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	<title>Blackfeet Archives - Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</title>
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	<description>A digital archive of treaties, documents, artwork, and 360° trail panoramas from the Corps of Discovery</description>
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		<title>Indian Family with Travois</title>
		<link>https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/indian-family-with-travois/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2026 18:46:29 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://research.lewisandclarktrust.org/art/indian-family-with-travois/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Russell's watercolor depicts a Plains Indian family in transit, their belongings lashed to a travois — the A-frame drag sled made of lodgepoles harnessed to a horse or dog. The composition is horizontal, suited to…</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/indian-family-with-travois/">Indian Family with Travois</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Russell&#8217;s watercolor depicts a Plains Indian family in transit, their belongings lashed to a travois — the A-frame drag sled made of lodgepoles harnessed to a horse or dog. The composition is horizontal, suited to the lateral movement of a traveling group across open country. A mounted figure leads or accompanies the procession, while the travois itself carries bundled goods and likely a child or elder. Russell renders the scene in transparent watercolor with graphite underdrawing, a combination he favored for working studies and finished sheets alike. The palette is restrained — earth tones for the figures and animals, washes of pale ground and sky — and the draftsmanship emphasizes the angular geometry of the travois poles against the rounded forms of horse and rider.</p>
<p>By 1897 Russell had been working in Montana for roughly seventeen years, having come west from St. Louis in 1880 as a teenager. He spent the 1880s as a wrangler and night herder in the Judith Basin, where he observed Blackfeet, Crow, and Cree camps firsthand and lived for a period among the Blood Blackfeet in Alberta in 1888. By the mid-1890s he had given up cowboying entirely for full-time painting, and subjects of Native domestic and travel life — as distinct from battle scenes or hunts — became a sustained interest. Travois imagery recurs throughout his work because the device condensed everything that interested him about pre-reservation Plains mobility: the horse culture, the movable lodge, the household on the march.</p>
<p>Russell (1864–1926) is the central figure in the Montana school of Western art and, with Frederic Remington, one of the two artists most responsible for shaping popular visual memory of the northern Plains. The sheet entered the collection of Amon G. Carter, the Fort Worth publisher and oilman whose Russell and Remington holdings became the founding core of the Amon Carter Museum of American Art when it opened in 1961. Although this watercolor does not illustrate a Lewis and Clark Expedition episode directly, Russell was the principal twentieth-century painter of Corps of Discovery subjects, and his ethnographic studies of travois transport inform the visual vocabulary later applied to expedition scenes such as his Montana statehouse mural and the Sacagawea paintings of the early 1900s.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/indian-family-with-travois/">Indian Family with Travois</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
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		<title>Running Fight Between Crees and Blackfeet, Old Style Warfare</title>
		<link>https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/running-fight-between-crees-and-blackfeet-old-style-warfare/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2026 18:46:29 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://research.lewisandclarktrust.org/art/running-fight-between-crees-and-blackfeet-old-style-warfare/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Russell's watercolor depicts a mounted skirmish between Cree and Blackfeet warriors on the open plains. Figures on horseback are arranged in a loose diagonal across the sheet, some firing rifles from the saddle, others wielding…</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/running-fight-between-crees-and-blackfeet-old-style-warfare/">Running Fight Between Crees and Blackfeet, Old Style Warfare</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Russell&#8217;s watercolor depicts a mounted skirmish between Cree and Blackfeet warriors on the open plains. Figures on horseback are arranged in a loose diagonal across the sheet, some firing rifles from the saddle, others wielding lances or bows as their horses gallop at full stretch. Russell uses graphite underdrawing to establish the anatomy of horses and riders, then washes in color to differentiate the two groups by their dress, weapons, and horse trappings. The palette is restrained—earth tones for the prairie, blue and grey for the distant sky—with brighter accents on shields, feathered headgear, and painted ponies. Dust kicked up by the running horses softens the middle distance, a device Russell used repeatedly to convey speed across flat country.</p>
<p>The subtitle &#8220;Old Style Warfare&#8221; signals Russell&#8217;s intent to record intertribal combat as it had been waged before the consolidation of the reservation system, when raiding and counter-raiding between Cree bands from the north and Blackfeet on the northwestern plains were ongoing features of life on the upper Missouri and Saskatchewan drainages. By 1895, when Russell made the painting, those running fights were a generation in the past. He was thirty-one and had been living in Montana since 1880, first as a wrangler and then increasingly as a working artist; he had spent the winter of 1888–89 with the Blood (Kainai) Blackfeet in Alberta, an experience that shaped his lifelong attention to Blackfeet material culture and to the horse cultures of the northwestern plains more broadly. Watercolors of this period helped him transition from illustrator to recognized painter of the West.</p>
<p>Russell (1864–1926) produced thousands of works ranging from quick sketches to large oils, and intertribal combat scenes form a recognizable subset within his output, distinct from his cowboy subjects and his Lewis and Clark paintings of the early twentieth century. The present sheet bears the credit line of the Amon G. Carter Collection and entered the holdings of the Amon Carter Museum of American Art in Fort Worth, the institution Carter&#8217;s collection seeded, which holds one of the most comprehensive groups of Russell&#8217;s works on paper. Its current location is not recorded in the available documentation.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/running-fight-between-crees-and-blackfeet-old-style-warfare/">Running Fight Between Crees and Blackfeet, Old Style Warfare</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
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		<title>Indian Scouting Party</title>
		<link>https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/indian-scouting-party/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2026 18:46:28 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://research.lewisandclarktrust.org/art/indian-scouting-party/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Russell's watercolor depicts a small group of mounted Indian scouts in an open landscape, the composition stretched to an unusually narrow vertical format—roughly 28 inches tall by 12 inches wide—that emphasizes the verticality of the…</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/indian-scouting-party/">Indian Scouting Party</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Russell&#8217;s watercolor depicts a small group of mounted Indian scouts in an open landscape, the composition stretched to an unusually narrow vertical format—roughly 28 inches tall by 12 inches wide—that emphasizes the verticality of the riders and their horses against the open plains. The figures are arrayed in profile, allowing Russell to display the silhouettes of horse and rider, weapons, and headdress detail that were his stock in trade. He worked here in transparent and opaque watercolor over a graphite underdrawing, a combination that let him preserve the luminosity of the paper for sky and distance while building up solid passages of pigment for the figures in the foreground.</p>
<p>By 1900 Russell had been working professionally as an artist for roughly a decade, having transitioned from cowboy life in the Judith Basin to full-time painting in Great Falls, Montana, in 1893. The turn of the century marked an important period of consolidation in his career: he was producing more finished watercolors for eastern clients and publications, and his marriage to Nancy Cooper in 1896 had begun to shape his work toward a more deliberate professional output. Scouting parties, hunting scenes, and pre-reservation depictions of Plains life were among his recurring subjects, drawn from his own observation of Blackfeet, Crow, and other Northern Plains peoples during his Montana years, including a stay among the Blood Indians in Alberta in 1888.</p>
<p>Russell (1864–1926) became the defining painter of the Northern Plains, and works like this one belong to the genre of Indian subject pictures that he produced in parallel with his cowboy scenes. The painting is held by the Amon Carter Museum of American Art in Fort Worth, Texas, part of the Amon G. Carter Collection assembled by the Texas publisher and oilman whose holdings of Russell and Frederic Remington formed the founding core of the museum when it opened in 1961. While not a Lewis and Clark subject directly, the work documents the mounted Plains scouting traditions that the Corps of Discovery encountered between 1804 and 1806 along the Missouri and its tributaries, and Russell&#8217;s broader body of work has long informed the visual imagination of the expedition.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/indian-scouting-party/">Indian Scouting Party</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
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		<title>Sun Worship in Montana</title>
		<link>https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/sun-worship-in-montana/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2026 18:46:28 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://research.lewisandclarktrust.org/art/sun-worship-in-montana/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Russell's Sun Worship in Montana shows a lone Plains Indian man, mounted on a light-colored horse, holding a long staff or pipe-stem aloft toward the rising or setting sun. The figure is positioned on open…</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/sun-worship-in-montana/">Sun Worship in Montana</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Russell&#8217;s <em>Sun Worship in Montana</em> shows a lone Plains Indian man, mounted on a light-colored horse, holding a long staff or pipe-stem aloft toward the rising or setting sun. The figure is positioned on open prairie with low ridges visible in the middle distance, and the sky—washed in pale golds and blues—occupies more than half the composition. Russell uses a vertical format unusual for his horseback subjects, which emphasizes the upright posture of horse and rider and the vast sky above them. The brushwork is loose in the landscape and tighter in the figure, where Russell renders the rider&#8217;s feathered headdress, leggings, and the horse&#8217;s painted markings with the ethnographic precision he was known for.</p>
<p>The painting dates from 1907, a productive period in Russell&#8217;s career when he had moved beyond his earliest cowboy-life subjects and was increasingly devoting canvases to Plains Indian life as he understood it from his time among the Blood (Kainai) in Alberta in 1888–1889 and from continued contact with Blackfeet and other tribes in Montana. By 1907 Russell had relocated to Great Falls, was married to Nancy Cooper Russell (who managed his career and prices), and was beginning to command serious eastern attention. Works depicting Native spiritual practice—dances, ceremonies, prayer to the sun—formed a recurring strand in his output during these years, reflecting both his sympathy for Plains peoples and a wider Euro-American interest in recording what was assumed to be a vanishing way of life.</p>
<p>Russell (1864–1926) had come to Montana from St. Louis as a teenager and built his reputation as the self-taught cowboy artist of the northern plains, in counterpoint to Frederic Remington&#8217;s more cosmopolitan production. <em>Sun Worship in Montana</em> is held by the Amon Carter Museum of American Art in Fort Worth, Texas, as part of the Amon G. Carter Collection, the foundational gift of Western art that established the museum in 1961. While not a Lewis and Clark subject, the painting belongs to the broader visual record of the upper Missouri country the expedition traversed a century before Russell painted it, and it documents the Indigenous religious life that Lewis and Clark observed but rarely described with sympathy.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/sun-worship-in-montana/">Sun Worship in Montana</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
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		<title>Lost in a Snowstorm &#8212; We Are Friends</title>
