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𝐁𝐞𝐚𝐮𝐭𝐢𝐟𝐮𝐥 𝐡𝐢𝐬𝐭𝐨𝐫𝐲 𝐭𝐡𝐚𝐭 𝐜𝐚𝐧𝐧𝐨𝐭 𝐛𝐞 𝐞𝐫𝐚𝐬𝐞𝙈𝙖𝙧𝙮 𝙆𝙞𝙤𝙣𝙖, a member of the Cowlitz tribe long before the Cowlitz had federal reco...
01/08/2023

𝐁𝐞𝐚𝐮𝐭𝐢𝐟𝐮𝐥 𝐡𝐢𝐬𝐭𝐨𝐫𝐲 𝐭𝐡𝐚𝐭 𝐜𝐚𝐧𝐧𝐨𝐭 𝐛𝐞 𝐞𝐫𝐚𝐬𝐞
𝙈𝙖𝙧𝙮 𝙆𝙞𝙤𝙣𝙖, a member of the Cowlitz tribe long before the Cowlitz had federal recognition as a Indian tribe in the State of Washington. Mary was 107 in this portrait taken by Josef Scaylea in the year of 1957. Mary lived past the age of 117. She was the longest living Native American in the State of Washington. She was known for her daily ten mile walks to go visit her friends and relatives. Mary spoke no English and was called upon by Washington state government and historians to provide information about what she had witnessed in the 1800's as she had been born about 1850. Mary's family always accompanied her and interpreted for her as she would report.
Mary Kiona was Joe's all time greatest subject of his 37 years as chief photographer at The Seattle times News Paper. Mary liked Joe enough to invite him to family gatherings and allow him to take photos of her as her friend.

“I am poor and naked, but I am the chief of the nation. We do not want riches but we do want to train our children right...
01/08/2023

“I am poor and naked, but I am the chief of the nation. We do not want riches but we do want to train our children right. Riches would do us no good. We could not take them with us to the other world. We do not want riches. We want peace and love.”

– Red Cloud, Chief of the Oglala Lakota tribe.


Sources: Photograph taken by John K. Hillers, circa 1880 / Yale Collection of Western Americana, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut / Wikimedia Commons

Chief Big TreeBig Tree, a Kiowa warrior and chief was born in 1850. Here’s what the authorities at the Texas State Histo...
01/06/2023

Chief Big Tree
Big Tree, a Kiowa warrior and chief was born in 1850. Here’s what the authorities at the Texas State Historical Association have to say about him:
Big Tree (Ado-Eete), Kiowa warrior, chief, and cousin of Satanta, was born somewhere in the Kiowa domain at the time when pressures from the expanding non-native population were threatening the tribe’s traditional way of life. By the late 1860s the embattled Kiowas were forced to seek an accord with whites. The agreement, arrived at during the Medicine Lodge Treaty Council in 1867, forced Big Tree and the Kiowas to move to a reservation in southwestern Oklahoma. Frustrated by the confinement, Big Tree came under the sway of leaders of the tribal war faction at an early age. He joined Satank, Lone Wolf,qqv and Satanta in raids on settlements inside Indian Territory and across the Red River in Texas. He reputedly was involved in an abortive attack on Fort Sill in June 1870 but really gained notoriety as a result of his participation in the Warren Wagontrain Raid, or Salt Creek Massacre, of May 18, 1871.
On August 22, 1874, a number of Kiowas, led by Satanta and Big Tree, combined with Quahadis and skirmished with troops during ration distribution at Anadarko Agency, Indian Territory. From there the Indians moved onto the Llano Estacado in Texas, where, on September 9, 1874, a party of 200 Kiowas, including Lone Wolf, Satanta, and Big Tree, attacked Gen. Nelson A. Miles’s supply train, some thirty-six wagons escorted by a company of the Fifth Infantry and a detachment of the Sixth Cavalry. For three days the army held off the Indians until, unable to overwhelm the soldiers, the Kiowas drew off and returned home.
Big Tree remained imprisoned at Fort Sill until the Kiowas were finally defeated in December 1874. After his release, he spent the remainder of his life counseling peace and acceptance of the white man’s ways. His new direction was especially manifested in his drive to discredit the revivalist doctrine preached by the prophet P’oinka in 1887 and in his decision not to participate in the Kiowa Ghost Dance of 1890. He was among those who requested a missionary and was instrumental in establishing the first Baptist mission on the Kiowa reservation. By 1897 Big Tree’s conversion was complete; he became a member of the Rainy Mountain Baptist Church and served as a deacon for thirty years. He died at his home in Anadarko on November 13, 1929, his last act of leadership being his unsuccessful opposition to the allotment of Kiowa lands in 1901. He was buried near his home in the Rainy Mountain Cemetery.

