924 



INDEX TO CATLIN GALLERY. 



Gitch-ee-gaw-ga-osh, The point that remains for- 

 ever, Chippewa (see No. 191), 123. 

 Globe, Indian idea of, 629. 



Go-now-da-gie or O-shah-go-non-da-gie, Destroy 

 tower, or He destroys the tower, a Seneca, his 

 biography, 163. 

 Good Hunter, Seneca, a warrior (No. 267), 174. 

 Go-to-kdw-pah-ah, He who stands by himself, 



Weeah (Weas), (No. 248), 140. 

 Grand chute, passing the, in a bark canoe, on Fox 



River, 1835, 360. 

 Grave of Blackbird, Omaha chief, 263. 

 Graves of Indians, rifling, horrors of, 697. 



rifling of Indian, Mr. Ratlin's comments 

 on, 265. 

 Grazing lands in Indian Territory, report on lease 



of, referenco to, 863. 

 Great Spirit, invocatioDS to, 315. 

 Green Bay, notes on, 509. 



Green corn dance, Minatarees, 1832 (No. 446), 314. 

 Grizzly bear and mouse (No. 603), 385. 

 Gros Ventres, Algonkin, Minatarees, Peopleof the 

 willows, 115-117. 

 few men among, 117. 

 houses or lodges of, like Mandans. 117. 

 notes on, 116. 



present condition and location, 117. 

 stature of, 11 7. 

 warriors of, 117. 

 woman (No. 174), 116. 

 Grouse shooting on the Missouri prairies in 1832 



(No. 426), 294. 

 Gudin, M., artist, mentioned, 688. 

 Guillotine, Iowa Indians idea of, Paris, 1845, 679. 

 Gypsum, beds of, 490. 



Hah-nee, The Beaver, Comanche (No. 52), 48. 

 Hahje-day-ah'-shee,The Meeting Birds, Chippewa 



(No. 184), 122. 

 Hair of Assinaboine Indians" worn long, spliced 

 and colored (No. 181), 120. 

 Indians, cut offwhilst mourning (No. 162), 



107. 

 Mandan, Blackfoot, Crow, and other 

 Indians, habit of parting the hair on 

 the forehead and filling the crease with 

 vermilion or other red paint, a custom 

 common to all the Indians Mr. Catlin 

 saw, 86. 

 Mandan men, worn banged (Nos. 137, 142), 



82. 

 the Mandans, color of, and how worn by 

 men and women, 85-86. 

 one in twelve has bright, 

 silver-gray hair, coarse 

 and harsh like a horse's 

 mane, 82. 

 worn long among the Crows and other In- 

 dians of the Northwest, how dressed, worn 

 long and carried (see Nos. 163, 164, 165), 

 107. 

 Ha-kon-e-crase, eagle dance of the Iowas, 150. 

 Half-breeds, a deteriorated race, 529. 

 Hall, Judge James, describes Black Hawk, 27. 



his efforts to obtain Mr. Cat- 

 lin's pictures for his work, 

 766. 

 note on, by H. W. Beckwith, 



764. 

 on Bed Jacket, 157. 

 Hall, Egyptian, Picadilly, London, mentioned, 557. 

 Ha-na-ta-nu-mauk, The Wolf Chief, head chief 

 of the Mandans (No. 127), 80. 

 his dress and peculiarities, 80. 

 Handshaking by Indians, 260. 

 Ha-no-ja-cyn, Tall Peter, a Seneca, his biography, 



164. 

 Hard Fish and his band of Sac and Fox, men- 

 tioned, 19. 

 Hard Hickory. Seneca (No. 266), 174. 

 Harris, C. A., Com'r of Indian Affairs, certificate 



from, 227. 

 Harrison, Henry, mentioned, 5. 



Joseph, jr., of Philadelphia, secures and 

 saves the Catlin gallery at London, 

 1852, 699. 



Harrison, Joseph, jr., purchases the original Cat- 

 lin Indian gallery in London, 5. 

 Mrs. Joseph, jr., of Philadelphia, pre- 

 sents the original Catlin Indian gallery 

 to the Smithsonian Institution, 5. 

 Pres't W. H., mentioned, 19. 



notes on the aborigines of 

 the Ohio Valley (see No. 

