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Beautiful artwork found on pinterest♥️
04/20/2025

Beautiful artwork found on pinterest♥️

Wooden Leg. Cheyenne. 1927. Photo by Thomas B. Marquis
04/20/2025

Wooden Leg. Cheyenne. 1927. Photo by Thomas B. Marquis

Geronimo. Apache. Early 1900s. Oklahoma?— với Antonio Betz.
04/12/2025

Geronimo. Apache. Early 1900s. Oklahoma?
— với Antonio Betz.

American Indian Tribes Today.
04/12/2025

American Indian Tribes Today.

Quanah Parker, chief of the Comanches. 1900.
04/12/2025

Quanah Parker, chief of the Comanches. 1900.

THE COMANCHE CHIEF QUANAH PARKER:He was their most famous chief. Born to white mother Cynthia Ann Parker (captured in a ...
04/11/2025

THE COMANCHE CHIEF QUANAH PARKER:

He was their most famous chief. Born to white mother Cynthia Ann Parker (captured in a Comanche raid at age 9), wife of Chief Peta Nocona. He is shown here posing with a photo of his mother breast feeding.

Courtesy~TrueWestMagazine

Alchesay, also known as William Alchesay, Alchisay and Alchise, May 17, 1853 – August 6, 1928, was a chief of the White ...
04/11/2025

Alchesay, also known as William Alchesay, Alchisay and Alchise, May 17, 1853 – August 6, 1928, was a chief of the White Mountain Apache tribe and an Indian Scout. He received the United States military's highest decoration for bravery, the Medal of Honor, for his actions during the Indian Wars.

He tried to convince Geronimo to surrender peacefully on behalf of the United States government and remained friends with Geronimo until his death. After the wars were over he returned home to his wives and became a rancher and was active in Indian affairs.

Biography
He was born May 17, 1853, in a part of the Arizona Territory known as Limestone Canyon. He joined the Indian Scouts at Camp Verde December 2, 1872 and served under General George Crook in actions against an uprising of the Chiricahua Apache in the winter of 1872–1873, holding the rank of Sergeant. He was cited for gallantry, and acted as an envoy from Crook to Geronimo, trying to convince him to surrender peacefully.

Crook's aide (and fellow Medal of Honor recipient) John G. Bourke described Alchesay as a perfect Adonis in figure, a mass of muscle and sinew of wonderful courage, great sagacity, and as faithful as an Irish hound. He was an adviser to Indian agents and to President Grover Cleveland. He fought again under Crook in the campaign against the Chiricahua Apache in the Sierra Madre of Mexico in 1883 and his last military duty was as an advisor during the pursuit of Geronimo in Mexico in 1885.

The Apache Wars officially ended with the surrender of Geronimo in 1886 and Alchesay returned to his family and his home. He became a successful cattleman and farmer, living for a while in Forestdale and later in North Fork. Plural marriage was an Apache custom, and was recognized by the U.S. government. Alchesay had three wives. His first wife was a young girl named Apache who bore him a son. In 1871, he married Tah-jon-nay. Then, ten years later in 1881, he married Tah-jon-nay's sister, Anna.

As the leader of the Tribe, Alchesay sought better conditions for his people, and in 1887 traveled to Washington D.C. to speak to President Grover Cleveland. He met with President Theodore Roosevelt in 1909, and with Warren G. Harding in 1921. The military left Fort Apache, and in 1923, the Theodore Roosevelt Indian Boarding School was built for Navajo children. Alchesay traveled to Navajo county to welcome Navajo children to the White Mountain Apache reservation. He was instrumental in getting federal compensation for the families that were removed because of the school.

He and Geronimo remained close friends until Geronimo's death in 1909. He filed for an Indian Wars pension under the name William Alchesay and resigned from active chieftainship in 1925. Alchesay died August 6, 1928, at North Fork, Arizona and is buried on the Fort Apache Indian Reservation in Whiteriver, Arizona.

The Suquamish (Lushootseed: xʷsəq̓ʷəb)[1] are a Lushootseed-speaking Native American people, located in present-day Wash...
04/10/2025

The Suquamish (Lushootseed: xʷsəq̓ʷəb)[1] are a Lushootseed-speaking Native American people, located in present-day Washington in the United States. They are a southern Coast Salish people.

Today, most Suquamish people are enrolled in the federally recognized Suquamish Indian Tribe of the Port Madison Reservation, a signatory to the 1855 Treaty of Point Elliott. Chief Seattle, the famous leader of the Suquamish and Duwamish Tribes for which the City of Seattle is named, signed the Point Elliot Treaty on behalf of both Tribes. The Suquamish Tribe owns the Port Madison Indian Reservation.

Language and culture
Suquamish people traditionally speak a dialect of Lushootseed, which belongs to the Salishan language family.

Like many Northwest Coast indigenous peoples pre-European contact, the Suquamish enjoyed the rich bounty of land and sea west of the Cascade Mountains. They fished for salmon and harvested shellfish in local waters and Puget Sound. The cedar tree provided fiber used to weave waterproof clothing and beautiful utilitarian items, and provided wood for longhouses, seagoing canoes and ceremonial items.

The Suquamish traditionally lived on the western shores of Puget Sound, from Apple Tree Cove in the north to Gig Harbor in the south, including Bainbridge Island and Blake Island. They had villages throughout the region, the largest centered on Old Man House, the largest winter longhouse in the Salish Sea and the largest longhouse ever known.

