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1907 Otoe Indian Woman - Photograph by George B. Cornish, Arkansas City, Kansas

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Black Americana Start Price:350.00 USD Estimated At:500.00 - 800.00 USD
1907 Otoe Indian Woman - Photograph by George B. Cornish, Arkansas City, Kansas
Western America
“Otoe Indian Woman” Photograph by George B. Cornish
1907-Dated Classic Vintage Portrait Photograph titled, “Otoe Indian Woman,” by George B. Cornish, Arkansas City, Kansas, Choice Extremely Fine.
1907-Dated Collotype Photograph by George B. Cornish, Arkansas City, Kansas, measuring 5.75” x 7.75” never folded on crisp photo cardstock. This Photograph is titled, "OTOE INDIAN WOMAN" and shows a wonderful portrait of a dignified Indian woman in Native American dress wearing her decorative beaded necklaces and numerous silver trade decorations attached to her top near her shoulders. Nice overall contrast and what appears as a line by the forehead is made in the image and is not a later defect. The Otoe-Missouria Tribe of Indians is a single, federally recognized tribe, located in Oklahoma. The tribe is made up of Otoe and Missouria Indians. Traditionally they spoke the Chiwere language, part of the Siouan language family.
Collotype, also called Photocollography, photomechanical printing process that gives accurate reproduction because no halftone screen is employed to break the images into dots.

In the 19th century, the Missouria and the Otoe established permanent villages consisting primarily of earth lodges, but also occasionally tipis and bark lodges. Their joined society was patrilineal and comprised seven to ten clans. Tribal members had to marry outside of their clan. Each clan had a leader, and together the clan chiefs formed a tribal council. The chief of the Bear Clan was the principal leader of the tribes. They hunted buffalo and grew such crops as squash, beans, corn, and pumpkins.

In 1803, Lewis and Clark estimated their population to be 500. Artist George Catlin estimated their population at 1200 in 1833. In 1830 there were an estimated 1500 Otoe-Missouria living in together. By 1886, only 334 Otoe-Missouria survived.

The first land cession treaty between the Otoe-Missouria and the United States was in 1830. These were followed by more treaties in 1833, 1836, and 1854. The 1854 Treaty established a reservation on the Kansas-Nebraska border, near the Big Blue River. The tribe split in factions of assimilationists and traditionalists. The assimilationist Otoe-Missouria were influenced by Quaker missionaries and became known as the Quaker Band. The traditionalists were known as the Coyote Band.

In 1876 Congress arranged the sale of 120,000 acres (490 km2) of the Otoe-Missouria reservation and sold the rest in 1881, when Congress forced the Otoe-Missouria into Indian Territory. The Coyote Band settled on the Sac and Fox reservation, while the Quaker Band settled on their own small, 113-acre (0.46 km2) reservation in present day Noble and Pawnee Counties.

The Coyote Band rejoined the Quaker Band, but their reservation was almost immediately broken up into individual allotments, as dictated by the Dawes Act, in the 1890s. A total of 514 Otoe-Missourias received individual allotments. Much later, in the 1960s the Otoe-Missouria people were compensated for their lands lost during the 19th century by the Indian Claims Commission.

The tribe's constitution was ratified in 1984 in accordance with the Oklahoma Indian Welfare Act.