Luminous-Lint - for collectors and connoisseurs of photography Register
Subscribe
Login
Photographers:
Connections:
Getting around...
| Home > Contents > Images
See astonishing photographs and connections.
Register and see for yourself...
LL/79793
C.M. Bell
1880
Red Cloud

Cabinet card
Metropolitan Museum of Art
Gilman Collection, Purchase, Sam Salz Foundation Gift, 2005, Accession Number: 2005.100.619
 
Curatorial description (Accessed: 9 January 2018)
Throughout the nineteenth century, the U.S. government invited hundreds of Native American delegations to Washington, D.C., in an effort to seek peace, negotiate treaties, and acquire tribal land. Delegation photography was a routine part of any state visit, and many portrait studios, including that of Charles M. Bell, profited from the business.
 
Red Cloud (Mahpiua Luta, 1822-1909), the principal chief of the Oglala, Dakota, was born on the Platte River in Nebraska Territory. He was one of the few Native American leaders to win a military campaign against the U.S. Army, successfully resisting in 1865-66 the government's development of the Bozeman Trail. A signatory of many treaties and a frequent visitor to the capital, Red Cloud sat for this portrait in June 1880 as part of a special delegation investigating the treatment of students at the Carlisle Indian School in Carlisle, Pennsylvania.
 
This cabinet card (6 1/2 x 4 1/4 inches) portrait shows Red Cloud wearing an animal-skin shirt and a breastplate of bones, called hair-pipes, edged with brass beads. He also wears a single feather from a golden eagle. No other creature flew so high or matched its swiftness and majesty.
 
LL/79793


 

Terms and conditions • Copyright • Privacy • Contact me
Contributors retain copyright over their submissions
In using this website you agree to the Terms and Conditions
© Alan Griffiths - Luminous-Lint 2025