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![Untitled [Indians at the World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, Illinois]](images/r_osbn_ster_chgo_sm.jpg)
Untitled [Indians at the World's Columbian
Exposition, Chicago, Illinois]
Cabinet photograph
Friesleben Portraits, Chicago, IL, 1893
2002.114 |
The Midway at the World’s
Columbian Exposition (or World’s Fair) of 1893 featured a
“Bazaar of Nations” with villages “peopled by
natives from every clime.” Among the peoples on display at
this “bazaar” were American Indians. This photograph
shows a group of Plains Indians, one of whom is dressed in a suit
and top hat, greeting a visitor. The display of American Indians
as an exotic curiosity is especially poignant in view of Wounded
Knee, the last military action directed at Native Americans, which
had occurred just three years previously, and historian Frederick
Jackson Turner’s pronouncement at the 1893 Fair that the frontier
was “closed.” |
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White Wolf, a Comanche warrior
Cabinet photograph
W. E. Irwin, Chickasha, IT, circa 1900
2001.025 |
Studio portrait of White Wolf a Comanche warrior
wearing an eagle feather war bonnet, which is traditionally more
associated with the Sioux and other tribes of the Central Plains,
but was also worn by the warriors of Southern Plains tribes like
the Comanche. The other aspect of White Wolf’s dress that
is distinctively Comanche are the otter fur hair wraps that hang
down his front. He is holding a Model 1894 Marlin rifle. |
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Arrowmaker, Ojibwa brave
Tinted photographic postcard
Detroit Photographic Co., Detroit, MI, 1903
99.06.5 |
This photographic postcard, meant to be sold
as a souvenir, taps into white stereotypes of Native Americans as
fierce or savage. The man pictured in the postcard is represented
as an Ojibwa Indian, which is a Woodland tribe from the Great Lakes
region, but the clothing he is wearing is of Plains Indian origin.
Unlike the clothing, the rifle stock club he is wielding could be
an authentic Woodland weapon. |
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Chief Eagle Calf
Photographic postcard
Photographer unknown, Montana (?), circa 1920
2000.063 |
In the 1920s, when access to Glacier National
Park was primarily by train, a group of Blackfeet Indian “chiefs”
would greet new arrivals and offer to sell photographic postcards
of themselves. “Chief” Eagle Calf (John Ground) was
part of this group. The postcards sold for a nominal price and could
be autographed for an additional cost, which is the case with this
card. The first pictograph symbol is the sign for chief or man,
the second means eagle, and the third is calf, thus Chief Eagle
Calf. Our thanks to Lyle J. Heavyrunner, grandson of John Ground
(Chief Eagle Calf), for this translation. |
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“Red-skins” & cowboys
Stereograph
Underwood & Underwood, Baltimore, MD, 1889
2003.131.1 |
Stereograph of American Indians lined up for
a performance in a Wild West show, which, based on the date, may
have been Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show or another similar
traveling show. Wild West shows were a popular form of entertainment
in the United States and Europe in the late 19th century and early
20th century. These shows would usually feature trick shooting and
riding, dubious reenactments of Western historical events, and Native
Americans dressed in full tribal regalia. Wild West shows are also
one of the antecedents of contemporary rodeo. |
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Cowboys and Indians talking in the sign
language, Okla.
Stereograph
Keystone View Company, Meadville, PA, circa 1910
2003.085 |
This posed stereograph shows an Oklahoma cowboy
sign talking with two Plains Indians. Indian sign language has been
a staple of Western films since the beginning of the film industry,
but unlike many Western film conventions, Indian sign language is
firmly based in fact. There are well over 200 different vocal American
Indian languages and dialects. This multiplicity of languages encouraged
the creation of sign languages that allowed communication between
diverse tribal groups. |
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In the village of Blackfeet Indians near
St. Mary’s Lake, Glacier National Park, Montana
Stereograph
Keystone View Company, Meadville, PA, circa 1920
2002.024 |
This posed stereograph depicts a small Blackfeet
village in Glacier National Park. The photograph is very reminiscent
of the work of pictorialist photographer Roland Reed who photographed
the Blackfeet at around the same time. |
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