/16/2023

The tipi represents our family system, the rope that binds is our mothers, grandmothers and sisters.

When we lose that rope, our family can fall apart. Hard times and confusion follow, but when we recognize this, we can become the rope.
Through those teachings, we can keep our families together and happy.

Wrap your family as tight as you can, and as much as you have to, wrap them with unconditional love, compassion, direction, sobriety, wolakota and wotakuye.

Tiwahe. Family.
Ti- dwelling or home
Wa- pure
He- where it stands.

"I am an old woman now. The buffaloes and black-tail deer are gone, and our Indian ways are almost gone. Sometimes I fin...
04/15/2023

"I am an old woman now. The buffaloes and black-tail deer are gone, and our Indian ways are almost gone. Sometimes I find it hard to believe that I ever lived them.
My little son grew up in the white man's school. He can read books, and he owns cattle and has a farm. He is a leader among our Hidatsa people, helping teach them to follow the white man's road.
He is kind to me. We no longer live in an earth lodge, but in a house with chimneys, and my son's wife cooks by a stove.
But for me, I cannot forget our old ways.
Often in summer I rise at daybreak and steal out to the corn fields, and as I hoe the corn I sing to it, as we did when I was young. No one cares for our corn songs now.
Sometimes in the evening I sit, looking out on the big Missouri. The sun sets, and dusk steals over the water. In the shadows I see again to see our Indian village, with smoke curling upward from the earth lodges, and in the river's roar I hear the yells of the warriors, and the laughter of little children of old.
It is but an old woman's dream. Then I see but shadows and hear only the roar of the river, and tears come into my eyes. Our Indian life, I know, is gone forever."
Waheenee - Hidatsa (North Dakota

What an amazing and beautiful 74 year old photo! This Innuit girl descending into her home, an ice igloo ...This powerfu...
04/15/2023

What an amazing and beautiful 74 year old photo! This Innuit girl descending into her home, an ice igloo ...
This powerful image transcends time, and continues to go viral over 70 years later.
Helen Konek is 91 years old now. But she was 17 when photographer Richard Harrington asked to take images of her family near Arviat, Nunavut. This one is in the massive igloo her father Pipqanaaq built.

Muscogee actor Will (Sonny) Sampson, who is most known for his role in โ€œOne Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nestโ€ playing opposit...
04/14/2023

Muscogee actor Will (Sonny) Sampson, who is most known for his role in โ€œOne Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nestโ€ playing opposite Jack Nicholson, will be posthumously inducted into the Oklahoma Movie Hall of Fame at the Roxy Theater in Muskogee Oklahoma.
"Will was a dear friend, as was his son Tim and sister. Am happy that he is receiving this honor today. I had the privilege to work with Will in the mini-series 'Mystic Warrior' (1984). He gave me advice while working on this series. I was set to have the lead role and Will was to be cast as the medicine man. What happened was ABC ended up casting the lead role to an Irish actress, dyed her hair black and put contact lenses in and Will's character went to an Italian actor.' Will was a kind man and very supportive of my work. In 1983, he founded the American Indian Registry for the Performing Arts for Native American actors." - Joanelle Romero (RNCI Founder/actress/director/producer)
In addition to his incredible performance as the apparent deaf and mute Chief Bromden in โ€œOne Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest,โ€ he also played Crazy Horse in the 1977 western โ€œThe White Buffalo,โ€ as well as Taylor in โ€œPoltergeist II: The Other Sideโ€ and Ten Bears in 1976's โ€œThe Outlaw Josey Wales.โ€For 20 years Sonny competed in rodeos, his specialty being bronco busting. He was also an artist, his artwork has been shown at the Gilcrease Museum and the Philbrook Museum of Art.During the filming of โ€œThe White Buffalo,โ€ Sonny halted production by refusing to act when he discovered that producers had hired white actors to portray Native Americans for the film.

BlackfeetPhoto by Roland W. Reed, 1912
04/12/2023

Blackfeet
Photo by Roland W. Reed, 1912

(Born 1863-Died December 18, 1923)a.k.a. George Jackson and Buffalo Sundown,Waaya-Tonah-Toesits-Kahn (meaning โ€œEarth Lef...
04/12/2023