		<link>https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/lost-in-a-snowstorm-we-are-friends/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2026 18:46:27 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://research.lewisandclarktrust.org/art/lost-in-a-snowstorm-we-are-friends/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Russell's horizontal canvas shows a tense encounter on a windswept plain during a blizzard. A party of mounted white trappers and a group of Native horsemen meet face to face in driving snow, the riders…</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/lost-in-a-snowstorm-we-are-friends/">Lost in a Snowstorm &#8212; We Are Friends</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Russell&#8217;s horizontal canvas shows a tense encounter on a windswept plain during a blizzard. A party of mounted white trappers and a group of Native horsemen meet face to face in driving snow, the riders bundled in capotes and blanket coats, their horses heads-down against the weather. The central gesture is one of recognition: a hand raised, palm forward, in the sign-language greeting for &#8220;friend.&#8221; Russell compresses the figures into a tight, frieze-like band across the middle of the composition, leaving broad expanses of gray sky and blowing snow above and below. The palette is muted—whites, grays, dun browns, the dull red of a trade blanket—and the brushwork is looser and more atmospheric than in his later, more polished narrative pictures.</p>
<p>The painting dates to 1888, when Russell was twenty-four and still working as a wrangler and night herder in the Judith Basin of central Montana. He had come west from St. Louis in 1880 and spent the 1880s absorbing the country, its weather, and its people firsthand, including a winter of 1888–89 spent among the Blood (Kainai) in present-day Alberta. The picture reflects that direct experience: the moment turns on the plains protocol by which strangers met in open country, where misidentification in poor visibility could mean a fight and the sign for peace had to come first and unmistakably. It is not a Lewis and Clark subject, but it belongs to the same northern plains world the expedition had crossed eighty years earlier, and Russell&#8217;s reconstructions of that landscape have shaped how later viewers picture the Corps of Discovery&#8217;s encounters.</p>
<p>Lost in a Snowstorm — We Are Friends is among the earliest of Russell&#8217;s ambitious narrative oils and is often cited as the first work in which he handled a multi-figure cross-cultural meeting with full confidence. It is held by the Amon Carter Museum of American Art in Fort Worth, Texas, part of the Amon G. Carter Collection, the founding gift that established the museum&#8217;s holdings of Russell and Frederic Remington. The painting is regularly reproduced in studies of Russell&#8217;s development and of plains sign language.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/lost-in-a-snowstorm-we-are-friends/">Lost in a Snowstorm &#8212; We Are Friends</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
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		<title>The Buffalo Hunt</title>
		<link>https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/the-buffalo-hunt/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2026 18:46:27 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://research.lewisandclarktrust.org/art/the-buffalo-hunt/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Russell's painting shows a group of mounted Plains Indian hunters in the midst of a buffalo chase across open grassland. The composition is built around movement: bison run from right to left in the foreground…</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/the-buffalo-hunt/">The Buffalo Hunt</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Russell&#8217;s painting shows a group of mounted Plains Indian hunters in the midst of a buffalo chase across open grassland. The composition is built around movement: bison run from right to left in the foreground and middle distance, kicking up dust, while riders armed with bows and lances close in at full gallop. One hunter in the foreground draws his bow alongside a bull; another rider, partially obscured by dust, presses a second animal. Russell uses a low horizon and a warm, dry palette of tans, ochres, and rust browns, with the distant plain dissolving into pale blue haze. The animals&#8217; anatomy and the riders&#8217; bareback technique—reins gripped short, weight forward—reflect his long firsthand study of both subjects.</p>
<p>By 1919 Russell was sixty-five and had been painting full-time for roughly two decades, having transitioned from cowboy and wrangler in the 1880s to one of the most commercially successful Western artists in the country. The buffalo hunt was a recurring subject for him from the 1890s onward, painted repeatedly in oil and watercolor. He treated it as historical reconstruction: by the time Russell arrived in Montana in 1880, the northern bison herds were already collapsing, and the mounted Indian hunt he depicted was a scene from living memory rather than current observation. Works like this one were part of a broader postwar market for nostalgic Western imagery, sold to collectors and railroad-era patrons who wanted images of a frontier they understood to be gone.</p>
<p>Russell spent most of his adult life in and around Great Falls, Montana, where his log-cabin studio still stands. His sympathy for and knowledge of Plains tribes—particularly the Blackfeet, among whom he had lived briefly in 1888—distinguished his Indian subjects from those of many of his contemporaries. The painting is now held by the Amon Carter Museum of American Art in Fort Worth, Texas, entering that collection through Amon G. Carter, the Texas newspaper publisher who assembled one of the largest holdings of Russell and Frederic Remington works in existence. The museum, which opened in 1961, built its early identity on these two artists, and Russell&#8217;s buffalo-hunt canvases have remained among its most reproduced holdings.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/the-buffalo-hunt/">The Buffalo Hunt</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
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		<title>Blackfeet Burning Crow Buffalo Range</title>
		<link>https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/blackfeet-burning-crow-buffalo-range/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2026 18:46:27 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://research.lewisandclarktrust.org/art/blackfeet-burning-crow-buffalo-range/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Charles M. Russell's "Blackfeet Burning Crow Buffalo Range" depicts a scene of intertribal warfare on the northern plains. The composition shows mounted Blackfeet warriors setting fire to grassland, a tactic used to deprive a rival…</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/blackfeet-burning-crow-buffalo-range/">Blackfeet Burning Crow Buffalo Range</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Charles M. Russell&#8217;s &#8220;Blackfeet Burning Crow Buffalo Range&#8221; depicts a scene of intertribal warfare on the northern plains. The composition shows mounted Blackfeet warriors setting fire to grassland, a tactic used to deprive a rival tribe of forage and to drive bison away from enemy hunting territory. Smoke and flame fill the middle distance while the riders move across the foreground, rendered with Russell&#8217;s customary attention to horse anatomy, the cut of leggings and shirts, and the carriage of the rider on horseback. As a halftone print measuring roughly 3 1/2 by 5 3/8 inches, the image was reproduced from one of Russell&#8217;s painted or drawn originals for mass circulation, a common practice for his work in the early twentieth century.</p>
<p>The 1907 date places this image at the height of Russell&#8217;s productive middle career, after he had left the cowboy life behind and settled in Great Falls, Montana, to paint full time. By this point he was widely published in magazines, gift books, and promotional literature, and small halftone reproductions of his Western subjects circulated broadly. The subject reflects Russell&#8217;s lifelong interest in the Plains tribes before reservation confinement, a period he treated repeatedly through scenes of hunting, horse raids, and intertribal conflict. The Blackfeet–Crow rivalry he depicts here was a defining feature of the northern plains in the early nineteenth century, the same landscape and peoples the Lewis and Clark Expedition encountered in 1805 and 1806 as the Corps of Discovery moved through what is now Montana.</p>
<p>Russell (1864–1926) is the artist most closely identified with Montana&#8217;s visual identity, and his images shaped public understanding of the northern plains for generations. This print is held in the Amon Carter Museum of American Art in Fort Worth, Texas, a major repository of Russell&#8217;s work alongside that of Frederic Remington. It entered the collection through the Fred and Jo Mazzulla Collection, an important Colorado-based assemblage of Western American photographs, prints, and ephemera. Russell&#8217;s depictions of intertribal warfare and pre-reservation Plains life have been frequently reproduced in Lewis and Clark commemorative publications, where they serve to illustrate the Indigenous world the expedition documented but did not fully understand.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/blackfeet-burning-crow-buffalo-range/">Blackfeet Burning Crow Buffalo Range</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
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		<title>Indian Women Moving</title>
		<link>https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/indian-women-moving/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2026 18:46:26 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://research.lewisandclarktrust.org/art/indian-women-moving/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Charles M. Russell's Indian Women Moving depicts a Plains Indian family group on the march across open prairie country. The composition centers on mounted women, with travois-laden horses pulling the household possessions of a band…</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/indian-women-moving/">Indian Women Moving</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Charles M. Russell&#8217;s <em>Indian Women Moving</em> depicts a Plains Indian family group on the march across open prairie country. The composition centers on mounted women, with travois-laden horses pulling the household possessions of a band relocating camp. Children, dogs, and pack animals fill out the procession, which moves across the canvas from right to left against a landscape of rolling grassland and distant hills. Russell rendered the scene in oil with the loose, narrative brushwork characteristic of his late-1890s easel work, paying particular attention to the harness, parfleche bags, and lodge poles that constituted the material culture of a mobile camp. The palette is keyed to the muted greens, ochres, and grayed blues of the northern plains.</p>
<p>By 1898 Russell had been painting professionally for roughly a decade, having transitioned from working cowboy to full-time artist after his marriage to Nancy Cooper in 1896. The late 1890s marked his shift toward more ambitious oil compositions and a sustained engagement with Indigenous subject matter, particularly the Blackfeet, Crow, and Cree peoples he had observed during his years on the open range and during a stay among the Blood Indians in Alberta in 1888. Scenes of camp movement were a recurring theme in his work; they allowed him to document a way of life he understood to be receding under reservation policy and the closing of the open range, processes well advanced in Montana by the time this canvas was painted.</p>
<p>Russell (1864–1926) spent virtually his entire adult life in Montana and became the state&#8217;s most identified artist, his reputation built on firsthand familiarity with both cowboy and Native subjects. <em>Indian Women Moving</em> entered the collection of Amon G. Carter, the Fort Worth publisher and oilman whose acquisitions of Russell and Frederic Remington became the founding holdings of the Amon Carter Museum of American Art, where the painting remains. While not a Lewis and Clark subject in the literal sense, works of this kind have long informed the visual imagination of the expedition era, supplying scholars and the public with credible images of the mobile Plains societies the Corps of Discovery encountered between 1804 and 1806.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/art/indian-women-moving/">Indian Women Moving</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
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		<title>Curly Bear Wagner on Blackfeet History and Lewis &#038; Clark</title>
