Object Details
sova.naa.photolot.176_ref8278
Local Numbers
OPPS NEG.3179 B 8
Local Note
Black and white copy negative
Topic
Sioux
Culture
Hunkpapa Lakota (Hunkpapa Sioux)
Indians of North America -- Great Plains
See more items in
Bureau of American Ethnology negatives
Bureau of American Ethnology negatives / Additional Materials / ANONYMOUS
Biographical / Historical
"Antelope was considered to be the greatest orator of the Sioux nation. When in council or making an address he was full of action, his gestures were fine, he would remind you of some great orator. You enjoyed listening to him and seeing him in action, when you didn't understand a word he was saying; he spoke in Sioux. "John Grass was considered a Sioux orator. John Grass had a most remarkable memory. His great memory gave him the reputation of being a Sioux orator. "Major James McLaughlin, who spent 52 years in Indian service and had visited all the different tribes of Indians and had heard all the great speakers, said Running Antelope was the greatest of all of them." -- Notation on photograph in the Burdick Collection of Barry photographs. (February 1937)
Extent
1 Photograph (5x7 in)
Archival Repository
National Anthropological Archives
Type
Archival materials
Photographs
Genre/Form
Photographs
NAA.PhotoLot.176_ref8278
Large EAD
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/nw35c2c1acd-06ba-4af1-93be-2c2d8eba8ebf
NAA.PhotoLot.176
NAA
Record ID
ebl-1628267668517-1628267670620-1