March 7, 1902 - Educated Indian Women at show. Not like the squaws of fiction.
The Indian women at the Sportsmen’s Show are a constant source of wonder to those who visit the big building. The soft-footed, soft-voiced women from Uncle Sam’s reservations are not at all like the squaws of fiction. In their costume alone can there be found any resemblance. They wear well-cut, nicely-fitting gowns made of think, soft buckskin and decorated with wampum silver trinkets and bright colored braids. They are educated intelligent, well-groomed and treat curious questioners with a gentle courtesy that is an object lesson to many who annoy them.
The three in the above picture are of the Albanki tribe. Their names are Falling Star, Bright Eyes and Mountain Dove, and they are one of the most picturesque features of the big Indian exhibit in the concert garden. Their duty is to sell Navajo blankets and various other useful and ornamental articles made by Indians. Bright Eyes is a little tot, not over 10 years old. She dances around the polished floor happy as a lark on a bright morning, and yet she makes no noise except a faint tinkle of the silver ornaments on her dainty little buckskin leggings.
1902 March 7, The Evening World |
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