The Cheyenne were a very far-ranging people, especially once they acquired horses. Originally, the Cheyenne lived on the Great Plains of South Dakota, Wyoming, Nebraska, Colorado, and Kansas. Today...
The Comanche tribe is from the Great Plains whose territory originally consisted of most of present-day northwestern Texas, eastern New Mexico, southeastern Colorado, southwestern Kansas...
The Oto tribe originally occupied lands on the Central Plains along the bank of the Missouri River in Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa and Missouri. Today the Otoe-Missouria Tribe of Indians is federally recognized...
The Arapaho were a far-ranging people and lived on the Great Plains in what is now Colorado, Wyoming, Nebraska and Kansas. There are two Arapaho tribes today; the Northern and the Southern. Curtis created...
The Osage (“People of the Middle Waters”) tribe is a Midwestern Native American tribe of the Great Plains. The tribe controlled the area between the Missouri and Red rivers, the Ozarks to the east and...
The Pawnee people are a Plains Indian tribe who now live in Pawnee, Oklahoma. Historically, the Pawnee lived in Nebraska and Kansas. Curtis created one (1) copper photogravure plate...
The Ponca tribe originally occupied lands in Nebraska and South Dakota. Today, the Ponca people are located in Nebraska and Oklahoma. Curtis created seven (7) copper photogravure plates...
The Quapaw tribe originally occupied lands in Arkansas, Missouri, Mississippi and Tennessee. In the 1800’s, along with many other tribes, the Quapaw tribe was forced to move to Oklahoma where they are...
The Yavapai tribe of Arizona were mainly hunter-gatherers, following an annual round, migrating to different areas to follow the ripening of different edible plants and movement of game. The Yavapai...
The Yaqui tribe are native people of the Sonoran Desert and retreated into the northern part of the desert, in what is now Arizona. The Pascua Yaqui tribe is based in Tucson, Arizona. Curtis created...
The Yuma (Quechan) tribe lived along the banks of the Colorado River in southeastern California and southwestern Arizona. Their houses were made of willow poles and long sticks to create...
The Mohave (Mojave) people lived along the banks of the Colorado River in southeastern California and southwestern Arizona. The name Mohave translates to mean the people who love by the river or on the water. Curtis...