		<link>https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/tent-voices/tent-of-many-voices-06040505/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Feb 2026 00:36:06 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://research.lewisandclarktrust.org/tent-voices/tent-of-many-voices-06040505/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>A recording from the Tent of Many Voices collection.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/tent-voices/tent-of-many-voices-06040505/">Curly Bear Wagner on Blackfeet History and Lewis &#038; Clark</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>e well good afternoon everyone and welcome to the tent to mini voices T of mini voices is part of the core Discovery 2 traveling Louis and Clark exhibit and what this tent is is exactly what it sounds like it&#8217;s a place to hear a wide variety of perspectives or voices about the Lewis and Clark expedition and also the 200 years since then and what we have here this afternoon is we&#8217;re lucky to have with us curly bear Wagner and curly bear is um of the black feet people he&#8217;s going to talk a little bit about the history and culture of his people and specifically their encounter with uh Captain Lewis and his men and give you a unique perspective a first nation&#8217;s perspective on those encounters so please give curle bear Wagner a warm tenin voices welcome thank you thank you thank you 1 two three can you hear me hear me all right okay I&#8217;m curly bear Wagner I&#8217;m a black feet from can you say okie Okie can you say that there you go that&#8217;s how are you in black feet OK we say OK n say OK n that&#8217;s how are you my friends then you reply you say suap that&#8217;s good all right but you guys look ex soapi that&#8217;s it&#8217;s real good huh all right uh some of the things that I&#8217;ve done uh my past is I&#8217;m the past culture director of the black feet and as culture director uh we I was involved in many issues concerning our people one of the issues was saving the sweet grass Hills we got a 20-year monitori from the secretary interior babit sweet grass Hills in the Bader 2 medicine area and also we were the first tribe in the United States to get our ancestor remains at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington DC and also the field museum in Chicago and brought our ancestors back home for proper burial and uh so that was really a feather in our H hat counting coup on those guys huh and uh I remember at the Smithsonian institution little guy by ubelaker little skinny guy at the Smithsonian he&#8217;s beating his little skinny fist on the desk said curly bear it&#8217;s impossible to get your ancestor remains out of here I looked at him I said well I don&#8217;t l my faith in man I lay my faith in him up there and we&#8217;ll see if we get him out but I call him up about once a month to see he get angry and the Dickens with me we we did it all right uh my people the black feet I&#8217;m going to talk about uh traditionally our land started from the headwaters of the Saskatchewan River by Edmonton Alberta and running East to battle for saskat then running South to the Missouri up the Missouri to the Yellowstone up the Yellowstone back into Teton country that was traditionally black feet land now there was us black feet today in the United States our reservation is a million and a half acres in size there&#8217;s the blood to be the cisa in there up north in Canada so there&#8217;s four bands of us actually five bands a small R band they got the largest band of our people that got wiped out by small poox so that was traditionally land our land now as I said working with the as culture coordinator I was involved in many issues concerning our people now some of our people up in Canada the Pagan Nation give me a call A guy by name and Albert little mustache Albert said curly bear can you come down here and give us a hand up here and give us a hand we have a VIP coming some of you may remember in the 80s when the pope visited Canada and uh he said the pope was I thought he was teasing me because my people have such a great sense of humor and I said yeah I&#8217;d like to come up he said well when you come up to our Reserve he said look for a mile when you get to Fort McLoud you turn out towards our Reserve he said look for a mile poster number 28 you take a left there and so I drove up and I found M poost number 28 I took a left and went on down many roads huh in that area called Indian roads I know I do archaeology work I just finished down here you see all the roads these farmers and Ranchers have all over the place but they had a road plowed all the way down and I followed it down in a very beautiful setting by The Old Man River they&#8217;re putting up a lodge ceremonial Lodge for our guests and the men folks are out there putting that Lodge up and they&#8217;re having a hard time so I stopped the car and I went out and I helped them we finally got the lodge up and we put it up wrong so we had to take it down and put it back up again that used to be the woman&#8217;s job putting those lodges up huh today you ask women to put the lodge I say if you want that Lodge up curly bear you put it up yourself kind of an in and women&#8217;s lib thing caught on amongst our people so we&#8217;re doing that work those women supposed to be doing so we we got the lodge up it was a 28t lodge a ceremonial Lodge with a Bear Lodge very sacred to our people they came through vision through dreams and inside we put a liner all the way around also very beautifully designed then we laid Buffalo robes throughout in the center we left the fire we made then we put the willow back rests up these Willow back rest about 132 those Willows like these easy chairs that you&#8217;re leaning up against we had that in place now Albert he was pretty nervous about everything so since there&#8217;s many roads getting that area he plac these young kids up there on that road so when the Caravan came to come and visit the pope to come and visit our people that they would uh find the right Road how this all started is the pope was going to visit in Calgary Alberta and he was going to come down and visit the head smashed in Buffalo Jump head smashed in Buffalo Jump is recognized by UNESCO as a world heritage site up in Canada some you may have been up there it&#8217;s about a three $6 million Museum built right into the uh grounds and the Pagan heard about it since most of our people are Catholics baptized Catholics it gave us an opportunity for the pope to visit the First Nations people I always say First Nations I don&#8217;t really care to be called a Native American because most of you people are Native Americans right you&#8217;re all born here right but I don&#8217;t mind being called an indan either doesn&#8217;t bother me to be called an Indian because when Columbus came to this country he was looking for India huh and he seen the people and he called them Indians that was good I&#8217;m glad he wasn&#8217;t looking for the Virgin Islands or turkey being the heck of a fixing so so uh IND didn&#8217;t don&#8217;t bother me and so when uh everything was in place now we had everything in order and uh the pope was coming down and uh from Calgary after SP spending some time up there and visiting the head smashed in Buffalo Jump now the pope very highly thought of throughout the world is a very educated person and he knows many languages but my people know many languages too because there&#8217;s over 500 federally recognized tribes the United States today and we all speak a different language and we uh sign language huh that&#8217;s how we communicated with one another that&#8217;s like juler in the uh core Discovery he spoke sign language and so that was in place now we&#8217;re all set up waiting for him and waiting for him and and and uh nothing happened pretty soon one of these young kids come running over the hill told Albert something Albert dropped everything went running over those Hills apparently the Caravan the pope has taken a different Road and Albert panicked he running over these little Hills and he&#8217;s seen the Caravan coming some distance and so he start waving his hands like this to get the Pope&#8217;s attention and to get him on the right path he&#8217;s really waving his hands like this he finally got the Pope&#8217;s attention and when he got the you know Pope rides in that uh Pop mobile huh rides way up high and he was waving like that and he found he got his attention he told him in Sign Language he said come on over to our lodge we&#8217;ll sit we&#8217;ll talk we&#8217;ll drink tea be good so copy told him in sign language and the pope would like this to him so nber he came back to the lodge he started rolling those Willow backrest up and placed them outside placing those buffaloes outside and those Elders said nabert what on Earth are you doing did you get to talk to the pope he said yeah what would you tell him well I really waved my hands like this I finally got his attention the Pope&#8217;s attention I told him in Sign Language I come on over to our lodge we&#8217;ll sit we&#8217;ll talk we&#8217;ll drink tea be good what what the pope say the pope said take your teepee down and get the hell out of here I was in Italy a couple times I want to tell that story over there I thought I better not get the hell out of there is everybody from Montana here any out of Staters who&#8217;s from out of state where you from Illinois Illinois huh I spent a lot of time in Chicago New York new yorkon Arizona South Dakota who&#8217;s from h no all right well welcome to our beautiful country the black feet called Fort Benton mini horses because of the trade here they didn&#8217;t like us too much they kicked us out of here well anyway I&#8217;m going to talk about my people and and I&#8217;ll eventually work to the encounter and uh the black feet are the oldest Plains living tribe on the plains we can trace our ancestors well back over 5,000 years of being on the plains we were hunters and gatherers we didn&#8217;t grow any kind of a crops we had a about 75 plants that we use for food and for medicine so we depended upon the Buffalo for the staff for life for our people before come to the horse we use dogs as a means of transportation it was a wolf-like dog we put a harness over the dog and that&#8217;s the way we travel now average family of four to six people would have about up to 15 dogs to move their belongings a lot of dogs and uh Buffalo being the style for life for our people so who had various ways of hunting the Buffalo one of the ways was run off over these Cliffs these Buffalo jumps we call piskin and we did this in late fall around October so we had enough meat to last us through the winter we T we dried the meat and uh this was a food source but we also hunted buffalo on the plains on an everyday basis also and then the first white man to make contact with us was in 1754 a guy by name of Alexander hendr came with the Hudson Bay people and they wanted to open up trade with us well we opened up our our arms to them because they had a lot to offer to us they they come in here to coexist not to take from us and so we opened up trade there after the beaver they wanted us to go back to the Hudson Bay bring our Wares back there our Beaver skins and we said no we don&#8217;t know how to paddle canoe and we don&#8217;t eat fish and that&#8217;s true we never ate fish at that time um because my people are very superstitious like say we were why we never ate fish because we&#8217;re nomadic people and we had across these Rivers all the time and uh we were highly Believers of the sopy spirit the water spirit and when we came to the CCS we&#8217;d leave offerings and uh talk and say let our elders and our young people cross in a good way don&#8217;t take their lives because you know the rivers are very strong and then we&#8217;ll leave your children alone that&#8217;s the reason why we never atat fish because of our spiritual beliefs and after comeing to the horse it changed our life completely uh the horse meant great wealth to our people and to gain more wealth to our people we had to go out and what we call take horses from other tribes in the history books it said that we were horse thieves those black feet were horse thieves we weren&#8217;t horse thieves we were horse takers because everything was done through prayer and I&#8217;ll I&#8217;ll tell you a story leading up to Lewis and Clark now to gain wealth these young boys it was a probably the poor kids in our bands now would be the one that would be go out and taking these horses because every time you did you put your life on the line and so these young boys would gather and they&#8217;d go get uh guidance from the elders they may bring them a pipe said we&#8217;re going to go take horses and build them a sweat lodge and the sweat lodge is like our church is made of 12 Willows and they&#8217;re woven together and in theide of our sweat lodge in the center we dig a hole for the hot rocks to be placed inside that hole and then we go and and prepare now the we didn&#8217;t call them medicine men because we had no word for medicine we called them mysterious men so anything that we didn&#8217;t understand we called it mysterious he&#8217;d come with his pipe now you guys know it as a piece pipe but to us the pipe is a connection between us and the Creator now the bowl of the pipe It&#8217;s Made of Stone so to us that represents the Earth the stem of the pipe it&#8217;s made of wood so to us that represents all living things on the earth and the smoke that comes out of our pipe we believe that&#8217;s our prayers going up the Creator because the smoke is like a spirit you see it then it disappears so that was our connection because when anthropol when they wrote about my people they said the son was our God the son wasn&#8217;t our God our God is the same God as your God only thing that in our beliefs in our ways everything is real and so we honored the son every morning we still do because our traditions and culture is still very much alive every morning we leave an offering to the Sun and thank the Sun for what the sun gives to us what does the sun give to us heat light and it&#8217;s an energy force