In 1922 a white physician working on the Northern Cheyenne Reservation began taking photographs of the Cheyenne people. Before his death in 1935, Thomas Marquis had amassed over five hundred photographs and published a number of significant books and articles about the Cheyenne
Texas Rangeland presents an unusual series of photographs of cattle interspersed with commentary by ...
Michael Forsberg’s magnificent photos of land, animals, and people compelled me initially to turn pa...
Long before Lewis and Clark launched their journey of exploration up the Missouri, Native peoples us...
In 1922 a white physician working on the Northern Cheyenne Reservation began taking photographs of t...
In the latter half of the nineteenth century a deadly clash of cultures swept across the Great Plain...
When my copy of A Northern Cheyenne Album arrived, I was immediately taken back to a day more than t...
In September 1878 about three hundred Northern Cheyenne men, women, and children under the leadershi...
In November 1876, Colonel Ranald Mackenzie led a successful attack on a Northern Cheyenne village in...
In 1995 Alan Boye, an English professor at Lyndon State College in Vermont, began a thousand-mile jo...
Perhaps the most widely recognized character in the history of the West is the American Cowboy. Acro...
Review of: "Twenty-five Years among the Indians and Buffalo: A Frontier Memoir", by William D. Stree...
On the morning of June 25, 1876, soldiers of the famed U.S. Seventh Cavalry led by the flamboyant Ge...
In the last two decades of his life Bent became a prolific letter-writer as well; more than five hun...
Although biographies have long been a staple in Plains Indian ethnology, this profile of an Arapaho ...
At dawn on November 27, 1868, Lt. Col. George A. Custer led troopers of the Seventh U.S. Cavalry in ...
Texas Rangeland presents an unusual series of photographs of cattle interspersed with commentary by ...
Michael Forsberg’s magnificent photos of land, animals, and people compelled me initially to turn pa...
Long before Lewis and Clark launched their journey of exploration up the Missouri, Native peoples us...
In 1922 a white physician working on the Northern Cheyenne Reservation began taking photographs of t...
In the latter half of the nineteenth century a deadly clash of cultures swept across the Great Plain...
When my copy of A Northern Cheyenne Album arrived, I was immediately taken back to a day more than t...
In September 1878 about three hundred Northern Cheyenne men, women, and children under the leadershi...
In November 1876, Colonel Ranald Mackenzie led a successful attack on a Northern Cheyenne village in...
In 1995 Alan Boye, an English professor at Lyndon State College in Vermont, began a thousand-mile jo...
Perhaps the most widely recognized character in the history of the West is the American Cowboy. Acro...
Review of: "Twenty-five Years among the Indians and Buffalo: A Frontier Memoir", by William D. Stree...
On the morning of June 25, 1876, soldiers of the famed U.S. Seventh Cavalry led by the flamboyant Ge...
In the last two decades of his life Bent became a prolific letter-writer as well; more than five hun...
Although biographies have long been a staple in Plains Indian ethnology, this profile of an Arapaho ...
At dawn on November 27, 1868, Lt. Col. George A. Custer led troopers of the Seventh U.S. Cavalry in ...
Texas Rangeland presents an unusual series of photographs of cattle interspersed with commentary by ...
Michael Forsberg’s magnificent photos of land, animals, and people compelled me initially to turn pa...
Long before Lewis and Clark launched their journey of exploration up the Missouri, Native peoples us...