938 



INDEX TO CATL1N GALLERY. 



Wa-bo-ki-e-skiek, The Sac Prophet (see Wah-pe- 

 kee-suck), 31. 

 Waco (see W6e-co), 53. 

 Wa-chesh-uk, War, Osage (No. 39), 44. 

 Wah-chee-haks-ka, The man who puts all out 



doors, Winnebago (No. 207), 128. 

 Wah-chee-te, woman and child, Osage, No. 30, 



wife of Clermont (No. 29), 42. 

 Wah-chees, a brave, Menomonee (No. 233), 133. 

 Wab-kon-ze-kaw, The Snake, a Wionebago brave 



(see also Wa-kawn), (No. 213), 129. 

 Wa-ho-beck-ee, handsomest man in the Osage Na- 

 tion (No. 33), 43. 

 Wa-bong-ga-shee, No Fool, a very great fop (No. 



24), 40. 

 Wa-h6n-ga-shce, No Fool, a fop, Kansas (No. 24), 



40. 

 Wah-pa-ko-las-kuk, The Bear's Track, Sac and 



Fox (No. 10), 36. 

 Wah-pe-kee-suck, White Cloud, The Prophet, a 

 Sac, prime mover in the Black 

 Hawk war, description of, as 

 a warrior, as an orator, capt- 

 ured with Black Hawk at 

 Bad Axe, 31, 32, 33. 

 sometimes called the Priest of 

 Assassination, also called 

 Charitable, an euemv of the 

 whites, his death, 31,32,33. 

 Wah-pe-say, The White, Weeah ( Weas), (No. 250), 



140. 

 Wah-pe-seh-see, an aged woman, mother of No. 

 246, and one of the three remaining Kas-kas- 

 kias, in 1832-'3 (No. 247), 139. 

 Wah-p6n-jee-a, The Swan, Weeah (Weas), (No. 



249), 140. 

 Wah-ro-nee-sah, The Surronnder, Otoe (No. 117), 



75. 

 Wa-kawn, The Snake (see No. 213), 129. 

 Wa-kon-ehash-kaw, He who comes on the thunder, 



Winnebago (No. 211), 129. 

 Wallow, butfalo, on the prairie, 293. 

 Wa mask-ee-sheet, He who takes away, Osage 



(No. 38), 44. 

 Wampum on neck and red flag in the hand, sym- 

 bol of war with Kiokapoos, 138. 

 Wa nah-de-tunk-ah, The Big Eagle, or Black Dog, 



Sioux, chief of Sioux (No. 70), 54. 

 Wan-ee-ton (Wanata), chief of the Sus-se-ton 

 (Sisseton), Sioux, Upper Missouri, a great chief, 

 his dress, his peculiarities, and great fortitude, 

 his power with the Sioux (No. 72), 54, 55. 

 Wa-o-no-jah-gah, He has swallowed a tooth, a 



Seneca, 1C4. 

 Wap-sha-ka-nah, a brave, Peoria (No. 252), 140. 

 Wa-quothe-e-qua, The Buck's Wife, or Female 



Deer, Sac and Fox (No. 10), 34. 

 War, Black Hawk, of 1832, causes of, 24. 

 costumes of Indians (No. 172), 116. 

 dance of the Sioux, painted in 1832 (No. 

 .457), 319. 

 by the Sioux, in a vat in a brewery, 

 at London, 1845, 635. 

 party, Comanche, 1834 (No. 459), 320. 

 (No. 488), 339. 

 mounted (No. 496), 343. 

 foot, of Indians marching, scouts and 

 spies inadvance (No. 367), 266. 

 Mandan in council, 1832 (No. 

 457), 319. 

 symbols of Kickapoos, 138. 

 whoop of the Iowas, 152. 

 Warriors, amongst the Mandans, 84. 



the Gros Ventre, great, 117. 

 Wars, Indian, Sioux, from 1812 to 1882, 63. 

 . Wa-saw-me saw, The Bearing Thunder, son of 



Black Hawk, 30. 

 Wa-saw-see, Indians (see Osage), 42. 

 Was-c6m-mum, The Busy Man, Iowa (see also No. 



257), (No. 260), 142. 

 Wash-im-pe-shee, The Madman, Osage (No. 42), 44. 

 Wa-shinga-sah-ba, Blackbird, Omaha (No. 364), 265. 

 Washington, General George, King Louis Phil- 



lippe, note on, 1796-97, 694. 