to make all things grow huh and so therefore we honor that and then when the Sun goes home in the evening we leave another offering thanking him for the day that he&#8217;s given to us because when the Creator created this creation everything is living from the sky the Sun the moon the stars the mountains of trees the rocks of grass the gravel the water everything is living and they&#8217;re all related and we&#8217;re part of that relationship without those things out there we can&#8217;t survive as a people so we need them working in the sweet grass Hills and working with the Bure blad management we educated them about our ways and working with the ranchers and the farmers in that area because water is very important we call a giver of life huh so all these things are connected and so that&#8217;s we pray when we pray we pray all directions and so these boys are going in there they&#8217;re going down into Crow country to take horses and that&#8217;s what they want they want spiritual blessing that they make this journey in a good way and they&#8217;re just young kids and their leader is picked and they go in there and when you go into the sweat LOD you go for four rounds one round consists of four songs prayer and splashing the water onto the steam onto the rocks to create the Steam and it&#8217;s cleansing our souls it&#8217;s it&#8217;s uprooting the evil spirits who all been into a sauna before you all been into a sauna you come into a sweat who&#8217;s been into a sweat lodge a sweat lods make a sauna look like a gets really hot in there sometimes you pray you&#8217;re praying to get out it&#8217;s so hot anyway when that&#8217;s over they get ready and preparation to go and what they do they take their they a blanket with them they take their spiritual things with them now excuse me and moccasins are found me because it&#8217;s a long journey when we went into Crow country we walked from all the way down in Crow about a twoe journey down there and uh we had our we didn&#8217;t call them Scouts today always say well those Indian Scouts were way out there we had no word for scout scout we don&#8217;t know what Scout is so we call them cranes because a crane is great finder of things huh that&#8217;s why we call them our cranes would be out looking for the enemy as we traveled and as we traveled constant prayer prayer was going on all the time everything we did was through prayer and it&#8217;s still that way even today when I came down here this morning I left the offering prayer that I have a safe journey down here to talk to you good people and on our journey things get quite difficult sometimes sometimes uh if you a person starts having bad dreams a leader then they&#8217;ll turn around and go home or an individual if he has dreams that he&#8217;s going to get killed or something bad&#8217;s going to happen to him he turns around and he leaves nothing is said to him nothing is said that nobody makes fun of him him or teases him or nothing because it it&#8217;s it&#8217;s very serious and we looked at it in a very serious Manner and so they travel during the day in blackf country when they got close into Crow country absor country they traveled at night and uh the the cranes would be way up maybe a mile to two miles ahead of them always looking for the enemy when the crow is spotted that crane will run in a zigzag way knowing that the area has been found and so what they do is they go build a war Lodge now a war Lodge Is Willows and trees stack together like a like a lodge and inside there they get ready and prepare to get ready and go and take horses now as the cranes are coming in these young Warriors take a bunch of sticks and they pile them up about so high off the ground maybe 2 feet and pile them so when the cranes come in they kick those sticks like that and those sticks scatter like that everybody runs for them and picks up a stick and how many sticks they get that&#8217;s how many horses are going to take and so they made a game of it too and I having fun doing it now inside that Lodge they their preparation was made now they start painting their faces now they just didn&#8217;t paint them anyway and you know he always hear about these Indian teams college teams and paint and all that paint is very sacret it that was probably given to you by your grandfather by your father and uncle or you may have that a vision and so that paint was put on and songs were connected with it that Warrior wouldn&#8217;t go in and say well let&#8217;s drag out your hym books today and we&#8217;ll open up to page 56 and we&#8217;ll uh horse taking him we didn&#8217;t do things like that everybody sang their own individual songs now once the songs are done the black feet would go over and absorb absorb the crow huh now the crow are all the plains tribes are pretty much alike because there&#8217;s a lot of activities going on at night and we didn&#8217;t really set guards out on our horses but their best horses were tied alongside their Lodge probably around the owner&#8217;s wrist Crow away crows were very good horse people and uh the Buffalo horses were very well trained you just ride them you you could guide them with your with your knees like like such I give a presentation on all that stuff too and so what we want to do is cut their ropes and get the best trained horses they had now when the Indians are taking horses what they do they feel the back tail of the horse and my my uncle long time ago he was a horse doctor and I I knew him real well I was a little guy I used to say you feel the tail the man if it&#8217;s if it&#8217;s if it isn&#8217;t thick and it it is kind of loose and kind of light and feel the horse&#8217;s veins if the veins are sticking out he&#8217;s no good he a ain&#8217;t a good runner and so the man veins had to be very thin and no veins sticking out so that&#8217;s how they picked their fast Runners but I always thought well when you&#8217;re taking horses you ain&#8217;t too particular you take what you can get and get the heck out of there that&#8217;s the way I looked at it now what they do they set the young boys in the brush and they go on in and what they do they would take this pitch from the cottonwood trees and rub it all over themselves try to get that smell try to for a black feet to smell like a crow would be pretty hard but we tried it anyway any crows here and they go on in and they they go on in and they would uh start taking the horses and not so good horses they start take them and start running them home now I&#8217;ll stop right there in the meantime Lewis and Clark had just come on over L pass and stopped at Travelers Rest and here they split their party up Arc was to take a group and go down the Yellowstone Maryweather Lewis di Sergeant orway Thompson mcneel and Goodrich field brothers and jwor and head on back down into this country now he&#8217;s going to leave orway Thompson mcneel and Goodrich and Great Falls to dig up the rest of their stuff and Float on down and they&#8217;re going to meet down here by LMA Montana where the Bear River pours into the Missouri we call it the Bear River they call it the maras and so that was the plan now they knew when it was coming up into this part of the country what they were looking for was more land they thought the water would go beyond the 49th parallel and this is what they wanted to claim reclaim more land and so when they left Great Falls they cut Overland they come by Rose river out here we you guys call it the Teton we call it the rose and they cross they kept running into Indian signs all the time they run into Indian fresh Indian Signs by meaning Lodge circles and what have you and doing the archaeology work last week I was running through a lot of tee rings out there and all this time I was thinking about Lewis and Clark because I was walking through those Farmers Fields my goodness they&#8217;re hard walking through gee many crickets but it made me feel good because I&#8217;m sure it was a lot harder coming up that Missouri River and so that kind of put my mind at ease but we found a lot of sites coming in and and so they see these these signs and they they went on they followed the maras or the Bear River all the way up until it start turning South West and that would be the cut bank and they start and the Cut Bank turned into start turning like that and so they camped it was cloudy it was hazy they couldn&#8217;t get a couldn&#8217;t read his instruments it was raining couldn&#8217;t really see the Rocky Mountains they stayed there for a couple days and they called that area count disappointment and they left there and they went Overland hit the two medicine and start uh falling the two medicine down about four miles where Badger Crick turns into two medicine they stop they sent Jer now Jer was an indan a shaune Indian sent him out to hunt for deer and he decided to come up off the Blends up onto the flat area and look around now when they get up there up on top of the ridge they were Scouting Around and to their surprise they seen the Indians eight of them well they were scared the Indians didn&#8217;t see them they were down looking at juler and I do tours in that area I take people out to that site now where the black feet were they&#8217;re looking down and where Clark was maybe about a mile or so away and there&#8217;s a little dip like that and it comes back up on the hill so the Indians came on down that little dip and they come up on this hill and that&#8217;s when they seen Maryweather Lewis in the field brothers Joseph and Ruben fields of course they&#8217;re young kids they were kind of scared I&#8217;m sure but also very curious who these people were now we were used to seeing uh these nappy Quin uh we always call them napin means old man because they had always had beards huh the French and so on always had these big beards so we call them napin old men and so we were curious and we&#8217;re going to find out who they were and so they planned amongst themselves and marwe Lewis was standing out there I&#8217;m sure he was pretty frightened and the black feet took one boy and took out after him full tilt on Horseback the rest of the boys stood back and he had his club and his spear in his hand ra with lwis was standing there raising his hand like that and the black feet got maybe the length ofest tent and turned his horse and and took back off remember whether Lewis didn&#8217;t show Fear if he showed fear and he turned his back that IND would have come back up and struck him behind the head we learned that from the bear huh we&#8217;re taught if a bear comes at us not to lay down and play dead don&#8217;t make eye contact stand still and and the biggest chances out of of a 100 he&#8217;ll turn and he&#8217;ll leave you alone because you don&#8217;t show Fear so we learned that and so they went back and they said well where our tobacco is low now I know these napin they have a lot of tobacco let&#8217;s go see who they are so they went down and he was trying to talk sign language to the black feet and he wasn&#8217;t doing a very good job so they sent for juler who was out hunting the deer you know one of the field Brothers black feet rode off that cliff and found him and they come back in and you know up on the plane and this happened in July it gets awful hot up there and the they were sitting there visiting a sign language and they said well let&#8217;s go down we&#8217;ll Camp there&#8217;s three trees down there go camp by those trees and so they did get some shade they put up Buffalo robes and they made shade and they began to talk sign language well he went into his dog and pony show and black feet really didn&#8217;t make much sense of it but one of the things that did happen they said they wanted to open up trade with us they wanted to bring guns into the shonis into the crow into our enemies because the black feed at that time our enemies were the Flathead sish Cy cordan NEP Shon rapo Crow shyen Su man hadat and R grant grant were our allies at that time so that was our enemies and we didn&#8217;t want anybody to be equal with us huh so it didn&#8217;t strike us too too keen and so as night came tobbacco run roll they went to lay down to rest they kept guard black feet came along early in the morning took one of Ruben Fields guns and took off they hollered at him dropped it another one took a gun and start walking away Ruben Fields went up caught the boy tackled him stabbed him in the heart his name was Sid Hill calf without Clark&#8217;s permission or Maryweather Lewis&#8217;s permission killed him killed him instantly took about a couple steps and died and that started a confusion horse started running away Mayweather Lewis was a hard sleeper he finally arose and seeing was horses were being taken he pulled his pistol and he shot one of the Indians he didn&#8217;t kill him he just grazed him wounded him in a lot of history books it said that he was killed he wasn&#8217;t killed he brought him back home and uh a lot of confusion they start running their horses off off and and going to the Indian boys they took off tailed it for home and left some of their best horses there now these horses were quite unique because these horses can run from sun up to sun down without stopping these were the Spanish barbs that were brought over here by Cortez and uh that&#8217;s also another story but these horses were bred by the Moors of Africa huh this is why they were such they can go great dist they go great distances without food or water for a day or so couple days and so they start they left a piece midle on side Hill calf and they they left we went back told our Warriors