The Suquamish continue to fish and harvest in their traditional territory, and a new generation of local artists — among them Ed Carriere — carry on the ways of their ancestors in creating carved or woven items that help tell the story of the Suquamish people.

In 2011, the Suquamish Tribal Council voted unanimously to approve same-sex marriage.

History
The first contact between Suquamish and European people came in 1792 when George Vancouver explored Puget Sound and met members of the Suquamish Tribe, possibly including Schweabe and Kitsap. More regular contact with non-Natives came with the establishment of British trading posts in Puget Sound and the Strait of Georgia in the early 19th century.

Once the Washington Territory was established in 1853, the U.S. government began signing treaties with area indigenous leaders to extinguish aboriginal claims and make land available for non-Native settlement. In the Point Elliott Treaty signed on January 22, 1855, the Suquamish agreed to cede land to the United States in exchange for certain payments and obligations. They reserved for themselves the land that became designated as the Port Madison Indian Reservation, near their winter village on Agate Pass. They also reserved the right to fish and harvest shellfish in their Usual and Accustomed Areas, and reserved certain cultural and natural resource rights within their historical territory. Today, the Suquamish Tribe is a co-manager with the State of Washington of the state's salmon fishery.

Leaders and notable people
Two members of the Suquamish came to be recognized across the region as great leaders. One was Kitsap, who led a coalition of Puget Sound Tribes against the Cowichan Tribes of Vancouver Island around 1825. Another was Seattle (also spelled Si-ahl, Sealth, See-ahth, and Seathl, pronounced [ˈsiʔaːɬ]), son of Schweabe, who was a peacekeeper during the turbulent times of the mid-19th century.

Martha George served as chairwoman of the Suquamish Tribe from the late 1920s to the early 1940s.

Lawrence Webster (1899-1991) served as chairman of the Suquamish Tribe from 1979-1985. In 1979, he traveled to Washington, D.C., to represent Native Americans at an event commemorating the 15th anniversary of the government program, VISTA. In 1983, he helped establish the Suquamish Museum. Earlier in his life, he was a noted baseball catcher, playing on a Suquamish team in 1921 that was sent by a national sporting-goods company on a goodwill tour of Japan.

Leonard Forsman, an anthropologist and archeologist who has served as the Suquamish Tribe’s chairman since 2005, is a governor-appointed member of the state Board on Geographic Names and an Obama appointee to the U.S. Advisory Council on Historic Preservation.

Cindy Webster-Martinson, a former Suquamish Tribal Council member, is vice president of the North Kitsap School Board (elected in 2013 to a four-year term) and is believed to be the first Native American elected to non-Tribal public office in Kitsap County.[9] She is a granddaughter of Lawrence Webster.

Governance
The Suquamish Indian Tribe of the Port Madison Reservation is governed by a seven-member council, elected by citizens of the Suquamish Tribe. Government departments include administration, child support enforcement, community development, court, early learning center, education, fisheries, human services, legal, natural resources, and police. The Tribe contracts with local fire districts for fire protection service.

Before I was six years old, my grandparents and my mother had taught me that if all the green things that grow were take...
04/10/2025

Before I was six years old, my grandparents and my mother had taught me that if all the green things that grow were taken from the earth, there could be no life. If all the four-legged creatures were taken from the earth, there could be no life. If all the winged creatures were taken from the earth, there could be no life. If all our relatives who crawl and swim and live within the earth were taken away, there could be no life. But if all the human beings were taken away, life on earth would flourish. That is how insignificant we are.”
Russell Means, Oglala Lakota Nation (November 10, 1939 – October 22, 2012).

Geronimo. Apache. 1904
04/10/2025

Geronimo. Apache. 1904

South Central is an American crime-drama film directed by Stephen Milburn Anderson, based on Donald Bakeer's 1987 novel ...
04/05/2025

South Central is an American crime-drama film directed by Stephen Milburn Anderson, based on Donald Bakeer's 1987 novel The Original South Central L.A. Crips. The movie stars Glenn Plummer, Byron Minns, and Christian Coleman, and was produced by Oliver Stone.❤️🖤🎬

Summary:
Bobby Johnson, a gang member, is paroled and reunites with his girlfriend Carole, their son Jimmie, and his gang. After killing a dealer, Bobby is sentenced to ten years in prison. His son Jimmie follows in his footsteps, getting involved in crime. After being shot and placed in a juvenile halfway house, Jimmie encounters his father, who has reformed. Bobby convinces Jimmie to avoid a life of crime, culminating in a confrontation where Jimmie decides not to kill a man who shot him. The film ends with Bobby and Jimmie resolving to start their lives anew.

Cast:

Glenn Plummer as 'OG' Bobby Johnson
Christian Coleman as Jimmie 'J-Rock' Johnson
Byron Keith Mimms as Ray 'Ray-Ray' DeWitt
Carl Lumbly as Ali
Lexie Bigham as 'Bear'
Vincent Craig Dupree as 'Loco'
LaRita Shelby as Carole
Ivory Ocean as Willie Manchester
Vickilyn Reynolds as Mrs. Manchester
Tim DeZarn as 'Buddha'
Starletta DuPois as Nurse Shelly
The soundtrack, featuring hip hop, soul, and R&B music, was released on September 18, 1992, by Hollywood Records.🎶

Beautiful artwork found on Pinterest ♥️
04/05/2025

Beautiful artwork found on Pinterest ♥️

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