Spotted Tail's' headquarters.
The start on the Grant Hunt.
Indians at the Spotted Tail Agency.
Sioux Chief 'Roman Nose'.
Biggest wheel on earth 240 ft. diam. with heaviest axle ever forged (56 tons), World's Fair, St.Louis, U.S.A.
Medicine men, with squirming rattlesnakes - odd homes of the Cliff Dwellers.
Ke-bey-na-ke (The Winner), Chippewa brave.
Tepees of the Sioux Indians.
The (AB) original babe in the wood.
Wa-kan-o-zhan-zhan (Medicine Bottle), executed at Fort Snelling, November 11, 1865, for participating in the massacre of 1862.
Wah bo jeeg (White Fisher), chief of the Gull Lake Band Chippewas, an old warrior once taken prisoner by the Sioux and speaks the language.
Now we ke shick (Noon Day), a Chippewa chief.
View of a group of Indians with Europeans in the yard of "Col. Murphy's near Shakopee".
Tepees of the Sioux Indians.
Winneshiek, head chief of the Winnebago.
Old Bets, a Sioux squaw 120 years old, will long be remembered with gratitude by many of the Minnesota captives for her kindness to them while among the Sioux in 1862.
Ma-Za-Oo-Nie -- the little bird hunter (Sioux).
Ox carts, from Pembina, on Red river, 600 miles north of St. Paul.
Winnebagos at Ft. Snelling, 1863.
Red river half-breeds and carts.
On carts, from Pembina, on Red river, 600 miles north of St. Paul.
Red river half-breeds, and carts.
Potrait of Sioux (Dakota) man, Little Six.
Pembina half-breeds on a trading tour.
Portrait of a Sioux (Dakota) woman in front of teepees.
Portrait of a Sioux (Dakota) woman named Wenona among a group of teepees.