[NATIVE AMERICANS] -- [MORROW, Stanley J., photographer, after]. Period copy cabinet card of Brule Chief Spotted Tail with his wife and daughter. Nashville, TN: Schleier.
Sale 1095 - American Historical Ephemera & Photography, Featuring Property from the James Milgram, M.D., Collection of Broadsides, Ephemeral Americana & Historical Documents
Day 1 Lots 1-403
Nov 3, 2022
10:00AM ET
Day 2 Lots 404-634
Nov 4, 2022
10:00AM ET
Live / Cincinnati
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Estimate
$400 -
600
Price Realized
$344
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Lot Description
[NATIVE AMERICANS] -- [MORROW, Stanley J., photographer, after]. Period copy cabinet card of Brule Chief Spotted Tail with his wife and daughter. Nashville, TN: Schleier.
4 x 5 1/2 in. period copy cabinet photograph on cardstock mount (some toning, soiling, minor punctures/pricks to upper left portion, and wear to mount edges and corners). Schleier's imprint on mount recto, along with "Copy" stamped in blue ink. Portrait features Spotted Tail, his wife, and his daughter, Sky. Photograph originally taken by Stanley J. Morrow ca 1877.
Tribal Chief Spotted Tail (1823-1881) was a major figure in Sioux relations with the United States government during the latter half of the nineteenth century. He participated in the Grattan Massacre in 1854, but decided not to join in Red Cloud's War in the late 1860s, having determined that the Indians' armed resistance of white encroachment was largely futile. Instead, he took to speaking and negotiating on behalf of his tribe, including signing the 1868 Treaty of Fort Laramie, which established the Great Sioux Reservation. Spotted Tail traveled several times to Washington, D. C., mostly in the 1870s, to defend the rights of his people, especially to their land. He met with many important government officials during these trips including Commissioners of Indian Affairs Ely S. Parker and John Quincy Smith, and President Ulysses, S. Grant. Spotted Tail was, in the end, destroyed probably by his own fame and/or ego, as he was killed by a jealous sub chief, Crow Dog, after allegedly stealing the wife of a crippled man. Though he certainly made a name for himself in his own right, it is also possible that Spotted Tail was the uncle of the famed warrior, Crazy Horse, as two of his sisters were married to the elder Crazy Horse.
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