29 résultats
1992144392Sioux City Iowa: Sioux City Art Center 1992. Softcover. G Label & few marks from previous gallery owner; slight sunning to outer spine area; corners bent slightly; text and illus. are good. Aqua and white stapled wraps 28 pp. BW & color illus. Issued in conjunction with this 1992 exhibition of regional artists. Includes selected artwork of some of them. Sioux City Art Center unknown books
1994144393Sioux City Iowa: Sioux City Art Center 1994. Softcover. G Label & few marks from previous gallery owner; corners bent slightly; text and illus. are good. Aqua and white stapled wraps 28 pp. BW & color illus. Issued in conjunction with this 1994 exhibition of regional artists. Includes selected artwork of some of them. Sioux City Art Center unknown books
1994164067Sioux City IA: Sioux City Art Center 1994. First edition. Softcover. Introduction by curator Christopher Cook. A near fine copy in stapled wrappers. Uncommon. Sioux City Art Center unknown books
007169Sioux City Iowa : Sioux City Tent & Awning Co. No Date circa 1904. Advertising card for Sioux City Tent & Awning Co. measuring 3 1/4" x 6" the front side features a black and white photograph of Camp Security the verso reads "If You are Going to BONESTEEL Stop at CAMP SECURITY. Because - There are accomodations for about 1000 persons; the tents are all furnished with from two to four cots new bedclothes and camp furniture; it is enclosed in a 6-ft. tight wire fence and is carefully guarded day and night; meals are served on camp grounds; everything will be run in strictly first-class order. Sleeping accomodations can be reserved any time at our Sioux City office. SIOUX CITY TENT & AWNING CO. 412 Jackson Street." In 1904 the Rosebud Sioux Reservation was opened to homesteaders resulting in a land rush causing 100000 people to come to North Dakota about 30000 of which came through Bonesteel N.D. RARE. Worldcat does not locate any copies. . Cardstock. Very Good/No Jacket As Issued. 3 1/4" x 6". Sioux City Tent & Awning Co. Paperback books
1949WRCAM34236Washington: Government Printing Office 1949. 213pp. Original printed blue wrappers. Small ink stamp in gutter of titlepage. Else fine. Prints the constitution and by-laws of this branch of the Sioux tribe approved April 26 1949. The several articles define the tribe's territory membership requirements its organization by-laws jurisdiction powers electoral methods powers and duties of the tribal council and more. Government Printing Office unknown books
1957WRCAM34163Washington: Government Printing Office 1957. 26pp. Original printed blue wrappers. Near fine. Prints the constitution and by-laws of this Sioux tribe approved Oct. 16 1946. The several articles define the membership requirements of the tribe its organization jurisdiction powers electoral methods and more. Government Printing Office unknown books
1862220972Minnesota 1862. Hand-colored photograph mounted on card at a period date manuscript caption as above below the image. 6-1/2 x 5-1/4 inches image size. Waterstain to left side within the image soiling and staining to the mount. Hand-colored photograph mounted on card at a period date manuscript caption as above below the image. 6-1/2 x 5-1/4 inches image size. A rare image of the Ojibway chief Hole in the Day The Younger 1825-1868 chief of the Mississippi Band of the Ojibwe Chippewa of central Minnesota. During the Sioux Uprising of 1862 Hole-in-the-Day advocated joining forces with the Dakota and threatened to attack Fort Ripley. By late December 1862 US soldiers had taken captive more than a thousand Dakota including women children and elderly men in addition to warriors. After trials and sentencing by a military court 38 Dakota were hanged in the largest one-day mass execution in American history.<br/><br/>Although the photographer of the present image has not been identified a glass plate negative of the same image in reverse is located within the Edward Bromley Collection at the Minneapolis Public Library. Bromley arrived in Minnesota in 1867 and began collecting photographs and negatives of Minnesota. His first purchase of over 500 glass plate negatives was from Benjamin F. Upton. He also purchased 1600 negatives from William H. Illingworth's gallery in St. Paul as well as the negatives and plates of 30 other photographers including Pepper Jacoby Rugg and Harvey. <br/><br/>Given the timing of Hole-in-the-Day's assasination by a group of Ojibway in 1868 later revealed to have been contracted by by a group of white and mixed-blood traders it would seem likely that the present image is either by Upton or perhaps by Joel E. Whitney whose half-length portraits of Native Americans of the region are stylistically similar to the present image.