our real people and they took after them but they had about a day and a half&#8217;s journey on us we couldn&#8217;t catch them marwe Lewis in the field Brothers Junior came on down there were Lomo Montana to day about that time they heard a shot and it was or orway Thompson mcneel and goodr coming down they were happy to see him they dropped everything jumped on her vots and they took off how much time I got minut all right good I&#8217;ll make some some of these stories real short now one of the great stories is uh you probably heard the John culture story huh you guys hear that story this afternoon John couter story well John culter was going on back and he ran into a couple guys that were coming up the Missouri River and they going to trade so he got permission he came up with them he trapped and traded all winter and then he was going back on down he met manal Lisa and joined his party Manel Lisa was the first one to build a Trading Post in the state of Montana which is the state of Montana and that&#8217;s for the Little Big Horn pours into the Yellowstone and so he worked with Manuel Lisa one of his duties was to make peace with the black feet as an ambassador but he went out with some crows they joined some flatheads and there was a skirmish with the black feet gter was uh grazed on the on the side of the leg shot so cter to the black feet was a man who fought on the other side and as time went on uh he was up dropping in the Three Forks area we call those we have our names for the Three Rivers up there one was is Medicine Woman River or Medicine Woman River uh they were coming down that river guy a name of pots and him and the book says they run into a whole bunch of Indians maybe a couple hundred thousand or so and uh he was called out of the ship out of the boats they stopped hid their traps cter get out pots didn&#8217;t they said they filled his body with bullet holes when cter got out he said this old man talked to him said you better run you better run he didn&#8217;t listen to the old man but they stripped him naked he probably run him through the G in line and he said he kept running he took off running and he ran and ran he looked behind him his Indians were chasing him this one Indian with a spear and a blanket was coming close to him and he ran for maybe four or five miles blood was coming from his nose he stopped he got in a wrestle match with that Indian took him down that Indian start begging for his life but couter killed him anyway jumped up and took off dove in the river hid in a beaver dam took his blanket and Beaver House beaver hut that night he got out of the beaver hut and he crossed over the mountains another 500 Mile Journey back to Fort Manuel Lisa that was a story but really happened and we wouldn&#8217;t be traveling with that many 500 or even 100 or even 50 probably a small party of maybe 30 people out on a hunting uh 30 inds out on a hunting Patrol because we weren&#8217;t going to no major battle and we weren&#8217;t making no major move just think how much buffalo would take to feed that many men and uh we didn&#8217;t have any of our women folks with us or nothing and he did stop and uh maybe pots took a shot at one of the Indians and uh Indian shot him they didn&#8217;t rivet his bullet his body with bullets because bullets was hard to come by you know and we never shot off a horse huh like in the movies we never did shoot like that because you ever try to shoot some of you ratch yourself shoot riding a horse you&#8217;re never going to hit nothing except John Wayne you know John Wayne could shoot and 15 Indians will fall over but when we shot off the horses we always got off and and shot and and uh I don&#8217;t make that point and so then he took off run and and well then he went on over well anyway the story is that first place you&#8217;re not going out run a Indian a black feed Indian you know in those days you know look how many times we were on the cross country state championship I think we set some kind of a National Record 24 years in a row that&#8217;s our young people today when our people are natural born Runners and uh no Indian&#8217;s going to carry a spear with him there&#8217;s certain people carried Spears and these Spears are long they&#8217;re from uh 8 to 12 ft long are Spears and they were used for sacred purposes in those days because we had the rifle in those and who&#8217;s going to run carry a blanket with them while he&#8217;s chasing somebody huh stop and warm up every once in a while and uh there&#8217;s no way in the world you&#8217;re going to get in a beaver hut hide in a beaver house huh you guys know the beaver Huts you know they&#8217;re only about this this deep inside there&#8217;s two stories to him huh and so that&#8217;s and he didn&#8217;t run naked all the way back to he froze to death going over those mountains traditionally anytime we run into to our we had a battle that may be the Flathead Crow anybody and we always let one person alive to go back and tell the story always we give them the best Provisions we give him the horse the food clothe him up good go back and story they said they&#8217;ll told culture stay out of our country because they were trapping here and that was our economic base there was a lot of Bloodshed sped upon these planes and it shouldn&#8217;t never happened and they could have come up here and opened up trade with us they didn&#8217;t they come in and start taking the beaver and that&#8217;s like someone going to your home taking your belonging say you don&#8217;t need these things or you&#8217;re going to retaliate too huh but a lot of we were labeled of of bad being bad people we&#8217;re just protecting what was rightfully ours and so these are some of the incidents that occurred up home at that time until they finally wised up and hired a guy by the name of McKenzie mckeny worked with the Hudson Bay people he came in and and started that Fort uh Union brought a guy by name in here burger burger lived amongst the black feed for 25 years sent Burger up in the black feed country to open come on down and open up for trade Burger went up what is now the black feed ending reservation up on Badger Creek while into our reservation almost on the mountain front he met the black feet of one of the Chiefs was Pretty Woman Pretty Woman they wanted to talk to him he said no they got the White Flag let&#8217;s see what they want they recognized it was Burger he could speak the language fluently and he said come on down and we will trade with you and a lot of those sign uh that&#8217;s when uh uh uh so the black feet went on down and open up trade and and uh the artist that did all his artwork on his tent out here what&#8217;s his name huh Wagner absolutely he was up and he painted like Buffalo B back fat and those black feet and blood Indians that you see over there Buffalo B backfat was one of my ancestors I was back at uh at this at uh National Muse Art Gallery where they have a big painting of him in uh the Lewis and Clark expedition that was going on and they did open up trade and they wanted to build a trade place up here so they black gave permission to come on up and they opened up Fort Pagan and this was in 19 1832 a guy by name of Joe Kip they come built that Fort there and they open up trade Bloods came and burnt it down what has time when went on uh we didn&#8217;t start trading with Americans they offered us more and uh got rid of the British now I&#8217;ve did a lot of work on leis and Clark from the Indian from the First Nations persp perspective I got 150 hours of going up and down from uh St from I start from uh St Louis uh the Mounds kokia the mountains out there we start shooting out there and we we&#8217;ve interviewed the Omaha punka oage Oto Mandan hadat and rarra all these tribes coming on up the Missouri River all the on over to Fort katup we&#8217;re doing the Indian perspective of Lewis and Clark from our perspective we do the history before they came their involvement and then the after effects we finished our first one called Two Worlds at two medicine that&#8217;s a black feet encounter uh we put it in DVD form we&#8217;ve taken it to Harvard all over the country uh to the Isle George Museum in Indianapolis uh the Indian education conference national Indian education conference in Phoenix and so on all over the country got excellent reviews I&#8217;ve taken it to I&#8217;ve given it to our governor in the state of Montana national or the Indian Education Office of Public Instruction was very happy to see this because they want more Indian education system in their school so it what we&#8217;ve done is going to be put in the schools systems today we were drawn up the educational curriculum that goes with it it&#8217;s very interesting to hear all sides of the story so we&#8217;re telling our side and there&#8217;s a lot of it&#8217;s not really uh it&#8217;s it&#8217;s great I mean they did a wonderful job the National Park Service people seen it at Glacier and they said this is the most one of the best put together Lewis and Clark perspective that they&#8217;ve seen and uh so we have that with us today right behind us is my son who was the star one of the stars in the reenacment we&#8217;re selling it uh it is great uh we selling it for $25 it cost us $100,000 put together a professional film crew from Indianapolis I I was getting my head into a lot of money so I owe money but it&#8217;s great we&#8217;re getting it we&#8217;re getting it accomplished and uh you can purchase that and also black feet stories in there and you know I always like to say and but I&#8217;ll ask for questions and you know I always think of my elders and I have the most up respect for them because theyve given me all my wisdom and knowledge and God&#8217;s raised the traditional way of my people and uh have a lot of respect for my elders but if I could speak to my elders a long long long time ago I would tell them many things have changed since you&#8217;ve been gone but some things still remain the same they&#8217;re very mysterious but yet we need them on our everyday life and that&#8217;s love Faith and Hope thank you and God bless each and every one of you if you have any questions thank you the CDs right there if you like to if anybody has any questions please raise your hand I&#8217;ll bring the microphone around so everybody can hear you did we have any questions for curly bear there we go hold on how many Buffalo how many Buffalo would it take to feed a family win in the winter time uh a cow Buffalo could produce about uh 600 lb of meat uh they weighed about 12200 lb uh so about half it was in meat and that uh that that meat Source would last them just a little over a month CU they consume a lot of food they could sit down and they could consume two to three pounds of meat at one sitting so that&#8217;s a lot of buffalo meat and we&#8217;re still meat eaters today good all right we eat the beef today here did you uh did you uh did your divisions of the tribe did they migrate across back and forth the plains for the hunting areas or something well they tried to migrate into the black feet country but we wouldn&#8217;t let them The Bu oh the Buffalo black feet stayed from uh from which is now Edmonton Alberta down to the Teton country that was we stayed we didn&#8217;t migrate from that we we wandered we was novatic yeah we wanded we didn&#8217;t grow any kind of crops we wandered all over yeah yeah no uh most people use see they they call them uh uh Lodge circles and when I first started doing archaeology work I was walked into the archaeologist say I said what you doing he&#8217;s measuring your Lodge well you&#8217;re going to have to go out a couple more feet if you get our right measurements on it because that&#8217;s inside of our liner we we uh rocked our liners down and we pegged our Tepe our lodges down because my goodness if we rocked our lodges down we how in the world is the smoke going to get out huh and if we rock them down the wind blows hard in our country our lodges had to be flexible huh they had to be able to move and if they rock down they&#8217;d rip or we find them in Chicago somewhere yeah there were uh you had the Apaches down in that part of the country and the commanches and Kwa I&#8217;m sorry I me Montana yeah say Arizon yeah I said Arizona yeah oh yeah yeah I do archaeology work on I we see a lot of that stuff all over the place yeah thank any other questions right here over here contact with the black feet in the Lewis and Clark uh Expedition happened uh on on their return trip yeah uh did the black feed Nation know uh that they were going through this area in 180 did the black feet knew that they were going through our area we knew that they were coming up because word was sent from us from when they wintered with the Mandan uh the grant came through that part of the country and there were allies we knew of these people coming up they had nothing to offer to us meaning nothing to trade so we didn&#8217;t want to bother with them because we were quite busy people in the summertime we just have a few wants to gather berries hunt get our robes in preparation for the winter and so we Wen there were just another we didn&#8217;t you know there were just people passing through we we didn&#8217;t care who they were Lewis and Clark didn&#8217;t make any difference to them but they had nothing so we call them nothing people they were coming through that nothing to trade we didn&#8217;t bother him we seen them going going up the river we P them I mean might have been hunting Buffalo or taking horses and would have interrupted us we had to listen to their uh dog and pony show all right well thank you curly bear for presenting here in the 10 to many voices he curly bear is going to be back out at his table with his DVDs so I&#8217;m sure he&#8217;d be happy to answer any more questions you have out there our next presentation in here</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/tent-voices/tent-of-many-voices-06040505/">Curly Bear Wagner on Blackfeet History and Lewis &#038; Clark</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
