Keukuk was chief of the Sauks and Musquakees (Sacs & Foxes) - 2 tribes that lived together at Rock River, near the junction of the Mississippi, in Illinois. They followed a custom whereby each new male child was painted with a white or black mark and in alternating, divided the male population in half. It established a sense of rivalry in playing ball games or in examining which division brought home more scalps.
This portrait of Ne-Sou-A-Quoit or Bear in the Fork of a Tree, a Fox Indian, was made in 1837 in the city of Washington. He had 7 wives, was known for his generosity and the author found it notable that Ne-Sou-A-Quoit abstained from both alcohol and pipe smoking.
From the University of Washington Libraries Digital Collection comes the McKenney and Hall Indian Tribes of North America exhibition.
There are 9 thumb plate pages: page i, page ii, page iii, page iv, page v, page vi, page vii, page viii, page ix. Click on any individual image on each page for a larger version - text scan links relating to each image are then in the left margin.
There is also a map of the Localities of all the Indian Tribes of North Ameria in 1833.
There are 9 thumb plate pages: page i, page ii, page iii, page iv, page v, page vi, page vii, page viii, page ix. Click on any individual image on each page for a larger version - text scan links relating to each image are then in the left margin.
There is also a map of the Localities of all the Indian Tribes of North Ameria in 1833.
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