BUSHNELL] VILLAGES WEST OF THE MISSISSIPPI 197 
PLATE 14 Y 
Reproduced from an original negative now in the Bureau of American 
Ethnology. 
PLATE 15 
Reproduced from the engraving of the painting by Bodmer, as used by 
Maximilian. 
Karl Bodmer, born in Zurich, Switzerland, 1805; died 1894. Studied under 
Cornu. He accompanied Maximilian, Prince of Wied, on several journeys, 
including that up the Valley of the Missouri. Many of his original sketches 
made during that memorable trip are now in the Edward E. Ayer collection, 
Newberry Library, Chicago. His later works are chiefly of wooded landscapes, 
some being scenes in the valleys of the Missouri and Mississippi. Bodmer was 
a very close friend of the great artist Jean Francois Millet. De Cost Smith, 
in Century Magazine, May, 1910, discussing the close association of the two 
artists, and referring especially to their joint work, wrote: “ The two men must 
have worked together from the pure joy of friendship, for it must be con- 
fessed that the work of neither was very greatly improved by the other’s addi- 
tions. Bodmer would put a horse into one of Millet’s Indian pictures and 
add some vegetation in the foreground, Millet would return the favor by intro- 
ducing figures into Bodmer’s landscapes.” But this does not refer to the 
sketches made by Bodmer during his journey up the Missouri in 1888. 
- PLATE 16 
a. Reproduction of a wood cut on page 420 of Wanderings of an Artist. 
The original painting by Kane is now in the Royal Ontario Museum of 
Archaeology, Toronto, being No. 51 in the catalogue. Size of painting, 18 
inches high, 29 inches long. (See note, pl. 5, a.) 
b. The original photograph from which this illustration is made is in 
the collection of the United States National Museum, Washington, D. C. It is 
not known by whom the negative was made. 
PLATE 17 
Reproduced from the engraving of the original painting by Bodmer, as used 
by Maximilian. (See note, pl. 15.) 
PLATE 18 
Both a and b are reproductions of photographs furnished by the State His- 
torical Society of Iowa. 
PLATE 19 
Reproduction of an original photograph in a scrapbook, which contains many 
manuscript notes, news clippings, etc., prepared by Newton H. Chittenden. 
The book is now in the Manuscript Division, Library of Congress, Wash- 
ington, D. C. 
PLATE 20 
From original photographs by David I. Bushnell, jr. 1900. 
PLATE 21 
Reproduction of an original pencil sketch of the Sioux village of Kaposia, 
made June 19, 1851, by F. B. Mayer. The drawing is now in the Edward 
E. Ayer collection, Newberry Library, Chicago. 
