47 Rare Colour Photos Of Native Americans From The 19th And 20th Century
Film-maker Paul Ratner developed a passion for researching old photographs of indigenous people while making "Moses on the Mesa", a film about a German-Jewish immigrant who fell in love with a Native-American woman and became governor of her tribe of Acoma Pueblo in New Mexico in the late 1800s.
“What has been most gratifying to me about researching old photos of Native Americans is when the relatives of the people featured in the photos discover them through our popular Facebook page," Ratner told Bored Panda. "Many of them have never seen these photos and are excited to find them. It is also exciting when folks correctly identify the people and the tribes pictured in the photos since the archives or vintage photo auctions often have incorrect or incomplete information. I feel like through this process we are reclaiming some lost history.”
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Minnehaha. 1904
"Rare color photo"?? I don't think so.... this one has to be just a picture of a painting since Minnehaha never existed!
Please explain. How can this be a real photo? Minnehaha is a fictional Native American woman documented in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's 1855 epic poem The Song of Hiawatha.
Call it artistic license. The girl must have reminded the photographer of Longfellow's poem, so he felt compelled to make the cultural reference.
Load More Replies...Bone Necklace. Oglala Lakota Chief. 1899. Photo By Heyn Photo
This man has a sensitive, intelligent face and beautiful hands. This is an example of those who fell victim to the brutality of those who wanted their land. Sensitive face and beautiful hands. This man is an example of those we murdered for land.
Dont forget that, Indian would kill indian as well, they had wars, and they captured territory from their own people, they killed their own people, just like we do, just like any human does. A sensitive face and beautifull hands you say, rest assure those hands and face went to war against another Indian tribe. They murdered for land too, as with everyone else. Just because we conquered them, does not mean they automatically are innocent. Those are warriors, and they didnt became warriors by sitting around smoking peace pipe.
Load More Replies...This is my great grandmothers maternal Uncle. Image my surprise to see this photo! Wow!!!
What a beautiful man. He's someone you just want to sit beside and learn from or draw strength and peace from. I wish I'd known him.
Blackfeet Tribal Camp With Grazing Horses. Montana. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide By Walter Mcclintock
Eagle Arrow. A Siksika Man. Montana. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide By Walter Mcclintock
They called us superstitious until they catch up, then they call it science
Are these photos available for painting? I would really like to paint them.
Blackfeet Girl. Montana. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide By Walter Mcclintock
Her skin should be darker. They colorized these originally black-and-white photos so it is not the actual color of what she actually was. I have noticed this in paintings and colorized photos of indigenous Americans, and darker-skinned peoples around the world. Painters and photo editors will often lighten the skin color of the subjects because of the white beauty standard. This is especially true for darker-skinned women to make them seem more "beautiful" in the eyes of many even though I and many other men find darker-skinned women to be far more beautiful than fair-skinned women.
Her skin should probably be darker. They colorized it so it is not the actual color of what she actually was. I have noticed this in paintings and colorized photos of indigenous Americans, and darker-skinned peoples around the world. Painters and photo editors will often lighten the skin color of the subjects because of the white beauty standard. This is especially true for darker-skinned women to make them seem more "beautiful" in the eyes of even though I and many other men find darker-skinned women to be the more beautiful than fair-skinned women.
My great grandmother was Blackfeet, she was bought when she was 14 and brought to the east coast . My grandfather said she used to say we are from the nowashy tribe every time the kids had muddy bare feet. It is really cool to see how my face resembles even this women. My sister looks alot like her.
This girl looks like me at that age . My grandmothers great,great grandmother was a Indian chiefs daughter. She married a imergant that worked for the railroad. Also our last name is McClantoc which I was told had been changed over the years though misspelling from McClintok to McClantoc
Load More Replies...Chief James A. Garfield. Jicarilla Apache. 1899. Photo By William Henry Jackson
The Apaches were among the fiercest fighters, much feared. Death was meted out slowly and painfully.
"Painted Tipis Of The Headmen". Blackfeet. Montana. Early 1900s. By Walter Mcclintock
More like "sad to think" it was only 100 years ago".
Load More Replies...The Blackfeet were warriors and bison hunters. They were almost decimated after exposure to European diseases. They were given a reservation, and there are still about 15,000 in the U.S. More live in Canada.