 Wash-ka-mon-yu, Fast Dancer (see also No. 260), 



an Iowa, mentioned, 143. 

 Wa-sissica, war song of the Iowas, 149. 

 Wat-al-le-go, a brave, Creek (No. 290), 210. 



Wa-tan-ye, One Always Foremost, Iowa, men 



tionod (No. 7). 143. 

 Wa-ta-we-bu-ka-na, Commanding General, an 



Iowa lad, mentioned, 113. 

 Waun-naw con, The Dish, or John W. Quinney 



(No. 273), 196 

 Weapons of the Iowa Indians, 148. 



Indian, an to, 411. 

 Weas, as a tribe extinct, 140. 

 Webster, Hon. J. L., mentioned, 66. 

 We-chush-ta-doo-ta, The Red Man, Sioux, a ball- 

 player (No. 75), 55. 

 Weeah (Weas), Algonkin, 140. 

 condition in 1886, 140. 

 confederated on Quapaw Reservation, 



140. 

 extinct as a tribe, not one of pure blood 



now living 140. 

 portraits (N03. 248-250), notes on, 140. 

 Wee-co(Waco), portrait, notes on, present location 



and condition, 1885-86. 53. 

 Weedon, F., certificate from, 230. 

 Wee-ke-ru-law, He who exchanges, Otoe (No. 121), 



76. 

 Wee-sheet, The Sturgeon Head, one of Black 

 Hawk's principal warriors, biography of (No. 

 18), 36. 

 Wee-ta-ra-sha-ro, head chief, Pawnee (No. 55), 50. 

 Wellington, Duke of, seen by Iowas in London, 



1845, 638. 

 Welsh colony, Mandans, 4G3. 

 We-saw-me-saw, Roaring Thunder, Black Hawk's 



son (No. 4), 30. 

 West, Capt. F. R., recollection of Keokuk and 

 other Sac and Foxes in 1837, 17, 18. 

 the, as to, 435, 504. 



its future greatness, 505. 

 Western vernacular, the, 506. 

 Wharton, H., certificate from, 230. 



Captain, reference to, 494. 

 Wheeler, Capt. George M., collection of Indian 



photographs, 8U5. 

 Wheelock, Lieut. T. B., certificate from, 229. 

 Whisky and civilization, Mr. Catlin's idea of their 

 influence upon the Indian (see No. 198), 

 126. 

 disliked by the Osages, 45. 

 Whistles, war, of the Sioux, 395. 

 White boy rescued from Pawnees, 1832, 256. 



Cloud, The Sac Prophet, see Wah-pe-kee- 

 suck (No. 7), 31. 

 White wolves, a parley, 1832 (No. 468), 324. 

 Whitman massacre, referred to, 1847 (No. 29), 96. 

 Rev. Thomas, mentioned, 96. 

 Walt, poem on Red Jacket. 1844, 170. 

 Wigwams of Chippewas made of birch (No. 334), 

 239. 

 Iowa Indian, 148. 

 Mandans, 349. 

 Osages, how built, 44. 

 Wi-jun-jon, The Pigeon's Egg-Head, Assinaboine, 

 his mission to Washington in 1832, 

 and dress (No. 179), 118. 

 an Assinaboine, the story of, killed by 

 his tribe as a liar for telling what 

 he actually saw amongst the whites, 

 East (No. 479), 328. 

 Wild Hog, a Cheyenne chief, mentioned, 92. 

 Wiikie, Sir David, his opinion of Mr. Catlin's art, 

 746. 

 mentioned, 566. 

 Wi 16oh-tah-eeh-tchah-ta-inah-uee, The red thing 

 that touches in marching, Sioux girl (No. 81), 56. 

 Winnebagoes — Dakota Sioux, 127-132. 

 notes on, 127-132. 

 portraits (Nos. 199-215), 127-132. 

 present location, numbers, and 

 condition, l885-'86, 131. 

 Winnebago, Fort, Fox River, data as to, 1835 (No. 

 356), 261. 

 Indians, article on, by Hiram W. 

 Beckwith, Fergus's Historical Se- 

 ries, Chicago, 1884 (Nos. 10, 27), 131. 

 Winnebagonk (sen Winnohago), 130. 

 Wives, Stuck-stu-mick-osticks, six or eight, 102. 

 bought amongst the Mandans, 83. 

 changed for a day by Iowa Indians, as to, 

 685; 