Tall Bull (1830 - July 11, 1869) (Hotóa'ôxháa'êstaestse) was a chief of the Cheyenne Dog Soldiers. Of Cheyenne and Lakot...
01/06/2023

Tall Bull (1830 - July 11, 1869) (Hotóa'ôxháa'êstaestse) was a chief of the Cheyenne Dog Soldiers. Of Cheyenne and Lakota parentage, like some of the other Dog Soldiers by that time, he identified as Cheyenne.
He was shot and killed in the Battle of Summit Springs in Colorado by Major Frank North, leader of the Pawnee Scouts.
Tall Bull was a major Southern Cheyenne Chief, war chief and Dog Soldier leader. In 1864, under his leadership he had approximately 500 people following him in the eastern Colorado and western Kansas and Nebraska area. He participated in the 1864-65 Arapaho-Cheyenne War, the retaliation that followed the Sand Creek massacre, but gave up the fight after seeing the futility of winning the war. In 1868, he participated in the Beecher Island battle. During the battle he warned Roman Nose not to go into battle until he fixed his broken medicine and to do it quickly so that he could join the fight. During 1869, Tall Bull was shot dead, during an ambush by Maj Frank North at a ravine near White Butte.
At a peace council in 1867 he argued that the whites and the soldiers should stop making war upon the Cheyenne by invading the Cheyenne land and instigating further calamities. Furthermore, they should stop telling the Cheyenne that they should give up their land to have peace. Their Indian agent Edward Wynkoop tried bartering a peace with direct tones that were none too conciliatory. During one peace talk Tall Bull personally stopped the great Cheyenne warrior Roman Nose from killing Gen. Winfield Hancock.
Tall Bull was killed in the Battle of Summit Springs on 11 July 1869. Not even a year had passed after the death of his fellow Dog Soldier, the great Roman Nose, on September 17, 1868. Also dead was Chief Black Kettle. The war societies were devastated due to their loss of leadership. The Cheyenne never recovered and were no longer a threat on the southern Great Plains.

Elle (or Ellie) of Ganado. Navajo. In Fred Harvey Indian Building, Albuquerque, N. M. ca. 1907. Photo by Fred Harvey Com...
01/05/2023

Elle (or Ellie) of Ganado. Navajo. In Fred Harvey Indian Building, Albuquerque, N. M. ca. 1907. Photo by Fred Harvey Company. Source - Southern Methodist University, Central University Libraries, DeGolyer Library

The gracious Comanche elder Dana Pekiyou Chibitty was born at Richard's Spur in 1896. From an interview done in 1967, Da...
01/05/2023

The gracious Comanche elder Dana Pekiyou Chibitty was born at Richard's Spur in 1896. From an interview done in 1967, Dana declared that "I belong to the Noyakahs. My daddy was Noyakah but I don't know what my mama is, and all my grandfolks up here and my uncles, they all Noyakah, I'm Noyakah. It means "traveling around". You know, like you go somewhere you travel, it means that, Noyokah."
Of her Comanche name, Dana added that her recorded Indian Agency name was Tah-da-tas-i which means "real little". Before the use of her recorded Agency name, Dana's parents had called her by the name of Neh-me as a small child. Neh-me means "Walking".
With regard to the naming of Comanche children, Dana voiced the following:

"Some name the kids when they go to war, fighting you know, the other enemys", and "some name them by what they done, you know."

An outstanding picture entitled "Comanche Papoose" taken by Henry T. Hiester, Vernon, Texas, circa 1889-1895. Photograph courtesy of the Lawrence T. Jones III Texas Collection, DeGolyer Library, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas. Additional information from the Western History - Doris Duke Collection, The University of Oklahoma Libraries, Norman, Oklahoma.

A PARENTS WORST NIGHTMARE ........Losing a child and having to bury them. A man lost his son and couldn’t bare the thoug...
01/04/2023

A PARENTS WORST NIGHTMARE ........
Losing a child and having to bury them. A man lost his son and couldn’t bare the thought of living without him. He was suffering and couldn’t believe his son was gone. He cried and cried every day and night, missing his son, wishing things were different.
He couldn’t sleep and hadn’t slept in a long time. One night an old medicine man came to him in a dream and told him “Enough!! That’s enough crying!!” The dad told him “I cannot stop, I am never going to see him again!” The old Medicine man said, “Do you want to see him again?” The dad says “yes of course” the old medicine man takes him to the entrance of happy hunting ground where he sees many little beautiful children, so happy and innocent, carrying eagle feathers into the happy hunting grounds, smiling and laughing and just so beautiful. The dad asks “where is my son? Who are these kids?” The old medicine man said “these are the children that are called home early, they are innocent and loved and they go right through to the happy hunting grounds, so happy” the dad says “and my son? Where is he? Why isn’t he with these children?” The old medicine man said, “come this way” and guided him to the side of entrance. A small boy with a beautiful smile was standing there watching all the children enter the happy hunting grounds. He was standing there within reach of an eagle's feather. His dad grabbed him and hugged him, and the boy kissed his dads' cheeks and told him he missed him. The dad said “why don't you have a eagles feather like the other kids? Why are you waiting here at the entrance?”
The boy said “I keep trying to get the eagle feather Daddy, but your tears pull it out of reach. I see you are so sad, and I am tied to that feeling so I wait here until you’re ok” the dad burst out crying for the last time, he told his son, “Get that eagle feather and go, I will be ok, and I know you will be too”
- Don't cry too long for that loved one you lost, whether son, daughter, husband, mother or father!! Let them rest in peace, don't torment your life, because they won't come back, have faith that you will be together again, and that Creator makes us a beautiful home with all our loved ones when we leave this world.
Three Generations - Alfredo Rodriguez (1954, American).