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		<title>Curly Bear Wagner on Blackfeet and Lewis and Clark</title>
		<link>https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/tent-voices/ranger-aaron/</link>
		
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		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Feb 2026 00:36:04 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://research.lewisandclarktrust.org/tent-voices/ranger-aaron/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>A recording from the Tent of Many Voices featuring Ranger Aaron.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/tent-voices/ranger-aaron/">Curly Bear Wagner on Blackfeet and Lewis and Clark</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>to the T of many voices my name is Ranger Aaron and I have been traveling on the Lou and Clark Trail with this mobile exhibit for about 2 years now it&#8217;s been an exciting trip we&#8217;ve seen a lot of places along the trail and met some really interesting people and at this hour one of those interesting people and friends that I&#8217;ve met is Curly bear Wagner and he&#8217;s going to introduce his film today and talk a little bit about his people cuz he come comes from the black feet Nation all right so let&#8217;s give him a nice round of applause and welcome here to the ten many voices and I&#8217;ll hand the microphone over to curly bear thank you can you say Oki Oki that&#8217;s how are you in black feet say n that&#8217;s how are you my friends then you reply you say Sugi C that means good but you guys look EXO copy that&#8217;s real good all right well my name is Curly bear and I&#8217;m going to be your I&#8217;m going to show you a documentary which we did on uh the encounter that they had with the black feet this is very important to us telling our perspective of Lewis and Clark from coming from the first nation&#8217;s people it&#8217;s important because we were here a long time before Lewis and Clark came into our country our people we first made contact with a white man in 1754 a guy by name Alexander hendre when Alexander hendre came he came with the Hudson Bay people and they wanted to open up trade with us and so he succeeded and we created a good work and relationship with the Hudson Bay and the Northwest Fur Company up in Canada and the Northwest Fur Company was a Scottish and Irish and the Northwest were the English and my people the black feet there is us here today the black feet were&#8217;re in the United States of America our reservation is a million and a half acres in size the population of my people around 20,000 enroll members in the United States we have three bands in Canada the blood the Pagan and the cisa and they&#8217;re North in Canada so traditionally our land started from the headwaters of the saskatchwan river by Edmonton Alberta and running East to battle for saskat then running South to the Missouri up the Missouri to the Yellowstone following the Yellowstone back up to what we call the backbone of the the world the Rocky Mountains that was traditionally black feet land now my people are the oldest Plains living tribe we can trace our ancestors back over 6,000 years of living out on the Plains and so we were hunters and gatherers we had about 75 plants that we used for food and for medicine and the Buffalo being the staff of life for our people and so our people very connected with uh what we call Mother Earth today huh and this is how we sub maintained ourselves this is how we survived by what the Creator give to us we used for our survival and it was very important in those days and very important even today because a lot of people want to learn about survival and so this is some of the things that we do by teaching and educating about our people but I did a we did a documentary on what we call Two Worlds at two medicine now this is the only deadly encounter that occurred on the whole journey uh Sergeant Floyd died Council area that was one death but there was two other because two other black feet got killed in this Expedition and I want we want to we captured that we put it on DVD for educational purposes because it&#8217;s so important to educate the people about our way of life everybody was Lewis and Clark but nothing really perspective coming from the first nation&#8217;s people and we want to change that we want to do our story which is a very interesting story how our people lived before and after the coming of Lewis and Clark so we&#8217;ll get started with it and then I&#8217;ll talk to you I&#8217;ll tell you a story afterwards we&#8217;ll get started with the Expedition now or the the documentary oh the Creator gave it the moon that&#8217;s why we called them our father and mother the Creator made man and woman too and breathed life into to them and to everything the animals plants rocks water and wind the Creator gave a Living spirit so we can learn from them and that&#8217;s what we&#8217;ve been doing here since the Creator first placed us on this land then one day one day just 200 Winters ago some boys were coming home they were not old enough to be Warriors yet but they were coming home with horses they captured from the crow it was a big day for them a big day with many consequences for many years but the boys didn&#8217;t know that Captain Merryweather Lewis didn&#8217;t know it either but this chance encounter on this vast Untamed Horizon began to change our world forever in Lewis and Clark&#8217;s relentless push Westward to the Pacific Ocean the Expedition met with a great number of Native American tribes but one tribe the Expedition avoided on their way west was the black feet stretching from the Saskatchewan River and the mountains of Canada hundreds of miles south through the Yellowstone Country and the Grand Tetons the black feet are estimated to have once numbered 50,000 strong or more with a reputation of defending their homelands ferociously the captains could find no other natives Brave or foolish enough to guide them into black feet territory let alone act as interpreters but after wintering at Fort Clatsop on the Pacific the expedition was returning home in the summer of 1806 and Merryweather Lewis had a mission from Thomas Jefferson he had not yet accomplished that would take him into the heart of blackfeet territory facing something he had hoped he would not a party of black feet and the only deadly encounter with Native Americans of the entire Expedition a chance meeting and a clash of cultures that is still being felt today we&#8217;ve been here according to to our ancestors our creation story we were created by our Supreme Being and this is the land that we were he created for us some of the old leg in stories they they go back to Genesis black feet Genesis how long have the black feet been here why not ask the Rocks that&#8217;s one of the things Anthropologist and archaeologist Brian Reeves does Dr Reeves is also an adopted member of the blackfeet tribe the Blackwood people speaking peoples have been here at least 3,000 years probably a lot longer but as an archaeologist I can say at least three probably five and could be a lot longer they covered a large range of territory in Northern Montana and and up into Canada seasonly they would winter here in the Foothills along the mountains cu the Buffalo came into the Foothills and then in the summer they&#8217;d move out uh well maybe here about 100 miles east of the sweet grass Hills for the Sundance their way of life was tied to the Buffalo they had what I think was a very beautiful life they were happy and they were healthy up to that time there were pedestrians on foot and they just travel along slowly you know ask a black feet what was more important the coming of the white man or the coming of the horse and don&#8217;t be surprised when the black feet says the coming of the horse the crows and other tribes nearby around here uh acquired the white man&#8217;s horses about 1730 soon the black feet were raiding for their own horses now tribal Hunters could follow Buffalo herds for long distances assuring food for the tribes as well as shelter and clothing suddenly a man could acquire wealth in the form of more horses and where do you get more horses from another tribe who has them that&#8217;s when into trial Warfare started as they got horses they started going to other tribes to get more horses you know so they used to go back and forth and steal horses and women from each other whatever the case happened to be so when that happened they stop and fight each other and before long inable Warfare in this area had become a way of life the transition to an equestrian Society was Swift and complete for the tribe of the Great Plains and mountains by Lewis and Clark&#8217;s arrival the black feet were some of the best equestrians the world has ever produced the scope and the scale that they lived on is hard for us to imagine for the black feet the horse had made them masters of the high plains and the white man&#8217;s guns which they traded for from the British Hudson Bay and Northwest companies in the north made them rulers of it too the first white man that week we seen it was in 1754 and in fact we had a white man living with us at the time and he was with the Hudson Bay people early contact with whites had led to new technology for the plan&#8217;s people and general Hospitality toward the white Traders we were exposed to the French people you know from from the north the Trappers and whatnot and they seem to get along quite well with our people because they didn&#8217;t want to take everything from our people they learned to coexist and hunt and trap and whatever we had had two other fathers the the Spanish and the French nothing had changed in our world when these other two fathers came in and so we didn&#8217;t look at being displaced Thomas Jefferson that was his plan for for westward expansion his reasoning to send Lewis and Clark there was to to open up the uh Louisiana Purchase that they had bought from France we somar acquired it from Spain and neither of them owned it to begin with now an entirely new nation was coming into native lands the United States of America a nation located on their same continent with designs for expansion and the people and power to do it by the time Merryweather Lewis chose to enter blackfeet territory the exped Edition had already been to the Pacific Ocean and the effects of the stress on Captain Lewis had at times become evident Lewis was a a brilliant hyper energetic Brave fellow but he was I think you can call him a manic depressive also they were mean two Indians along the way up there in his country black feet they killed a boy and shot after some other Lewis had been Sur with the Clatsop at the expedition&#8217;s rain soaked winter quarters later impatient to recross the snowbound bitter rout mountains on the way home Lewis caught a shanuk stealing an iron socket of a canoe pole and struck the native man repeatedly the second time he had beaten a native now back at traveler&#8217;s rest captains Lewis and Clark split their men into smaller groups Clark will explore the Yellowstone while Lewis heads North up the Marias or what the black feet call the Bear River into what he knew to be black Fe territory he intends to follow the moras north possibly across the 49th parallel hopefully fulfilling Thomas Jefferson&#8217;s aspirations that the Louisiana Purchase encompassed some of British held Canada despite the danger of black feet or perhaps because of it Lewis intends to travel quickly taking with him just three volunteers though arguably the best three men on the Expedition George drer the half shaie Marksman Hunter and salker and two trustworthy brothers Joseph and Ruben fields at first the Marias takes them northward but then turns Southwest on July 22nd the party sets up camp so Lewis can take readings but overcast Skies render Lewis&#8217;s seant useless the next day brings dangerous news drer out hunting finds a camp of empty native Lodge poles 2 days later he and Joseph Fields come upon an empty black feet winter camp in his journal that night Lewis writes we consider ourselves extremely fortunate in not having met these people Merryweather Lewis July 25th 1806 July 26th is still overcast and Lewis&#8217;s chronometer had stopped working the day before dejected he names their position Camp disappointment and leaves taking a more direct route back the party of four find themselves in the Two medicon River Valley at midday leaving drer to hunt along the river Lewis and the field Brothers climb out of the rugged Valley to look around round I had scarcely ascended the hills before I discovered an assemblage of about 30 horses I used my spy glass by the help of which I discovered several Indians on top of an Eminence who appeared to be looking down towards the river I presumed it rier this was a very unpleasant sight however I resolved to make the best of our situation and approached them in a friendly manner a con 30 head of horses and so he figured there&#8217;d be that many warriors also another 30 Warriors maybe resting down all kinds of thoughts may have