Arrowmaker, An Ojibwe Man. 1903
Beautiful bead work in the necklaces and medallion. He looks European with light colored eyes. I wonder what his background is.
"Ringing Bell". 1908. Minnesota. Handpainted Photo Print By Roland W. Reed
They are not "yours". You are on their land they are not animals or creatures for you to own as "yours". What a diminitive, belittling, and inconsiderate thing to say about people whose land was stolen from them and on which you likely live on.
Load More Replies...Nearly naked AND wearing a headdress..every white man's fantasy..Native women did NOT go around half nude!! We are modest and back then, it would have gotten her punished , if not banned from her family snd tribe ..and Native women DO NOT WEAR HEADRESSES!! they r sacred..every Eagle feather earned..only a Chief wears it and only for special ceremonies and occassions..this picture helps perpetuate the image of Native women as being promiscuous and sexually avert..nothing is further from the truth!! Shame on you
Handpainted Print Of A Young Woman By The River. Early 1900s. Photo By Roland W. Reed
They look nothing alike, unless you mean she has black hair and is wearing buckskin.
Load More Replies...Charles American Horse (the Son Of Chief American Horse). Oglala Lakota. 1901. Photo By William Herman Rau
"Crazy Horse, Red Cloud, and other Lakota Sioux leaders are among the most famous of all ... , Oglala, or Sicangu ... The 1890s were difficult years for the Sioux."
Chief Little Wound And Family. Oglala Lakota. 1899. Photo By Heyn Photo
The Oglala Lakota were fierce warriors. Their beading was exquisite. That said, I don't think they were fashionistas.
Cheyenne Chief Wolf Robe. Color Halftone Reproduction Of A Painting From A F. A. Rinehart Photograph. 1898
The Cheyenne were the Indian's Indian -- their ethics, beliefs, and philosophical ideas were greatly honored by the other Indian tribes.
"In the Battle of the Little Bighorn on June 25, 1876, the Cheyenne, along with the Lakota Sioux and a small band of Arapaho, annihilated George Armstrong Custer and his troops near the Little Bighorn River. Known as the greatest Native American victory, 262 soldiers died in the battle, while only an estimated 60 Indian warriors were killed." No one deserved this more than Custer who was less a man than any Indian he murdered.
”In Summer”. Kiowa. 1898. Photo By F.a. Rinehart
"The Apache Indians are well-known today for their unique culture, but more specifically, their talent in art. Their art mainly encompassed silver smithing, bead work, sculpting, pottery, and intricate basket weaving." The Kiowa were part of the larger Apache tribes.
“Songlike”, A Pueblo Man, 1899. Photo By F.a. Rinehart
Visited the Pueblo Indian reservation in New Mexico. Amazing place with a burial ground in the mountains above it.
Walks-in-the-water (soya-wa-awachkai) And Her Baby Koumiski (round Face). Siksika. Montana. Ear
Children were sacred to the Indians. They didn't raise their voices or hand to them. These children were communally raised and cared for. Free and not forced to do anything yet they excelled at what they were interested in and were wise even though they didn't learn algebra or how to diagram sentences
Amos Two Bulls. Lakota. Photo By Gertrude Käsebier
This is a very intelligent, thoughtful face. We will never know completely the men and women we destroyed in our march across the continent.
She Who Travels In The Sky. Ojibwe. 1908. Photo By Roland Reed
"The Chippewa Indians, also known as the Ojibway or Ojibwe, lived mainly in Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Dakota, and Ontario. They speak a form of the Algonquian language and were closely related to the Ottawa and Potawatomi Indians. The Chippewas were allies of the French and French traders often married Chippewa women. Chippewa warriors fought with the French against the British in the French and Indian War. But political alliances changed with the times. During the American Revolution the Chippewas sided with the British against the Americans. "
Northern Plains Man On An Overlook. Montana. Early 1900s. Hand-colored Photo By Roland W. Reed
Blackfeet Children (including "sa-ko-uka-etsusin"). Montana. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide B
Note the exquisite beading; the Blackfeet were known for their beading artistry.
I have been informed that this is right, sorry
Load More Replies...Mrs. Bad Gun. 1879. Cheyenne. Photo By L.a.huffman
The Cheyenne were fierce warriors, and they had a very strong culture. They learned to read and write.
