934 



INDEX TO CATLIN GALLERY, 



Bed Jacket as a warrior, 154, 174. 



Bryant, Wm. (Jlement, on, 168. 

 burial place, 158. 



ceremonies at, 161. 

 Clinton, Hon. Geo. W., on, 168. 

 five Seneca chief's with him, 162. 

 his birth and death, 156, 158. 

 his official name and rank, 155. 

 his religious views, 156. 

 interview with, 154. 

 McKenney and Hall on, 155-170. 

 Mr. Catlin's notes on, 154. 

 opposes missionaries, 157. 

 Parker, Ely S., on, 165. 



personal appearance of, 



reinterment of, 160. 

 remains, lost and recovered, 158. 

 Savary, William, on, 1794, 171. 

 tomb erected over, by Henry- Pla- 



cide, 158. 

 "Whitman, Walt., on, 170. 

 Eeddesed post, used in Sioux scalp dance (No. 



457), 319. 

 "Red Men of Iowa," by A. R. Fulton, mentioned 



and quoted, 21, 22, 27. 

 Bed River couutry, notes on, 480. 

 Eee (see Ric-ca-rees, Arickarees), 78. 

 References to matters concerning the Indians, 



public and private, 852. 

 Religion of the Cheyennes, 1835, 93. 

 Iowa Indians, 148. 

 lowas, conversations on, 607, 651. 

 Sac and Fox, 39. 

 Religions, six, of the white men, described by the 



Iowa doctor, London, 1845, 615. 

 Religious belief of the North American Indian, 

 351. 

 Mandans, 352. 

 ceremonies of the Mandans, 350. 

 ceremony, a Sioux, self-torture by a 



warrior, 1832 (No. 460), 320. 

 dance of the Pottawatomies, a new one, 



introduced in 1884, 135. 

 denominations, Indian agents assigned 



to, 813. 

 views of the Six Nations, 156. 

 Removal of Indians to west of the Mississippi 

 River, 1831, cost, &c., 878. 

 references as to, cited, 879. 

 Report, annual, of the Office of Indian Affairs, 826. 



Congressional, on Indian Territory, 857. 

 Reluctant subjects for painting (No. 175), 116. 

 Republican Pawnees, 68. 



Reservations, the several Indian, 1886, 821, 840. 

 Indian, acres to each Indian, 840. 

 agencies, tribes occupying, 

 or belonging to the reser- 

 vations, area of each, 841. 

 area of, 840. 

 area, &c., 841. 



extinguishing the Indian 

 title to lands of Indian 

 occupancy ; title to lands, 

 how extinguished, 834. 

 how abolished, 838, 

 how made, 838, 841. 

 number of, 840. 

 treatv reservations, 838. 

 Reynolds, Governor, of Illinois, mentioned, 24. 

 Rhees, W. J., chief clerk Smithsonian, quoted, 794- 

 796. 



Rhinederbacber, , artist, mentioned, 807. 



Riccare^s, Ari^.varees, Eicaree, Ree, 78. 



cabins' or huts, 79. 

 Riccaree village, Mr. Catlin in, 470. 



lodges in, bow built (No. 386), 274. 

 how built (No. 586), 274. 

 vocabiilary. 551. 

 Rickaree Pawnees, 78, 79. 



notes on, 79. 



portraits of (Nos. 123-126), 78. 

 present location aiid condi- 

 tion, 1885-'86, 80. 

 Rice, wild, Indian method of gathering (No. 314), 



234. 

 Richardson. W. P.. Indian sub-agent, Nebraska, 



mentioned. 146. 

 Riquk, chief of a band of Osage, a visit to, 493. 



Robe of Mah-to-toh-pa, a Mandan chief, illus- 

 trated with incidents of his life, 399-406. 



Robes, Indian, Mr. Catlin's notes on, 398. 



Rock Island, 111. (No. 328), 236. 



in 1856, journey to, 522. 



Round Lake, Seneca warrior, half-blood (No. 

 265), 174. 



Ross, Johu, head chief of the Cherokee Nation, 

 biography of and notes on (No. 283), 205. 



Running a buftalo down on foot, and slaying -it 

 while running, .^1. 



Running buffalo, mouth of Yellowstone (No. 421), 

 292. 



Russia, the Emperor of, sends Mr. Catlin a gold 

 snuff-bos, 1844, 785. 



Ruton-we-me, Pigeon on the wing, an Iowa squaw, 

 mentioned (No, 11), 143. 



Ruton-ye-we-ma, Strutting Pigeon, White Cloud's- 

 wife, an Iowa, mentioned (No. 10), 143. 



S. 



Sabin, John, as to Lewis' Portfolio, 801. 

 Sac and Fox, at Rock Island, 1836, 524. 



at Puick Island, August 5, 1832, Keo- 

 kuk installed as chief vice Black 

 Hawk, 26. 

 begging dance (No. 439), 309. 

 custom, smoking horses (No. 463), 



322. 



dances, customs, &c. (see Nos. 439, 



442, 41-48, 450, 463-479, and 545), 



309-385. 



dance to the Berdashe (No. 442), 313. 



dance to the medicine-bag of the- 



brave (No- 444), 313. 

 decreasing, 31. 



discovery dance (No. 448), 316. 

 head-shaving a custom, 40. 

 Indians, history of, portraits of in- 

 dividuals (Nos. 1-21), 13-39. 

 Mr. Catlin's notes on, 13-36. 

 present location and condition, 1886, 



38, 39. 

 religious views and ceremonies of,39. 

 sailing canoes with blankets (No. 



479), 337. 

 slave dance, 1836 (No. 450), 317. 

 superstition as to the building of 

 Fort Armstrong at Rock Island 

 in 1816, 23. 

 tribal history of, with notes, by 

 Hiram W. Beckwith and others, 

 33-39. 

 Sachems of the Iroquois, origin of the names or 



titles of the fifty original, 180. 

 Sa-go-ye-wat-ha, Keeper Awake, Red Jacket (No.- 



263),' 154. 

 Sahaftins, notes on, 97, 98. 

 Nez Perc6s, 98. 

 Sah-raab, Chippewa name for tobacco, 590- 

 Saint Louis, from the river below, 1832 (No. 311), 

 231. 

 description of, in 1832-36, place of 

 deposit for Mr. Catlin's collections, 

 232. 

 Salmon River Valley (Idaho) in 1854-'55, Mr. 



Catlin with the Crows there, 108. 

 Salmon-spearing by torch-light, Chippewa (No. 



575), 385. 

 Salt Meadows, on the Upper Missouri, 1832,. 

 buffalo at, and notes on the Salt Springs (No, 

 342), 254. 

 Sand Bluffs, White, Santa Rosa Island, Florida, 



Seminoles drying fish, 1831, (No. 354), 260. 

 Sanford, John F. A., certificates of, 228, 348. 

 referred to, 329. 

 mentioned, 8. 

 San-ia-ka-k6-koh, The Deceiving Wolf, and five 



other Mandans (Nos. 137-142), 82. 



Saultde Sainte Marie, Indians catching white fish, 



painted in 1836 (No. 338), 



253. 



paintedinl836(No. 339), 254. 



Savary, William, his diary, with anecdotes of Red 



Jacket, 169. 

 vSjvannah, a beautiful, inthepinewoodsof Florida, 

 1836 (No. 31)9. 257. 



