Impact of the western settlers on Native Americans revealed in new colorized pictures: Poignant photos from the 1880s and 1890s show the early days of Euro-Americans’ move onto tribal lands in South Dakota and Wyoming
- The photographs were taken by pioneering photographer John C.H. Grabill between 1887 and 1892
- Pictures reveal the impact of the western settlers on Native American tribes in South Dakota and Wyoming
- In one image, three indigenous men wore ceremonial clothing as they greeted a Eurio-American man
The impact of the western settlers on Native Americans and the consequent upheaval of hundreds of indigenous tribes have been revealed in new colorized pictures.
The poignant photographs, taken by pioneering photographer John C.H. Grabill between 1887 and 1892, show the early days of Euro-Americans as they move to South Dakota and Wyoming and how this affected the area’s indigenous communities.
In one image, three indigenous men – otherwise known as Cheyenne men – wore ceremonial clothing and each held a rifle as they greeted a Euro-American man of western civilization who wore a suit and was accompanied by his interpreter.
Another image showed a group of Euro-American men and Lakota men, who belonged to either the Brule, Miniconjou or Oglala subtribes, posing in front of a tipi. This photo captured the moment U.S officials and Native American chiefs came together for a moment of peace.
Others showed three teenage boys sat in western clothing who were known as ‘Uncle Sam’s Pets’ and only got fed rations every 29 days, and a man from the Oglala subtribe as he stood with two U.S soldiers whilst cradling a cannon located in a military camp.
John C.H. Grabill’s collection is thought to be the largest surviving collection of this settlement, which documents railroad development, milling and mining. The Lakota Sioux community are portrayed living near or on the Cheyenne River, where they came into contact with the U.S military.
Some of the photographs featured are thought to only be taken just days after the Wounded Knee massacre in 1890, which was one of the final chapters in America’s long war with Native Americans and resulted in the death of nearly 300 Lakota people.
Three indigenous men – otherwise known as Cheyenne men – wore ceremonial clothing and each held a rifle as they greeted a Euro-American man of western civilization who wore a suit and was accompanied by his interpreter. The expansion of settler territory and the founding and growth of the U.S. meant Native American communities were moved
Another image showed a group of Euro-American men and Lakota men, who belonged to either the Brule, Miniconjou or Oglala subtribes, posing in front of a tipi. This photo captured the moment U.S officials and Native American chiefs came together for a moment of peace
The Lokota chiefs are pictured in a group portrait near the Pine Ridge reservation in 1981. The chiefs negotiated with General Nelson Appleton Miles and settled the Indian War. This picture will have been taken after the 1980 Wounded Knee Massacre, where nearly 300 Lakota people were killed by the US army
A group of 19 Miniconjou sub tribe men, women and children posed between two tipis in 1890. The Miniconjou are a Native American people constituting a subdivision of the Lakota people, who formerly inhabited an area in western present-day South Dakota
Plenty Horses, an Oglala man, and two U.S. soldiers are pictured standing in front of a cannon in a military camp in 1981. On January 1891, nine days after the Wounded Knee Massacre, he shot and killed Army Lieutenant Edward W. Casey in the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota
Plenty Horses, an Oglala man, a subtribe of the Lakota people, poses for the camera whilst resting his hand on a canon near Pine Ridge Reservation in 1891. The Pine Ridge Reservation is an Oglala Lokato Indian reservation in South Dakota. Today it is one of the largest reservations in the US
A group of Miniconjou sub tribe children and adults are pictured in a tipi camp in 1891. The children wrap themselves in blankets against the cold weather
Oglala Sioux women and children inside an uncovered tipi frame near Pine Ridge Agency in January 1891. Beyond are other Indians and the materials within their camp near the site of the Wounded Knee Massacre
A Lokota man poses on a grey speckled horse next to four Lakota women. Three of the women are holding infants as they wrap shawls around themselves
A group of well-dressed Euro-Western men are pictured sitting in and on top of the ‘The Deadwood Coach’ in 1889
The Miniconjou sub tribe band and federal military men are pictured at a Grass Dance on the Cheyenne River in 1890. Grass dancing is a form of Native American dance where men would strike warrior poses. Before a dance could be held on the prairie the grass had to be stomped down. Dancers would then tie the grass to their outfit
Two Oglala chiefs, American Horse, who is pictured wearing western clothing and gun-in-holder, and Red Cloud, who is wearing a traditional headdress, shake hands in front of a tipo near Pine Ridge Reservation in 1891
Three Lakota teenage boys in western clothing who were known as ‘Uncle Sam’s Pets’ are pictured smiling for the camera. The trio only got fed rations every 29 days
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