went through his mind at that point and he knew he was in all kinds of trouble about this time they discovered us and appeared to run about in a very confused manner in looking at the oral tradition within the black feed tribe itself and particularly at the chronicle of wolf CAF who was here at the actual event the the uh group that encountered Lewis Here were composed of young boys primarily in the age group of uh on the average of 12 years old these boys have just got came from Crow country where they&#8217;ve taken horses from the crow and when they did finally see Maryweather Lewis they were quite frightened just as Mar Lewis was frightened when he seen the Indians so both parties were kind of spooked of what one another at the beginning I think they were curious curious to who the people were I think they considered themselves becoming Warriors and I think they possibly realized that this encounter might be a test they thought well let&#8217;s see what they&#8217;re made of one of them rode full speed towards us he came within a 100 Paces halted looked at us and turned his horse about and returned as briskly we leared that from the bear huh if he&#8217; showed fear and I&#8217;m sure that black feet would have taken a war club and probably cracked his head open I expected that we were to have some difficulty with them I was convinced they would attempt to Rob Us in which case I should resist to the last extremity preferring death to that of being deprived of my papers and instruments he figured if he gets killed then he&#8217;s going to get killed but he wanted to make sure that the paperwork his journal was saved in some way some sense and that&#8217;s what he was really worried about years later wolf CF one of the black feet boys in the group that day reported that he was just 13 years old when his small party encountered Lewis and his men we met them in a friendly manner wolf CF Lewis&#8217;s journal concurs with Wolf&#8217;s account I Advanced singly to meet meet the Indian with whom I shook hands Lewis uses what little sign language he knows to try to communicate I asked if there was any Chief among them and they pointed out three but to Lewis the boys appeared too young to be Chiefs I did not believe them however thought it best to please them and gave to one a medal to a second a flag and to the third a handkerchief Lewis is now close enough to count and size up his potential opponents his confidence returning I now concluded that there were only eight in number and became much better satisfied with our situation as I was convinced that we could manage that number should they attempt hostile measures the boys accept the gifts and ask Lewis if he has tobacco Lewis sends one of the fields and a black feet boy down to the valley to find duer who carries their pipe and all agree to Camp by the Two medicon River Buffalo robes were set up next to the Two medicon River for shade Lewis smoked with the black feed boys communicating through George dreer&#8217;s sign talking into the evening I learned from them that they were part of a large band which lay encamped near the foot of the Rocky Mountains Lewis had noticed two boys carried British muskets they informed us that they trade on the Saskatchewan River and from these Traders they obtain arms ammunition spus liquor and blankets in exchange for wolves and beaver skins Lewis realized the Hudson Bay Company was the source of their arms then he launched into his usual speech about the new great white father who now owned this land that&#8217;s when he gave him his uh his dog and pony show huh and I&#8217;m sure that it must have just been bewildering and maybe even funny to some of them it certainly was very seldom taken the way that Jefferson met it to why is this great white father now going to come here and tell us how to live when we never did need him before I told these people I had come a great way from the East and seen a great many Indian nations all of whom I have invited to come and trade with me on the rivers one of the blunders that Barry weather Lewis made was when he began to talk to the black people that they were going to bring trade in here and start trading and give and to other tribes rifles amunition things of sort that would uh make other tribes equal with us and we didn&#8217;t want anybody to be equal with us confident of his diplomacy Lewis writes I found them extremely fond of smoking and plied them with the pipe until late that night Merryweather Lewis July 26th 1806 yet Lewis is wary of his visitors he takes first watch that night then wakes Reuben fields at movements of the Indians as I apprehended they would attempt to steal our Horses The Tobacco was running pretty low so they thought they&#8217;d get some rest but the Indians talked amongst house that night the chief Among Us said we should try to take some of the white men&#8217;s things wolf C I think they were these are young teenagers just looking around he thought they were going to steal something emboldened by their success in raiding horses from the crow the boys plot into the night the horses meant great wealth to them already and as you gain a little wealth and you push your luck and the plan was to take these Fire Sticks get those hidden then run off their horses while they&#8217;re still half asleep I fell into a profound sleep and did not wake until the noise of the men in Indians awoke me a little after light in the morning the boy&#8217;s first move seems to be working when early Dawn finds Lewis and two men asleep and their Sentry groggy it is now or never at daylight the Indians got up and crowded around the fire Joseph Fields who was on post had carelessly laid his gun down where his brother was sleeping one of the Indians slipped behind him and took his gun and that of his brother Joseph&#8217;s Fields seeing that he&#8217;s taking his pistol hollered at him drop that pistol drop that gun on this point both the black feed and Lewis&#8217;s accounts agree the white men killed Sid Hill calf with their big knives wolf calf Reuben Fields as he sees his gun stabbed the Indian to the heart with his knife Merryweather Lewis when breath killed instantly Rob stabbed him right in the heart he didn&#8217;t get permission from Mara loose to kill this boy he just acted on his own impulse at the same instant two others Advanced and seized the guns of duer and myself Dam you I reached to seize my gun but found her gone I then drew a pistol and saw the Indian making off with my gun I B him lay down my gun which he was in the act of doing when the fields returned and Drew up their guns to shoot the Indian which I forbade the Indian dropped the gun and walked slowly off Merryweather Lewis then the blacki boys seen what was occurring and so they begin to chase their horses off one of the white men I think it was their Chief chased another boy and shot him wolf cat one of them stopped at a distance of 30 steps from me and I shot him through the belly he partly raised himself up and fired at me being bareheaded I felt the wind of his bullet very distinctly Captain Maryweather Lewis July 27th 1806 if Lewis had been shot there it would have made a a big difference we can only speculate what difference it would have made but um I wouldn&#8217;t have been surprised if if there had been a whole Army sent out to wipe out the black feet from the black feet point of view it certainly set to Stage that uh the United States government and their uh uh their emissaries were not to be trusted or that although they came in peace uh they ended up killing two young boys I think Lewis from the moment it happened realized that there were going to be repercussions they were determined to get out of there as fast as they could which meant basically riding day and night our people did take after him I we sent our real Warriors out after but they had a good day and a half start on us their awareness of everything I&#8217;m sure was terribly heightened by the by the fact that they had just had a life and death confrontation and they were crossing this section of the Plains which is just enormous there was a bright moon overhead and there were thunderstorms going off on all the different Horizons here they were right reading themselves to exhaustion after that tremendous moment of of uh combat and uh to me the scene is just one of the most intense they run their horses Full Tilt and they about a day and a half and then they the next day they made it all the way down to what we call the big water and they were falling the Bear River or the Marise River and about the time they were getting there they heard these shots and they knew it was their party coming on down miraculously it was orway mcneel Thompson and Goodrich coming down the Missouri to pick them up they dropped everything I left everything they got on those canoes and they high tailed it out of the country the confrontation with the black feet at Two medicon River must have made quite an impression on Captain Lewis he wrote page after page about it more words in fact on that one incident than any other episode in his extensive journals Merryweather Lewis left black beat country that hot July day never to return but it didn&#8217;t take long before many other Americans did arrive hunting trapping and taking whatever they could from the land almost immediately after the Expedition fur Trappers went up into the mountains and instead of buying Furs from the black feet the way the British Traders up in Canada did um they went up there and began trapping themselves which left the black feet out these new frontiersmen didn&#8217;t need the natives to trap for them they could trap beaver and shoot Buffalo for themselves and when the Americans opened up the Missouri River for Commerce steamboats took Buffalo hides Away by the millions with them went the black Feet&#8217;s main source of food shelter and clothing and a way of life that would never be seen again Missouri hide trade took him out and it&#8217;s well documented like 18 uh oh 1858 uh there was something like 110,000 hides were shipped out of Fort Benton they made the leather belts yeah was very important they were far stronger than cows cow high and so it fueled all the old you know first Industrial Systems of the the belt systems they were killed systematically by uh people who wanted to kill the the Indian&#8217;s food source you killed off the food source you you killed off that way of life an establishment of the forts the coming of the steam ships up to Missouri you know and establishment of Fort Benton and their trade area and hey these guys are taking over okay I&#8217;m going to talk to you a little bit I feel better now I got to speak with my hands uh you guys are from St Stevens huh St Peter St Peters sorry I&#8217;m sorry for all the interruptions that&#8217;s going on here but that&#8217;s all right uh we have a very famous person that you seen up there James Alexander Tom is right here uh James has written a book called sign talker if you get an opportunity to see read that book read it it&#8217;s one of the best books I&#8217;ve ever read I I when I put it down I felt Lonesome so I told my business manager who&#8217;s Vicki who runs our institution Vicki you got to uh I got to try to meet this gentleman right away boy we met and his also his wife dark range is also a very famous writer and she had a lot to do with the core Discovery uh putting everything together she&#8217;s worked very hard at it and uh my business manager Vicky that holds our institution and does everything Vicky privet right there from Indiana and we just brought Joanna on board she&#8217;s going to also be working with us doing fundraising and writing grants because this is just a start of it for us we&#8217;re doing a segment on women called a backbone of my people we&#8217;re doing the Indian story of women is very important story because when they wrote about the Indian people they never wrote anything about the women the women were the backbone of our people and so we&#8217;re doing a documentary on that also and we&#8217;re doing all the tribes from kokia to Fort clup telling our story of Lewis and Clark uh the National Park Service said it was one of the best documentaries theyve seen on Lewis and Clark and so they funded us to uh continue on so just the start for us they might be finishing today here or this week but we&#8217;re just starting and we&#8217;re traveling on inding time ending time is whenever you get there and so we&#8217;re just getting there uh it&#8217;s been great putting together was a lot of fun working in doing this I was very excited to work on this project uh telling our story uh the the the kids the boys that you seen in there those are kids from heartb uh basketball those are my my one the kid with the wolf Rob on is my son and the rest are my nephews I had to throw them out of bed before we get started huh they we don&#8217;t do anything else we had a lot of fun doing it though you know a lot of things have happened after coming of Lewis and Clark and when they left our country and uh we continued on with our lives while after lwis and Clark came it was the free Trappers came up into our country when the free Trappers came up into our country of course the black feet we kept them out of our country because they just come in and start taking the beaver and that was our economic base was the beaver and so there was a lot of skirmishes could have never happened should have never happened a lot of Bloodshed out on the planes all they had to do is come up and say we want to trade with you because they had things that we wanted like the steel pots