In the 1950's, they were forced to read and write. Children were removed from their tribes and beaten and killed, (more than 500) for not following " the white rules at boarding schools". History lessons are not lies that can be erased to make this generation, " feel better". https://www.wowt.com/2023/11/06/survivors-say-trauma-abusive-native-american-boarding-schools-stretches-across-generations/
Load More Replies...Handpainted Print Depicting Five Riders Going Downhill In Montana. Early 1900s. Photo By Roland W. Reed
" The Crow are a northern Plains tribe, famous for their expert horsemanship and especially long hair. The Crow tribe are now mostly located on a reservation south of Billings, Montana. Some historians believe the early home of the Crow-Hidatsa ancestral tribe was near the headwaters of the Mississippi River in either northern Minnesota or Wisconsin; others place them in the Winnipeg area of Manitoba. Later the people moved to the Devil's Lake region of North Dakota before the Crow split from the Hidatsa and moved westward. The Crow were largely pushed Westward by the intrusion and influx of the Sioux, the Sioux being pushed West themselves by American expansion. Once established in Montana and Wyoming, the Crow eventually divided into two groups: the Mountain Crow and River Crow. --The Crow had more horses than any other Plains tribe; in 1914 they numbered approximately thirty to forty thousand head "
So basically in about 100 years they have done all the damage to the tribes? Yet Americans say it was the British who wiped them out
Si Wa Wata Wa. A Zuni Elder. New Mexico. 1903. Photo By Edward S. Curtis
"The Zuni are one of the 19 Pueblo tribes of what is now known as New Mexico. The Zuni tribe lives along the Zuni River in the northwestern corner of the state on a reservation of roughly 450,000 acres." They are known for their pottery and baskets.
A Blackfoot Couple. Montana. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide By Walter Mcclintock
An example of the exquisite beading the Blackfeet were known for. Beautiful picture.
"Coming Running". Blackfeet Woman With Children. Montana. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide By W
my mistake, I have been informed that it is correct, sorry
Load More Replies...Ojibwe Woman. Early 1900s. Photo By Roland Reed
Piegan Couple. Ca. 1890-1910. Glacier National Park, Montana. Colorized Photo/postcard
Night-herder On Lookout Butte Overlooking Old Man's River. Blackfeet. Montana. Early 1900s. Gla
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Red Stripe Tipi And The Thunder Tipi. Siksika Camp. Montana. Early 1900s
Blackfeet Family. Montana. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide By Walter Mcclintock
Vapore. Maricopa. 1899. Photo By F.a. Rinehart
"The most interesting fact in the history of these people is, that as far back as the records extend they lived, as they do to this day, by cultivating the earth; showing a direct affinity with the Pueblo Indians of New Mexico. Alarcon, who visited the great valley of the Colorado in 1540, mentions that it was cultivated to a considerable extent by tribes having a fixed residence and permanent abodes. Unlike the Apaches and the mountain tribes to the north, who live a wandering and predatory life, the Pimos have always manifested a friendly disposition toward the whites, and seem much devoted to the peaceful pursuits of agriculture and stock-raising."
A Medicine Man With Patient. Taos Pueblo, New Mexico. 1905. Photo By Carl Moon
Taos has a very old Pueblo settlement. Visited there and ate some of the most delicious bread I ever had. Brought home a recipe and some ingredients, but never able to duplicate it. Might be the old clay ovens.
Broken Arm. Oglala Lakota. Ca. 1899. Photo By F.a. Rinehart
I have a lithograph like this, I found it behind a antique portrait.
Acoma Pueblo. New Mexico. Early 1900s. Photo By Chicago Transparency Company
I found that "early 1900's " to be interesting, as I had actually thought it looked more current. I'd image that's because it has been colored. I like this one!