These four Chiefs were Chief Joseph, Sitting Bull, Geronimo and Red Cloud. Each of these forefathers played an important...
01/04/2023

These four Chiefs were Chief Joseph, Sitting Bull, Geronimo and Red Cloud. Each of these forefathers played an important role in shaping their tribe's customs and history. Because of their influence over the shaping of Native American history, they are often referred to as the real founding fathers.!
Left-Right : Chief Joseph, Sitting Bull, Geronimo, and Red Cloud.

Red Fox James at the White House, 1915In March 1914, Red Fox James began a journey of approximately 3,000 miles (4,828 k...
01/03/2023

Red Fox James at the White House, 1915
In March 1914, Red Fox James began a journey of approximately 3,000 miles (4,828 kilometers) on horseback from the Crow Indian Reservation in southern Montana to Washington, D.C. He made this ambitious nine-month trip on a horse named Montana. “The ride was made for the purpose of creating interest in a proposal to establish a national holiday in commemoration of the North American Indian,” reported the Billings Weekly Gazette shortly after Red Fox James completed the journey.

Red Fox James, who is widely believed to have been of both Blood (Kainai) and Blackfoot ancestry, was born sometime around 1890 in the Blood Indian Reserve No. 148 in what is now the Canadian province of Alberta. By 1914, he was living in the town of Waldheim, Montana.

During his long-distance 1914 journey, Red Fox James traveled mostly on the Lincoln Highway. He often walked in the daytime to help conserve the strength of his horse. Red Fox James’ journey attracted press coverage nationwide. The Greensboro Daily News in North Carolina, for example, featured a front-page photo of Red Fox James and his horse during their stopover in Omaha, Nebraska, in August. This photo depicted both of them alongside an automobile carrying the city’s mayor James Dahlman.

As he slowly but steadily made his way eastward, Red Fox James spoke in many communities en route about the needs and cultures of Native Americans. He also performed equestrian stunts at those stops. Red Fox James carried with him a letter of support from Governor Sam V. Stewart of Montana for an American Indian Day and he ultimately obtained similar endorsements from 23 other state governments during his ride to the nation’s capital.

Red Fox James finally arrived in the Washington, D.C., area in December. He visited the White House, where Senator Thomas J. Walsh of Montana introduced him to President Woodrow Wilson. Red Fox James gave Wilson all of the documents promoting the call for American Indian Day. (This meeting, incidentally, took place just a few days after representatives from the newly formed American Association of State Highway Officials had met with Wilson there at the White House.)

While such a national holiday commemorating Native Americans was not established at the time, a few states subsequently created their own versions of that day. The first of these states was New York, which began officially celebrating American Indian Day in 1916.

Red Fox James is best known today for his 1914 horseback trek between the Great Plains and the Eastern Seaboard, but he also made other noteworthy contributions during his life. These contributions included serving as a member of the Society of American Indians, the first national rights organizations run by and for Native Americans; establishing the first Boy Scout troop for Native Americans; and championing the right of women to vote.

Red Fish was a chief of the Oglala Lakota tribe in the 1840s. He had met with the Jesuit missionary Father Peter John De...
01/03/2023

Red Fish was a chief of the Oglala Lakota tribe in the 1840s. He had met with the Jesuit missionary Father Peter John De Smet at Fort Pierre in South Dakota in 1848. He asked for De Smet's help in gaining the return of his daughter who had been kidnapped by the Crow after he had made a disastrous unprovoked raid upon them.
Red Fish was a participant in the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1851, where he represented the Miniconjou with his son Lone Horn (c. 1814-1875). He negotiated with Chief Big Robber of the Crow to establish regional boundaries.

Chief Jim James and his second wife, Mrs. Lucy (Michel) James near their home Keller, within Ferry County, Washington - ...
01/01/2023

Chief Jim James and his second wife, Mrs. Lucy (Michel) James near their home Keller, within Ferry County, Washington - Sanpoil - circa 1950

{Note: Jim James, the son of Qual-Qual-Kiah, was born in 1875. His first wife Mrs. Millie James died in 1944. Then in 1945, he married his second wife, Yak-o-malx (aka Lucy Michel), the daughter of Sam Michel. Chief Jim James died in 1961, and Mrs. Lucy (Michel) James died in 1962.}

Lozen (c. 1840-June 17, 1889) was a warrior and prophet of the Chihenne Chiricahua Apache. She was the sister of Victori...
01/01/2023

Lozen (c. 1840-June 17, 1889) was a warrior and prophet of the Chihenne Chiricahua Apache. She was the sister of Victorio, a prominent chief. Born into the Chihenne band during the 1840s, Lozen was, according to legends, able to use her powers in battle to learn the movements of the enemy. According to James Kaywaykla, Victorio introduced her to Nana, "Lozen is my right hand ... strong as a man, braver than most, and cunning in strategy. Lozen is a shield to her people".

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