<br/><br/>"The photographs of the 1862 Sioux Revolt are more than examples of early western photography; they are among the first photographs to document a conflict between Indians and white settlers in the West" Heather A. Shannon "Photographs of the 1862 Sioux Revolt: From National Sensation to Ethnographic Documentation" in The Princeton University Library Chronicle Vol. 67 No. 2 Winter 2006 pp. 290-313. unknown books
18941399253D Cong. 2d Sess.: SED27. 1894. 101pp Disbound some pages loosened else Very Good. SED27. unknown books
18681389640th Cong. 2d Sess.: HED203. 1868. 11pp Disbound Very Good. HED203. unknown books
1966239538Birmingham: Midwest Yearbook Company 1966. First. hardcover. good. Many photo Illus. 4to black cloth. Birmingham MI: Midwest Yearbook Company 1966<br/><br/> A few pages underlined in pencil. Lower right corner of introduction page torn with a slight loss of text.<br/><br/> Midwest Yearbook Company unknown books
1866WRCAM50657Washington 1866. 6pp. Folio gathered signatures. Mild soiling and toning. Very good. After the Civil War the government moved quickly to control the western Indian tribes and this treaty is one of the first actions taken. The treaty was concluded Oct. 19 1865 at Fort Sully Dakota Territory amended and proclaimed March 17 1866. The treaty calls for the Sioux's subjugation to the U.S. government the ceasing of Sioux attacks on whites and their withdrawal from overland routes made through their country. The government agrees to pay them $7000 annually for twenty years for allowing free travel on these routes. The treaty is signed in print by Brig. Gen. Sibley among others. EBERSTADT 130. unknown books
1866WRCAM50650Washington 1866. 7pp. Folio. Gathered signatures. Small loss to bottom corner of front leaf scattered foxing. Very good. Concluded Oct. 14 1865; ratification advised with amendment March 5 1866; proclaimed March 17 1866. "Stipulates a cessation of hostilities and depredations by the various bands and their withdrawal from the overland routes established or to be established through their country" - Eberstadt. EBERSTADT 130. unknown books
1866WRCAM50658AWashington 1866. 6pp. Folio gathered signatures. Small tear to outer margin light toning. Very good. Concluded October 10 1865 ratification advised with amendment March 5 1866 proclaimed March 17 1866. The Minneconjou Sioux were given $10000 annually for twenty years in exchange for vacating the land where overland routes had been established by the U.S. Government. EBERSTADT 130. unknown books
1866WRCAM50658Washington 1866. 6pp. Folio gathered signatures. Small tear to outer margin light toning. Very good. Concluded October 10 1865 ratification advised with amendment March 5 1866 proclaimed March 17 1866. The Minneconjou Sioux were given $10000 annually for twenty years in exchange for vacating the land where overland routes had been established by the U.S. Government. EBERSTADT 130. unknown books
1866WRCAM7377AWashington 1866. 6pp. Folio. Gathered signatures. Minor toning and wear. Very good. Concluded by Newton Edmunds and Gen. H.H. Sibley at Fort Sully Dakota Territory; ratified March 5 1866; and proclaimed by President Johnson on March 17. This treaty saw the O'Gallala Sioux tribe agreeing to peace with the government and with neighboring tribes as well as the ceding of land for the sum of $10000 a year for twenty years. EBERSTADT 130. unknown books
1866WRCAM7377BWashington 1866. 6pp. Folio. Gathered signatures. Minor toning and wear. Very good. Concluded by Newton Edmunds and Gen. H.H. Sibley at Fort Sully Dakota Territory ratified March 5 1866 and proclaimed by President Johnson on March 17. This treaty saw the O'Gallala Sioux tribe agreeing to peace with the government and with neighboring tribes as well as the ceding of land for the sum of $10000 a year for twenty years. EBERSTADT 130. unknown books
