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Post by grahamew on Dec 19, 2006 16:05:58 GMT -6
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Post by grahamew on Dec 28, 2006 19:04:52 GMT -6
Can this be Yellow Nose again? The drawing is courtesy of the South Dakota State Historical Society, but beyond that, I know nothing about it.
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Post by Dietmar on Jan 27, 2007 16:46:29 GMT -6
So finally... here he is: Yellow Nose in front of his tent! "Yellow Nose sitting in front of his studio" Yellow Nose (close-up) This is the photograph from the Dyer book. To be honest, It would have been more impressive to see him portraited at less distance, but maybe another time... Hope you like it anyway Dietmar
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Post by Realbird on Feb 2, 2007 20:51:24 GMT -6
Whenever we speak of Native Americans who excelled in valor at the battle of the Little Big Horn, Lame White man and Yellow Nose should be recognize as foremost in actual combat prowess. Lame White man's martial abilities are relatively familiar. However, Yellow Nose's prowess is spectacular also. He may have been the solitary warrior to obtain a "company flag" while under extreme weapons fire from the enemy.
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Post by charlie on Feb 5, 2007 6:07:06 GMT -6
Dietmar, my compliments: you are an inexhaustible source of infos and images.....Certainly, in the photo above Yellow Wolf don't seems a great warrior, but a poor man.....Hear me: can you tell me the real indian's name of RED SHIRT (Oglala), already discussed in other thread? Thanks
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Post by grahamew on Feb 5, 2007 6:37:02 GMT -6
When and where was the picture taken, Dietmar?
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Post by Dietmar on Feb 5, 2007 16:13:01 GMT -6
Thank you, Charlie... but this time the merits go to Grahame, because he mentioned the Dyer book in this thread. I just was quick enough to buy it and scan the photo Unfortunately there is no information or footnote about any of the photos in the book, which is a reprint from an earlier edition, I think. It must have been made at the Darlington Agency or around Fort Reno in Indian Territory, not before 1884, when the Dyers moved to Fort Reno. Dietmar P.S.: I am not good in the Lakota language, but Ogle means shirt, I think, and luta means red, so Red Shirt has to be "Ogle luta"?! I have to look in some old treaty documents for the correct name...
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Post by Diane Merkel on Feb 5, 2007 21:11:12 GMT -6
An LBHA member would appreciate getting a copy of an article from the Bighorn Yellowstone Journal, Vol. 1, No. 3, titled "Yellow Nose Tells of Custer's Last Stand."
If you have a copy you'd be willing to scan or xerox, please let me know. Thanks !
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Post by herosrest on Nov 7, 2023 12:23:55 GMT -6
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Post by herosrest on Nov 7, 2023 12:38:23 GMT -6
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Post by herosrest on Nov 8, 2023 8:16:18 GMT -6
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Post by herosrest on Dec 1, 2023 11:25:40 GMT -6
Linked from Postimages.org linkAs I understand the nuts of the bolts, displaying the image here does not bump the sites storage quotas. It is attachments which do that. Linking in the image or displaying it from postimage simple uses the site's bandwidth. That is how I understand the matter on my own board. So - How did Yellow Nose magage to draw Custer's Battle Flag in this pictograph, unless he had at least seen it. The image portrays the very important and symbolic falg, fallen into Cheyenne hands. Pssst........ Don't tell the wife! Interesting comment about Custer's flag by BG Freeman, with Terry's column in 1876. The original link. If memory serves, this ended up with Moodey and is now at SI. Online collections. Yellow Nose or Spotted Wolf drawings.
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