Indians of North America -- Burial
Found in 8 Collections and/or Records:
Black and white steel engraving “Feeding the Dead.” (1853). Shows two Native American women bringing an offering to an elevated grave-some graves are on the ground. 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.
Black and white steel engraving “Indian Burial.” (1853). Shows the body of the deceased being raised to a platform. 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.
Black and white steel engraving “Mourning for the Dead.” (1856). Shows relatives gathered at an elevated greave-one women pierces her arm and another cuts her hair. By S. Eastman from Schoolcraft’s Indian Tribes. , 1856
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.
Black and white steel engraving of “Nocturnal Grave Light.” Shows a romanticized view of a woman keeping a graveside vigil. By A. A. Gibson from Schoolcraft’s Indian Tribes. , undated
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.
Indian grave located on O.W. Tucker Ranch, near Kenton, OK-1929., 1929
Black-and-white original prints of the Truman Tucker family that lived near Kenton, Oklahoma. Included are photographs of Truman and Fred Tucker as children celebrating Christmas in the early 1900s; street and business scenes of Kenton, Oklahoma; ranching and farming activities; and hunting scenes. The collection also contains photographs of Black Mesa in the Oklahoma panhandle.
Sophia Little Bear Dahlberg Collection
FULL FINDING AID (PDF)
Collector. Photocopies of birth and death certificates and related genealogical materials of members of the Little Bear family including Bacon Rind, Haynes Little Bear, Dora Pah Se To Pah, Jack Portilla, Sophia Little Bear Dahlberg, Edward L. Chouteau and Rosalie Capitaine Chouteau. Also in the collection are tombstone inscriptions from the old Kiowa Indian cemetery near Duncan, Oklahoma, and the Dyeo Mission cemetery near Lawton, Oklahoma, along with a checklist of Osage Indian songs in the Library of Congress collection and published information about Osage Indian traditions.
Tinted lithograph of a “Sioux Grave, Mouse River.” (1878). Shows the body wrapped and lying on top of a platform of sticks. From Campbell and Twining’s U.S. and Canadian Boundary Survey. , 1878
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.
Walter Stanley Campbell Collection
Professor. Personal correspondence (1897–1957); correspondence with Campbell’s relatives (1822–1896); correspondence with publishers and literary agents (1920–1958); literary manuscripts (circa 1914–1957); diaries, notebooks, and journals (1901–1926); and business papers (circa 1925–1959) regarding Campbell’s writings on the West, Indians, and Oklahoma, with emphasis on transportation, fortifications, cowboys, wars and battles, criminals and outlaws, and American Indian chiefs, along with original Indian art by Carl Sweezy. [Boxes 104 through 121 of this collection are available online at the OU Libraries website.]FULL FINDING AID (PDF)