Indian councils
Found in 15 Collections and/or Records:
Appaetone, Kiowa Chief, & Quanah Parker, Comanche Chief at a council, July 1900., 1900, Jul
Black and white steel engraving of “Indians in Council.” (1853). Shows the chief talking to several of his tribe (some standing, most seated) with a large tepee in background. By S. Eastman from Schoolcraft’s Indian Tribes. , 1853
Black-and-white and color engravings of Indians of the Southwest, namely Pueblo, Hopi, and Navajo. Included are scenes of village life, native dwellings, individual Indians, and dances. Though less numerous, depictions of hunting and ceremonies of the Lakota, Blackfeet, Chippewa, and Mandan Indians are also included in the collection.
Blackfoot Indian Council. Original print, 8x10., undated
Black and white copy prints of Arikara, Apache, Arapaho, Assiniboin, Blackfoot, Cayuse, Comanche, Crow, Cherokee, Cayuga, Chinook, Caddo, Choctaw, Chippewa, Cheyenne, Delaware, Hidatsa, Hopi, Iowa, Kaw, Kickapoo, Kichai, Kiowa, Klamath, Laguna, Moki, Modoc, Makah, Mandan, Makah, Mandan, Miami, Missouri, Nez Perce, Onadaga, Omaha, Oto, Osage, Paiute, Puyallup, Pawnee, Peoria, Papago, Potawatomi, Pueblo, Ponca, Quapaw, Quinault, Sac and Fox, Salish, Seminole, Seneca, Shawnee, Sioux, Shoshoni, Tuscarora, Umatilla, Ute, Walla Walla, Winnebago, Wyandotte, Yakima, Yuma, Yuchi, and Zuni Indians. George Rainey Manuscript Collection also in repository.
Business committee of the Kickapoo tribe in 1936. Credit: The Kansas State Historical Society, Topeka, Kansas. Negative, 5x7., 1936
Black-and-white original and copy prints of Kickapoo Indians from Kansas, Oklahoma, and Mexico, as well as Kickapoo bark lodges.
Chief Little Soldier, Ponca, Supreme Judge of the Court Council of Indian Offenses. With full headdress and calumet. Studio portrait. Photographer – Drake, Ponca City, Oklahoma. Original print, 4x6., undated
Black and white copy prints of Arikara, Apache, Arapaho, Assiniboin, Blackfoot, Cayuse, Comanche, Crow, Cherokee, Cayuga, Chinook, Caddo, Choctaw, Chippewa, Cheyenne, Delaware, Hidatsa, Hopi, Iowa, Kaw, Kickapoo, Kichai, Kiowa, Klamath, Laguna, Moki, Modoc, Makah, Mandan, Makah, Mandan, Miami, Missouri, Nez Perce, Onadaga, Omaha, Oto, Osage, Paiute, Puyallup, Pawnee, Peoria, Papago, Potawatomi, Pueblo, Ponca, Quapaw, Quinault, Sac and Fox, Salish, Seminole, Seneca, Shawnee, Sioux, Shoshoni, Tuscarora, Umatilla, Ute, Walla Walla, Winnebago, Wyandotte, Yakima, Yuma, Yuchi, and Zuni Indians. George Rainey Manuscript Collection also in repository.
Conference at Camp Weld, Denver, September 28, 1864. John Smith (interpreter), White Wolf, Bosse (Cheyenne), Neva (Arapaho), Bull Bear (Cheyenne), Black Kettle, One Eye (Cheyenne), Major Edward W. Wynkoop, Major Silas Soule (Provost Marshall)., 1864 September 28
Black and white copy prints of William W. Bent, John M. Chivington, Cheyenne and Arapaho leaders, and participants of the Camp Weld conference at Denver, Colorado in 1864. Also includes photographs of paintings, drawings, and lithographs by George Catlin, Richard West, J.W. Albert, and John Mix Stanley.
Council meeting including Woodland Indians from Oklahoma and white men., undated
Council of Comanche, Kiowa, and Apache chiefs with Lt. Brecher. [See also Phillips #720; and Kiowa County Historical Society #132]. Identified as 1. Quanah Parker, Comanche; 2. Ahpeatone, Kiowa; 3. Lone Wolf, Kiowa; 4. Koon-kah-zah-chy, Apache; 5. Ca-va-yo, Comanche; 6. Pah-ko-toquodle, Kiowa; 7. George Hunt, Kiowa (Interpreter); 8. Mo-ziz-zoom-dy, Apache; 9. Soontey, Apache; 10. Ar-rushe, Comanche; 11. Es-i-ti, Comanche; 12. San-ka-do-ta, Kiowa; 13. Otto Wells, Comanche (Interpreter); 14. Delos K. Lonewolf, Kiowa; 15. Tennyson Berry, Apache (Interpreter); 16. Pe-ah-coose, Comanche; 17. Eustace Merrick, Comanche; 18. Kline-ko-le, Apache; 19. Max Frizzlehead, Kiowa; 20. Ko-mah-ty, Kiowa; 21. Henry Tse-lee, Apache; 22. Lt. Stecker, Indian Agent; 23. John A. Hendricks, U.S. Indian Bureau Attorney., undated
Distant view of American Indians outside the administration building of the Anadarko Agency, gathering for a council meeting. July 11, 1901., 1901, Jul 11
Edward Everett Dale Collection
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Historian. Correspondence, student term papers, theses and dissertations, and personal research materials regarding the history of Oklahoma and Indian Territories, the state of Oklahoma, Indians of North America and the American Southwest; teaching materials used by Dale at Harvard and the University of Oklahoma; administrative and other files of the Works Progress Administration's Indian-Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma; U.S. Government documents issued by various cabinet-level departments and agencies, including Agriculture and Interior; and a portion of the University of Oklahoma Persidential papers of James Shannon Buchanan and Stratton D. Brooks. Edward Everett Dale Photograph Collection also in repository.
Indian council. (Glass plate negative), undated
Leonard M. Logan Collection
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University professor. Correspondence (1950-1958) with the Department of the Interior, congressmen, and the Bureau of Indian Affairs; reports (1956-1963) and newspaper clippings (1925-1961) concerning Indian affairs; and manuscripts (1948) entitled "The Care of Chronic and Convalescent Patients in Oklahoma" by Logan, and "Norman and Cleveland County, A Resource Inventory.".
Madeline Czarina Colbert Conlan Collection
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Historian. Manuscripts by Conlan reflecting the histories and cultures of numerous Indian tribes, the Choctaw Indians in particular, from 1756 to 1932; and a textbook, published in Great Britain (1950).
Quanah Parker and his council. (Oversize), Undated
Black and white original and copy prints of Comanche, Kiowa, Wichita, Cheyenne, Chickasaw and Choctaw Indians. The collection includes scenes of the Choctaw tribal council house, Muskogee, Indian Territory, and the Goodland Indian School. Jay L. Hargett Manuscript Collection also in repository.
Tinted lithograph of “Council with White Man’s Horse.” (1860). Shows a small group of Indians and small group of white men. The Indian chief and a white man standing facing each other and speaking for his group. Tents and covered wagons in background. By J.M. Stanley from Pacific R.R. Surveys, Volume 12-Part I. , 1860
Black-and-white and color engravings of Indians of the Southwest, namely Pueblo, Hopi, and Navajo. Included are scenes of village life, native dwellings, individual Indians, and dances. Though less numerous, depictions of hunting and ceremonies of the Lakota, Blackfeet, Chippewa, and Mandan Indians are also included in the collection.