Geronimo (goyaałé). Apache. 1898. Photo By F.a. Rinehart
Geronimo means "one who yawns" - He surrendered MANY times and was eventually put on Apache reservations in Arizona. Geronimo eventually became a celebrity. He appeared at fairs, including the 1904 World's Fair in St. Louis,and sold souvenirs and photographs of himself. However, he was NEVER allowed to return to the land of his birth. He died at the Fort Sill hospital in 1909 AND he was still a prisoner of war. He is buried at the Fort Sill Indian Agency Cemetery surrounded by the graves of relatives and other Apache prisoners of war. This man was used and abused beyond belief
Written after reading Watch for Me on the Mountain, a novel of Geronimo and the Apache Nation, by Native American author and Storyteller in Council to the Cherokee Nations, Forrest Carter. HOW GERONIMO GOT HIS NAME Sue Littleton Una moneda, señor, una moneda, por favor, ‘n I will tell you how that diablo Geronimo got his name! He stole the name of a good Catholic saint — San Geronimo, patron saint of Kaskiyeh, the pueblito my father’s folks come from! He was one of them Apache War Shamans, and he took feroz mad against us mejicanos when the soldados killed his young squaw ‘n their three niños. The warriors was all out on a huntin’ party, ‘n militares from the guarnación in the pueblo, they found the Apache camp, just wimmin ‘n kids ‘n old men — them soldados, they killed a lot of indios that day! My father’s mother, la abuelita, she was a skinny little girl, nine or ten, ‘n she hid good when them Apaches come lookin’ for venganza, shootin’ n’ burning.
Piegan Men Giving Prayer To The Thunderbird Near A River In Montana. 1912. Photo By Roland W. Reed
Ute Chief Ignacio. 1870-1890
Tribal history states that at age fourteen he killed every member of a rival family to avenge the murder of his father.
Was he chief from those dates or his age span...if so he looks older than 20. clothes look so modern !
A Woman By The Star Tipi In Blackfoot Camp. Early 1900s
Riders With Coup Sticks. Blackfeet. Montana. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide By Walter Mcclint
The idea was to ride into battle and touch an armed enemy with your coup stick, bringing great honor to you and your tribe -- it was called "counting coup."
"Hiawatha's Return." 1904. Photo By Detroit Photographic Co
If i'm not mistaken the tree at the side of the tipi seems to me to be the one where the No 1 picture in your list is the one where Minihaha's picture was taken,
Thunder Tipi Of Brings-down-the-sun. Blackfoot Camp. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide By Walte
Old Coyote (aka Yellow Dog). Crow. Original Photo Circa 1879 (color Tinted Circa 1910)
Copper or Gold?....and the fur on his braids are impressive
Load More Replies...Ugh, I love the photos but hate the tinting. Keep them B&W or sepia at the most.
A Crow Dancer. Early 1900s. Photo By Richard Throssel
Strong Left Hand And Family. Northern Cheyenne Reservation. 1906. Photo By Julia Tuell
Pulling the children in this manner was not uncommon for those too big for mom to carry but too small to keep up with traveling.
Notice Mother is walking with a child on her back. Indian women must have been a lot stronger than the males.
Load More Replies...Bear Chief Cutting A Green Hide. Blackfeet. Montana. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide By Walter
Chief Mad Wolf. Blackfeet. Montana. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide By Walter Mcclintock
Chief Hollow Horn Bear. Sicangu Lakota. 1905. Photo By Delancey W. Gill
Excuse me please. I imagine that you might miss having smart phones, vaccines, autos, and indoor plumbing.
Load More Replies...I grew up in Montana by Glacier Park. I wish as a child i had a greater appreciation for diversity like i do now. Beautiful people & photo
Sincere, unique, beautiful... Makes me wanna build a time machine... :-)
Me too. 🥺 It's like we're living in the wrong timeline, one where the sweetest and kindest people were met with unspeakable cruelty.
Load More Replies...Beautiful! This needs to be sent to the American government, who care so much about people's rights in other countries, yet give none to the Native of their continent!!!!
I love the pictures but I know we took stuff from them that we had no right to have. shame on us.
And you think that their ancestors did not take 'stuff' from other tribes living there before they arrived?
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Excuse me please. I imagine that you might miss having smart phones, vaccines, autos, and indoor plumbing.
Load More Replies...I grew up in Montana by Glacier Park. I wish as a child i had a greater appreciation for diversity like i do now. Beautiful people & photo
Sincere, unique, beautiful... Makes me wanna build a time machine... :-)
Me too. 🥺 It's like we're living in the wrong timeline, one where the sweetest and kindest people were met with unspeakable cruelty.
Load More Replies...Beautiful! This needs to be sent to the American government, who care so much about people's rights in other countries, yet give none to the Native of their continent!!!!
I love the pictures but I know we took stuff from them that we had no right to have. shame on us.
And you think that their ancestors did not take 'stuff' from other tribes living there before they arrived?
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