and Beads and stuff that kept our people satisfied and keep our people didn&#8217;t have to work so hard or whatever but they just come and start taking our Beaver so there was a lot of skirmish out on the planes that happened but there was a lot of interesting men that came up on the Lewis and Clark expedition some of them came back one of them was by the guy by the name of John calter John couter wrote a book called John coulter&#8217;s run I&#8217;ll tell you a little story about John couter he he started from here in St Louis and went all the way back up but on their return trip he came back and he went to go live with a guy that built the first Trading Post in Montana uh and he so he came back and he worked with him and one of the he was one of the guys that uh went into the first white man toee Yellowstone National Park was talking about the guers or what have you and uh nobody believed him and so these uh they finally got the opportunity to see him but John calter told a story about the black feet very interesting story P John couter was one of the free Trappers that came up into our country him and a guy by the name of pots and they were out on the what they call Three Forks Montana that&#8217;s the Madison Jefferson Gallatin River we called those Rivers Medicine Woman River blood clot River and beaverhead now blood clot might sound like a weird name but it was very important story about blood clot and it&#8217;s a long story and it&#8217;s blood clot was a very famous legend about him amongst my people but that&#8217;s what we called those three rivers well anyway him and guy by name of pots were coming down the Gallatin River and they were very feared of the black feet because of all the stories that they heard about our people and John calter had a previous had a skirmish with the black feet the black he joined up with the flatheads and they were free trapping and there was a fight out there and and blackfeet would run the flatheads off but John calter was wounded and so we knew John calter is a guy who fought on the other side but when he came up with manal Lisa was the first that built the first Trading Post where the Little Big Horn pours into the Missouri or to the Yellowstone excuse me and he was working with him and uh they wanted him to be an ambassador to the black feet but he never got that opportunity like I was saying they were coming down the river that one morning because what they&#8217; do they&#8217;d hide during the day and trap at night and what they were coming down the river the Gallatin River John cter said listen that noise that noise I think there&#8217;s some Indians around here and so they hid out and pretty soon they were spotted he said in his his writings said there was over 2,000 black feet that they seen and when they seen him they called him asure motion to him come asore so John calter and pots they rode their canoe to the shore and John couter got out po didn&#8217;t and uh said one of the black black feet took a shot at him and pot shot back then they riveted him with bullets couple hundred shots went into his body they said so when John when he came asore cter his old man approached him said you better run you better run kept telling him that about three times told him you better run but he didn&#8217;t pay much attention to him and so that old black feed man but they set up a line they run him through there and they gave him a stripped him of his clothing and gave him a good whipping called a gat line that&#8217;s what they do it&#8217;s kind of teaching him a lesson from coming up here in Traen but John culture he kept running he took off running at a Full Tilt running and running and running out running those Indians and a big he looked behind a big group of Indians were following him black feet chasing him but he couldn&#8217;t catch him he was running running he must have run about a couple miles and there was this one black feet that was Hut on his tail and this Indian was running but this Indian had a spear and a blanket and he was getting closer and closer my goodness John couter begin to Tire blood was coming from his nose and he beun to come come tired and his legs begin to cramp up and so he waited for this black feet Indian to catch up with him the one with the spear in the blanket when he cut up caught up with him John they had a rasle match John cter threw him to the ground busted his Spear and ready to stab him and that black feet start begging taking for his life and so John calter didn&#8217;t have no pity on him went ahead and killed him took that busted spear in that blanket and took off running again because he seen some more of these Indians running for him and he found a stream and he jumped into the stream there&#8217;s a beaver dam and a beaver hut in there Beaver Lodge and so he went up inside this Beaver Lodge and he got up in there and he stayed there all day until the sun went down and got night and when night came came when Nightfall came he came out and he crossed the mountain range now remember this guy has no clothing no shoes or nothing but he crossed the mountain range and and went about another 250 miles back to Camp Manuel Lisa and he stayed there and he told the story now the story&#8217;s been written several times and in previous I&#8217;ve did a lot of research in fact I I met the culture family out here in St Louis I think I was with Chris and those guys remember what school was that Chris cter Landing I met the cter family and told them that story all right so I got five minutes anyway you I&#8217;ll tell you the story that really happened now we would never travel with a thousand people because look how much food it would take to feed a thousand black feed Indians and they they consume about 2 and2 pounds of meat A day or or one setting excuse me and and uh when John cter said he met him we didn&#8217;t rivet with nobody with 100 bullets because ammunition was very hard to come by and so we didn&#8217;t shoot no we didn&#8217;t shoot 100 bullets into that man if we did shoot it might have been one bullet his ammunition was hard to come by and we get up he said that old man was talented now we were come from a warrior Society of people and it meant treason if you commit treason it meant death because we come from a warrior Society of people so no old man talked to him and when they run him through that line and he and everybody gave what happened he kept running there&#8217;s no way in the world that you&#8217;re going to outrun a black feed Indian or any Indian as far as that concerned the Indian boys are excellent Runners they raised out on the planes and we can run run run run John cultra was wounded in the leg remember so he was kind of crippled huh he couldn&#8217;t really run that fast and and so and no Indian is going to be carrying an 18t long spear with a blanket chasing a person for goodness sakes we had horses to do those things huh and chasing him like that and then then killing him and if like I say when the black feet was down he would never beg for his life we had a death song that we sang and it was against our Traditions or law to beg for our lives because we do come from a warrior Society but we do have a death song that we saying then he said he jumped into the side Deb Beaver Lodge now there&#8217;s no way in the world that you&#8217;re going to fit in inside of a Beaver Lodge huh there&#8217;s an opening you can&#8217;t even get inside of one and then he ran over those mountains 250 Mi back to Fort Manuel Lisa well he&#8217;d have never cross those mountains because he&#8217;d have froze to death up there huh and there&#8217;s a lot of pickly pair out on the Plains and so this is a story that from our perspective that we&#8217;re I did a lot of research on this in fact I was in Chicago not too long ago with a western writers association we was going to put this story into a book form but they didn&#8217;t they wanted to keep that Legend the way it is because it&#8217;s just what it is it&#8217;s just a legend it&#8217;s just a story that he&#8217;s told some say that John couter killed pots himself but and if we get into a battle and this occurred what we do we always let one person alive to go tell a story so we give him the best horses and the best Provisions feed him and let him go back to tell a story not to come into black feed country so that&#8217;s one of the stories of uh John coulter&#8217;s or Maryweather Lewis&#8217;s people coming up and and staying amongst my people to black feet John couter story I only get a couple minutes uh any you guys have any questions you want to ask me now this documentary if anybody&#8217;s interested in the documentary we do this for educational purposes because it&#8217;s very important that we leave something for the young people but we&#8217;ll be selling them back over here Vicki will have them and I think she&#8217;ll be back over here where&#8217;s Vicki at she&#8217;s right over there she she has the documentary and we sell them for how much you selling them for she selling them for $20 nobody&#8217;s interested after my questions I&#8217;ve got a microphone if you&#8217;ll just raise your hand I&#8217;ll bring it around to you questions you guys could to ask me one question anyway what&#8217;s the history of the name black feet the name black feet what&#8217;s the history of how we received our name heard many stories about how we received our name one of them boils down to that we crossed a prairie fire one time and at the other side the cree were our allies and uh this is during the what they do dog day period before coming to the horse we received the horse around the 1600s and so we crossed we always we met with people always sat down across Lake and they notice the souls of our moccasins were black and so he called us the black foot today we go by by the name of black feet I remember this guy from Cleveland Ohio asked me a question said curly bear what&#8217;s the difference between the black foot and the black feet I said there&#8217;s a big difference up in Canada they have one foot and down here we have two that&#8217;s the big difference you did you write the documentary did I what did you write the documentary did I write the documentary well we&#8217;ve interviewed a lot of our people yeah we a lot of there&#8217;s a lot more to than that and because I give a big yeah I did a lot of writing on it and put help putting that thing together but we just added a half hour on onto this and so PBS is going to pick this up hopefully it&#8217;s going to be on national TV we added a half hour onto it the summer so I&#8217;m going out to Florida and meet with those people sometime in November I guess yeah questions question in the front row um you said that merwe Lewis gave him a flag the Indian why would he give him a flag why would uh Lewis give um the native tribes a flag he get you mentioned in the movie that they gave him a flag well when they there was kind of a tradition that they give everybody a tribe that they met now see when Maryweather Lewis and them came up the river through black feed country we knew they were coming but we also knew who they were they didn&#8217;t have nothing to trade with us and we were we spent a short time out there preparing ourselves for winter and we didn&#8217;t want to stop the river hey Louis you guys where you guys going we didn&#8217;t know who they were you know we could care less who they were but they weren&#8217;t bothering anybody so we just let them go but it was a tradition that they gave something to each tribe that the tribal members they met so they gave one of our members a flag um how many black feet Native Americans do you think are still around today how many Native Americans are there today black feet black feet well we&#8217;re uh we&#8217;re over 50,000 today maybe 60,000 and that&#8217;s all four bands of us so we&#8217;re about the seventh largest tribe I think somewhere in that figure that&#8217;s gotten our people in Canada in the United States there&#8217;s 20,000 enrolled members of us today in the United States so we&#8217;re a huge band a huge tribe questions okay we have a last question here just time for one more why did the Indians take the guns why did the Indians take the guns in the movie this why why did we take the guns we didn&#8217;t call them guns we call them lightning rods or Fire Sticks and they were great to hunt with and and and defend our country with huh and so it&#8217;s something that we used we didn&#8217;t really hunt Buffalo with them but we we used them in other ways as defending ourselves with a with a gun so they&#8217;re very important and also very important in trade this girl had one question right here please all right we&#8217;ll make this one our last one did black feet tribes live in different places than Montana is our reservation in Montana yes it&#8217;s in the northwest corner of uh Montana it set borders Canada to the north of us and to the west of us is Glacier National Park and you&#8217;ll see the black feet we&#8217;re sitting right there today okay I want to thank you and if any you you want a question uh Vicki will have the DVDs back there if anybody&#8217;s interested thank you and God bless you all thank you very much curly bear it&#8217;s a pleasure to have you here in the Ten of many voices coming up next we have e</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org/tent-voices/ranger-aaron/">Curly Bear Wagner on Blackfeet and Lewis and Clark</a> appeared first on <a href="https://lewisandclarkresearch.org">Lewis &amp; Clark Research Database</a>.</p>
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