 26, Fergus Historical Se- 

 ries, 1884), 141. 

 Harvey, W. H., Superintendent Indian" Affairs, St. 



Louis, 1844, mentioned, 146. 

 Ha-tchoo-tuc-knee, The Snapping Turtle, or Peter 



P. Pitchlynn, Choctaw (No. 296), 212. 

 Hathaway, J. S. Lieut., certificate from, 230. 

 Haw-ehe-ke-sug-ga, He who kills the Osages, chief 



of the Missourias (No. 122), 76. 

 Ha-w6n-jc-tah, The One Horn, first chief of the 

 Sioux tribe of the Mee-ne-con-e-gee band, his 

 name, how derived, his dress, warrior and hunter 

 (No. 69), 54. 

 Hayden, Prof. F. V., quoted, 803. 

 fi'co-a-h'co-a-h'cotes-min. No horns on his head, 



Nez Perce, biography of (No. 146), 94. 

 Head dress, Indian, 453. 



flattening by Chicktsaws, 213. 

 Choctaw 8, 213. 

 Heads of children, how flattened by certain North 



American Indians, 99, 100. 

 Head of Crow Indian, peculiar, 108. 



shaving by Indians, Osages, Kansas, Paw- 

 nees, and Sac and Fox, 40. 

 Healy, G. P. A., referred to, 747. 

 Hee-doh'-ge-ats Chinook (No. 147), 99. 

 He-hahra-pah, The Elks Head, chief, Sioux (No. 



87), 57. 

 Height, the great, of the Osage Indians, 44, 45. 

 Hee-lah-dee, The Pure Fountain, wife of Shoode- 

 gacha Ponca, her dress and tattoo marks (No. 

 95), 64. 

 He-oh'ks-te-kin, The Rabbit's Skin Leggings, Nez 



Perc6, biography of (No. 145), 94. 

 Highland Society, Royal, of London, dines Mr. 

 Catlin, 1842; toasted by the JDuke of Richmond, 

 565. 

 Hillers, J. K., photographer, with Maj. J. W. Pow- 

 ell, 806. 

 Hills, the Bison, 431. 



the Square (see No. 395), 278. 

 His-oo-san-chees, The Little Spaniard, a guide and 



scout, Comanche (No. 51 ), 47, 48. 

 Historical Society of Buffalo, action as to reinter- 

 ment of Red Jacket's remains, 160. 

 History of Catlin's Indian gallery, 1829-1886. 4-10. 

 Indian affairs, colonial and national, 

 1776-1786,808. 

 H61-te-mal-te-tez-te-neek-ee, SamPerryman,broth- 



er of No. 288, Creek, (No. 289), 210. 

 Holman, Hon. W. S., report on the Indian Terri- 

 tory, quoted, 857. 

 Home, the Indian at, 505. 

 Homestead, Indian, 836. 



Hongs-kay-dee, the great chief, son of Shoodega- 

 eha No. 95, Ponca, his marriage to four wives 

 in one day (No. 97). 6k 

 Hon-je-a-piit-o, wife of O-ron-gas-see No. 26, a 



Kansas woman (No. 28;, 40. 

 Hoo-w'a-ne-kaw, The Little Elk, warrior and ora 

 tor, interview with Hon. Henry Clay in 1830, 

 Winnebago (No. 215), 130. . 

 H6-ra-t6-a, a brave, Crow (No. 165), 107. 

 Hornaday, William T., naturalist, hunts the buf- 

 falo for the Smithsonian, 1886-87 (the last hunt), 

 299. 

 Horsemanship, feats of, by Comanches, 1839, 338. 

 Horsemen, Indian, the Comanches very fine, 49. 

 Horse racing, Mandans, 1832 (No. 432), 309. 

 Horse trade with an Indian, Mr. Catlin's and Cap- 

 tain Duncan's, 347. 

 Horse, wild, at play, Texas, 1834 (No. 499), 344. 



bands of, on the plains, size and kinds 



of, how captured, 304. 

 breaking the, 1834 (No. 501), 344. 

 cavalry, selected by color for each 



company, 261. 

 Mr. Catlin'snoteson chasing, capture, 



and breaking, 344. 

 taken by the Sioux, 58. 