1866WRCAM7377CWashington 1866. 6pp. Folio. Gathered signatures. Minor toning and wear. Very good. Concluded by Newton Edmunds and Gen. H.H. Sibley at Fort Sully Dakota Territory ratified March 5 1866 and proclaimed by President Johnson on March 17. This treaty saw the O'Gallala Sioux tribe agreeing to peace with the government and with neighboring tribes as well as the ceding of land for the sum of $10000 a year for twenty years. EBERSTADT 130. unknown books
1866WRCAM26697BWashington 1866. 6pp. Folio. Gathered signatures. Mild toning. Very good. One of the Fort Sully treaties. "These famous treaties were concluded at Fort Sully Dakota Territory by Newton Edmunds E.B. Taylor and Generals S.R. Curtis and H.H. Sibley. They stipulate a cessation of hostilities and depredations by the various bands and their withdrawal from the overland routes established or to be established through their country etc. Among the witnesses is Hezeiah L. Hosmer Chief Justice of Montana Territory" - Eberstadt. EBERSTADT INDIAN TREATIES 130. unknown books
1866WRCAM26697AWashington 1866. 6pp. Folio. Gathered signatures. Mild toning. Very good. One of the Fort Sully treaties. "These famous treaties were concluded at Fort Sully Dakota Territory by Newton Edmunds E.B. Taylor and Generals S.R. Curtis and H.H. Sibley. They stipulate a cessation of hostilities and depredations by the various bands and their withdrawal from the overland routes established or to be established through their country etc. Among the witnesses is Hezeiah L. Hosmer Chief Justice of Montana Territory" - Eberstadt. EBERSTADT INDIAN TREATIES 130. unknown books
1866WRCAM26697Washington 1866. 6pp. Folio. Disbound leaves. Minor chipping staining. Very good. One of the Fort Sully treaties. "These famous treaties were concluded at Fort Sully Dakota Territory by Newton Edmunds E.B. Taylor and Generals S.R. Curtis and H.H. Sibley. They stipulate a cessation of hostilities and depredations by the various bands and their withdrawal from the overland routes established or to be established through their country etc. Among the witnesses is Hezeiah L. Hosmer Chief Justice of Montana Territory" - Eberstadt. EBERSTADT INDIAN TREATIES 130. unknown books
1866WRCAM7374AWashington 1866. 6pp. Folio gathered signatures. Light toning. Very good. The treaty was concluded at Forty Sully Dakota Territory by Gen. H.H. Sibley and Newton Edmunds ratified on March 5 1866 and proclaimed by President Johnson on March 17. Agreeing to a cessation of violence between the tribe and the U.S. government and offering thirty dollars annually per family for not interfering with citizens travelling through their land. EBERSTADT 130. unknown books
1866WRCAM7374CWashington 1866. 6pp. Folio gathered signatures. Mild wear. Very good. The treaty was concluded at Forty Sully Dakota Territory by Gen. H.H. Sibley and Newton Edmunds ratified on March 5 1866 and proclaimed by President Johnson on March 17. Agreeing to a cessation of violence between the tribe and the U.S. government and offering thirty dollars annually per family for not interfering with citizens travelling overland through their land. EBERSTADT 130. unknown books
1866WRCAM7374BWashington 1866. 6pp. Folio gathered signatures. Light toning. Very good. The treaty was concluded at Forty Sully Dakota Territory by Gen. H.H. Sibley and Newton Edmunds ratified on March 5 1866 and proclaimed by President Johnson on March 17. Agreeing to a cessation of violence between the tribe and the U.S. government and offering thirty dollars annually per family for not interfering with citizens travelling overland through their land. EBERSTADT 130. unknown books
1866WRCAM7374DWashington 1866. 6pp. Folio gathered signatures. Mild wear. Very good. The treaty was concluded at Forty Sully Dakota Territory by Gen. H.H. Sibley and Newton Edmunds ratified on March 5 1866 and proclaimed by President Johnson on March 17. Agreeing to a cessation of violence between the tribe and the U.S. government and offering thirty dollars annually per family for not interfering with citizens travelling overland through their land. EBERSTADT 130. unknown books
1866WRCAM7374Washington 1866. 6pp. Folio. Printed wrapper. Fine. The treaty was concluded at Forty Sully Dakota Territory by Gen. H.H. Sibley and Newton Edmunds ratified on March 5 1866 and proclaimed by President Johnson on March 17. EBERSTADT INDIAN TREATIES 130. unknown books