Indian love

234 Pins
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11mo
a woman sitting in the grass next to a horse
Profile portrait of Two-Guns White Calf. Pictograph/Signed in lower right of border. Blackfoot Indian, American Photo, Buffalo Nickel, The Old West, Indian History, Native American History, The Buffalo, American Culture, American People
Cowan's Auction House
Profile portrait of Two-Guns White Calf. Pictograph/Signed in lower right of border.
an old black and white photo of a native american man with feathers on his head
Joseph White Bull (the son of Makes Room) - Mniconjou/Hunkpapa - 1891
an old black and white photo of a native american man
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Yellow Shirt, Cиу.
a black and white photo of a woman with long hair
Tantoo Cardinal, actor CREE, FIRST NATIONS ALBERTA CANADA
native american man with painted face and feathers
kaktak
Rodney Grant, Omaha
an old photo of a native american man with feathers on his head and in traditional garb
Little Horse - Oglala.
Little Horse - Oglala
an old black and white photo of a native american woman with feathers on her head
Many Horses - Oglala.
American Indians : Many Horses - Oglala.
Bull Tongue - Apsaroke (The North American Indian, v. IV. Cambridge, MA: The University Press, 1909) Ralph Mcquarrie, Wilde Westen, American Photo, The Americans, The Old West, Native American History, Indian History, The Crow, American Culture
Bull Tongue - Apsaroke (The North American Indian, v. IV. Cambridge, MA: The University Press, 1909)
Blackfoot indian Blackfoot Indian, Wilde Westen, The Old West, Native American History, Indian History, American Culture, American People, Sioux, American Heritage
blackfoot indians photos
Blackfoot indian
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an old black and white photo of a man in native american clothing holding a guitar
Bemos A. Geshig, Ojibwa (Chief?), in Partial Native Dress and Holding War Club, by Charles Milton Bell, Photographs of American Indians, circa 1874-1890. (Original)
an old photo of a native american man holding a stick and wearing a headdress
Blackfoot or Siksika Native Americans (Indians)
Aatsista-Mahkan or Running rabbit (c. 1833 - probably 24 January 1911) was a chief of the Siksika First Nation. He was the son of Akamukai (Many Swans), chief of the Biters band, and following the death of his father in 1871, Aatsista-Mahkan took control of the band. He was known for his generosity and kindness, and for his loyal protection of his family. In 1877, he was a signatory to Treaty 7, but he and his people continued to follow the bison until 1881
two faces with different facial expressions and the words never forget, i've come from them
Native Americans
an old photo of two men on horses with a native american chief in the background
Steel Bison
<> 1905 by Edward S. Curtis.
an old photo of a native american man
Little Daylight (born Lakota and accepted as a Crow) - 1905