Details

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Collection: 00086 - Paul Ewald Photograph Collection
Folder: 0012
Item: 00615
Title: Mr. and Mrs. Black Chest in a Fort Berthold tipi camp with two female family members
Date: 1907
Creator: Wilson, Gilbert Livingstone,--1868-1930
Inscription/Marks: On the front: II-9, which corresponds to numbering of Minnesota Historical Society Wilson photos. On the back: col. 86-615, and speculative identifications.
Summary: Dressed in full traditional Hidatsa regalia, members of the family of the old Indian scout Black Chest pose near a tent near many tipis. Pots hang from a nearby sapling, and a campfire and cooking area have been set up close to where Black Chest and the women stand. Black Chest wears a single upright eagle feather in his otter fur turban, a fringed and quilled tunic, and decorated leggings. Beside him his wife is simply dressed in a patterned dress with a blanket shawl. A small girl and the woman next to her are more elaborately dressed in clothing with striped skirts and cape area of the shoulders decorated with cowrie shells or elk teeth. The older of the two, possibly Mrs. Julia Grinnell, also known by Hunts to Dig, has a breastplate of dentalia. Notes suggest Hunts to dig was called Mrs. Porcupine, later Mrs. Running Rabbit, and eventually Mrs. Yellow Wolf. Taken in 1907 during the Gilbert L. Wilson ethnographic study of the Hidatsa, and marked with the number associated with his collection housed in the Minnesota Historical Society.
Red ID: PH_I_140457 Image ID: 101710 Image Notes: 00086-00615

Collection: 00086 Digitized Images from Collection
Title: Paul Ewald Photograph Collection
Date: 1875-Circa 1960

Summary: Consists of prints and some copy negatives of several photographers on the Fort Berthold Reservation, primarily Gilbert L. Wilson, and also including Frances Densmore, Frank Fiske, Fred Olson, Sumner Matteson, and several unidentified photographers. Ewald wrote identification of many photographs in his collection based upon suggestions from the people of Fort Berthold. Images include celebrations and gatherings, dances, sweat lodges, Little Missouri camps, cradles, portraits, Buffalo Bird Woman, Wolf Chief, Goodbird, Indian crafts and skills, artifacts, wood gathering, gardening, food processing and cooking, earth lodges, bullboats, travois, and Indian cowboys.

This image may be restricted. Contact reference staff for assistance.
Collection: 00086 - Paul Ewald Photograph Collection
Folder: 0012
Item: 00615
Title: Mr. and Mrs. Black Chest in a Fort Berthold tipi camp with two female family members
Date: 1907
Creator: Wilson, Gilbert Livingstone,--1868-1930
Inscription/Marks: On the front: II-9, which corresponds to numbering of Minnesota Historical Society Wilson photos. On the back: col. 86-615, and speculative identifications.
Summary: Dressed in full traditional Hidatsa regalia, members of the family of the old Indian scout Black Chest pose near a tent near many tipis. Pots hang from a nearby sapling, and a campfire and cooking area have been set up close to where Black Chest and the women stand. Black Chest wears a single upright eagle feather in his otter fur turban, a fringed and quilled tunic, and decorated leggings. Beside him his wife is simply dressed in a patterned dress with a blanket shawl. A small girl and the woman next to her are more elaborately dressed in clothing with striped skirts and cape area of the shoulders decorated with cowrie shells or elk teeth. The older of the two, possibly Mrs. Julia Grinnell, also known by Hunts to Dig, has a breastplate of dentalia. Notes suggest Hunts to dig was called Mrs. Porcupine, later Mrs. Running Rabbit, and eventually Mrs. Yellow Wolf. Taken in 1907 during the Gilbert L. Wilson ethnographic study of the Hidatsa, and marked with the number associated with his collection housed in the Minnesota Historical Society.
Red ID: PH_I_140457 Image ID: 101462 Image Notes: 00086-00615-back

Collection: 00086 Digitized Images from Collection
Title: Paul Ewald Photograph Collection
Date: 1875-Circa 1960

Summary: Consists of prints and some copy negatives of several photographers on the Fort Berthold Reservation, primarily Gilbert L. Wilson, and also including Frances Densmore, Frank Fiske, Fred Olson, Sumner Matteson, and several unidentified photographers. Ewald wrote identification of many photographs in his collection based upon suggestions from the people of Fort Berthold. Images include celebrations and gatherings, dances, sweat lodges, Little Missouri camps, cradles, portraits, Buffalo Bird Woman, Wolf Chief, Goodbird, Indian crafts and skills, artifacts, wood gathering, gardening, food processing and cooking, earth lodges, bullboats, travois, and Indian cowboys.

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