(Born 1863-Died December 18, 1923)
a.k.a. George Jackson and Buffalo Sundown,
Waaya-Tonah-Toesits-Kahn (meaning โ€œEarth Left by the Setting Sunโ€), also spelled We-ah-te-nato-ots-ha (meaning โ€œBlanket of the Sunโ€)
Jackson Sundown, a nephew of Chief Joseph, was with him on the flight of the Nez Perce in 1877. He was the first native American to win a World Championship Bronc Rider title in 1916, at the age of 53, more than twice the age of the other competitors who made it to the final round. He is also the oldest person to ever win a rodeo world championship title. He was posthumously inducted into the Pendleton Round-Up Hall of Fame in 1972, into the National Cowboys of Color Museum and Hall of Fame in 1983, and the American Indian Athletes Hall of Fame in 1994.
Historical accounts of his life cite that Sundown, at a young age, displayed the traits of an athlete, riding his Appaloosa pony from the time he could walk. At age 14, his knack for handling horses earned him the privilege of caring for his tribesโ€™ horses and herding them when they moved camp during the turbulent 1877 Nez Perce War. On Aug. 9, 1877, the daring young Sundown displayed his stealth when his people were ambushed by the forces of the U.S. cavalry at Big Hole in southwestern Montana territory where they suffered many casualties, including women and children. Waaya-Tonah-Toesits-Kahn, although badly burned, outwitted the enemy and survived by hiding under a buffalo robe after they had torched his motherโ€™s teepee where he had been sleeping. Another legendary account of Sundownโ€™s bravery was when the Nez Perce, en route to Sitting Bulls camp in Canada, stopped to rest near Snake Creek in the Bear Paw Mountains just 40 miles south of the Canadian border. Unbeknownst to the Nez Perce, Brigadier General Nelson H. Miles had been dispatched to find and intercept them. Combined U.S. forces made an early morning surprise attack on the Nez Perce and after a three day stand-off, the war weary Chief Joseph surrendered and declared he would โ€œfight no more forever.โ€ Sundown, again displaying his prowess as a renegade Nez Perce warrior, escaped, although being wounded, โ€œby clinging to the side of his horse so that it appeared riderless.โ€ Despite having no blankets or food, he and a small band of survivors made their way to Sitting Bullโ€™s camp in Canada. Sundown is said to have lived in hiding with Sitting Bull and those that defeated General George Custer at the Battle of Little Big Horn as a war criminal for two years.

At the ripe age of 137, White Wolf a.k.a. Chief John Smith is considered the oldest Native American to have ever lived, ...
04/11/2023

At the ripe age of 137, White Wolf a.k.a. Chief John Smith is considered the oldest Native American to have ever lived, 1785โ€“1922.
The Minneapolis Morning Tribune obituary says Ga-Be-Nah-Gewn-Wonce (variously known as Kay-bah-nung-we-way, Sloughing Flesh, Wrinkled Meat or plain old โ€” well, really old โ€” John Smith) was reputed to be 137 years old when he died. Whatever his precise age, his well-lined face indicates a man who led a long and full life.

For generations, Plains Indians drew pictographs to document their daily experiences. The Lakota term for winter count i...
04/10/2023

For generations, Plains Indians drew pictographs to document their daily experiences. The Lakota term for winter count is waniyetu wowapi. The word Wowapi translates as โ€œanything that can be read or counted.โ€ Waniyetu is the Lakota word for year, which is measured from first snow to first snow.

SIOUX BABY. Sure, your baby picture was cute, but you did not get to wear a porcupine hair and feather roach and sit upo...
04/08/2023

SIOUX BABY. Sure, your baby picture was cute, but you did not get to wear a porcupine hair and feather roach and sit upon a racoon hide. Frank Bennett Fiske was best known for his portraits of Sioux taken at his Fort Yates (North Dakota) studio on the Standing Rock Reservation. In 1900 at age 17, Fiske had taken over the studio previously operated by S. T. Fansler.
= = =
The source file was a low-res scan of an undated real photo postcard at the North Dakota State Historical Society. The card was printed on DOPS brand paper, common on cards mailed during 1925โ€”42. However, the photo may have been taken decades earlier. โค

BRAVE WOLF & CORN WOMAN, 1901. The fine portrait was by Miles City (Montana) photographer L.A. Huffman at the Tongue Riv...
04/07/2023

BRAVE WOLF & CORN WOMAN, 1901. The fine portrait was by Miles City (Montana) photographer L.A. Huffman at the Tongue River (Northern Cheyenne) Indian Reservation. The photo was taken when historian Olin Wheeler interviewed warriors 25 years after Custerโ€™s Last Stand. Brave Wolf fought at the Little Big Horn in 1876, surrendered with Chief Two Moon's band in 1877, and became a scout for Col. Nelson A. Miles. For 10 of his earlier years, Brave Wolf had endured the rigors of a Contrary Warrior (Hohnรณhkao'o), riding into battle mounted backwards. He could not associate with others as an equal, lived alone and apart, slept without a bed.
Brave Wolf was a medicine man. The buffalo skull was used in the healing and spiritual ceremonies at the sweat lodge. If using a PC, click image to enlarge and better see detail.

MatศŸรณ Waล‹kรกtuya (aka High Bear), the husband of Yellow Blanket, with an unidentified girl, on the Pine Ridge Reservation...
04/06/2023

MatศŸรณ Waล‹kรกtuya (aka High Bear), the husband of Yellow Blanket, with an unidentified girl, on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota - Oglala - 1895

Medicine Crow, of the Apsaroke tribe. 1908
04/05/2023

Medicine Crow, of the Apsaroke tribe. 1908

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