Thursday, February 19, 2015

Native Americans from "Buffalo Bill's Wild West c. 1898

c. 1898

Portraits of the men and women who performed for Queen Victoria

Iron White Man
In 1898, photographer Gertrude Käsebier looked out of her studio window on Fifth Avenue in New York City and saw the cast of Buffalo Bill's Wild West parading past. Buffalo Bill, a.k.a. William Cody, was by that time a legendary figure of the American Old West, a legend he partially self-generated. Cody's nickname arrived when he supplied buffalo meat to workers on the Kansas Pacific railroad.
In 1872, Cody performed in the Wild West theatre production Scouts of the Prairie, and in 1883, aged 37, he founded his own circus-like show, called Buffalo Bill's Wild West. The show toured annually across the U.S. and Europe, performing in front of Queen Victoria and the future kings Edward VII and George V of Britain, and the future Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany. In Rome, the cast met the pope.
The show included sharpshooting acts, horseriding demonstrations and reenactments of American history. The performers included several Native Americans, many of them Sioux.
What Gertrude Käsebier saw from her window connected with her memories of the Native Americans she had known in the 1850s and 1860s, growing up in Colorado and on the Great Plains. Käsebier wrote to Cody asking if she might photograph the Native American performers in her studio. They arranged a session. 
A number of the Sioux photographed had fought against the U.S. military. Chief Flying Hawk was a veteran of Great Sioux War of 1876, the Battle of the Little Big Horn of the same year and was present at the massacre of Wounded Knee — just eight years before Käsebier took his portrait.
Flying Hawk
Flying Hawk
Flying Hawk
Dear Mr. Cody,I have seen your Wild 

West show two days in 

succession, and have 

enjoyed it thoroughly.

It brought vividly back 

the breezy wild life of 

the Great Plains and the 

Rocky Mountains, and 

stirred me like a war-

song.

Truly yours,

Mark Twain

LETTER TO BUFFALO BILL CODY, SEP. 10, 1884
Joe Black Fox
Joe Black Fox
I thought I was benefiting the 

Indians as well as the 

government, by taking them all 

over the United States, and 

giving them a correct idea of 

the customs, and life of the 

pale 

faces, so that when they 

returned to their people they 

could make known all they had 

seen.

WILLIAM CODY
Joe Black Fox
Whirling Horse
Whirling Horse
Whirling Horse
Whirling Hawk
Charging Thunder
Charging Thunder
Charging Thunder
Charging Thunder and wife
Samuel American Horse
American Horse
American Horse and wife
American Horse and wife
American Horse
Wife of American Horse
Shooting Pieces
Sammy Lone Bear
Sammy Lone Bear
Luke Big Turnips
Whirlwind Horse
Plenty Wounds
William Frog
Amos Little
Holy Frog(?) (left) and Big Turnips(?)
Bad Bear
Takes Enemy
Unidentified man
White War Bonnet

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