Market Analytics
Search Price Results
Wish

LOT 5046

TWO LEGGINGS' LODGE 1905 Photogravure

[ translate ]

EDWARD S. CURTIS. Two Leggings' Lodge - Apsaroke, 1905. 7.3x5.3" photogravure on 12.25x9.5" Japan Vellum paper and 11.5x9 cover tissue. Print date 1909. From Volume 4, The Apsaroke, or Crows & Hidatsa, of The North American Indian. Printed on print recto: Two Leggings' Lodge - Apsaroke / From Copyright Photograph 1905 by E.S. Curtis.

Curtis wrote about Two Leggings: "Born about 1848. River Crow; Not Mixed clan; Lumpwood organization. Having no great medicine derived from his own vision, he was adopted onto the Tobacco order by Bull Goes Hunting, who gave him his medicine of a fossil, or a stone, roughly shaped like a horse facing both ways. Two Leggings thus became a war-leader. In pursuing some Piegan who had killed a woman in the Apsaroke camp opposite Fort C. F. Smith on the Bighorn, he counted dakshe and captured a gun by the same act - a high honor. Led two parties against the Hunkpapa Sioux, each time taking scalps. Captured fifty horses from the Yanktonai at Fort Peck, and with Deaf Bull led a party that brought back eighty horses from the Teton Sioux. Portrait, folio plate 113."
Condition Report: Excellent. Minor discoloration on edges.

[ translate ]

View it on
Sale price
Unlock
Estimate
Unlock
Time, Location
01 Dec 2021
USA, Tucson, AZ
Auction House
Unlock

[ translate ]

EDWARD S. CURTIS. Two Leggings' Lodge - Apsaroke, 1905. 7.3x5.3" photogravure on 12.25x9.5" Japan Vellum paper and 11.5x9 cover tissue. Print date 1909. From Volume 4, The Apsaroke, or Crows & Hidatsa, of The North American Indian. Printed on print recto: Two Leggings' Lodge - Apsaroke / From Copyright Photograph 1905 by E.S. Curtis.

Curtis wrote about Two Leggings: "Born about 1848. River Crow; Not Mixed clan; Lumpwood organization. Having no great medicine derived from his own vision, he was adopted onto the Tobacco order by Bull Goes Hunting, who gave him his medicine of a fossil, or a stone, roughly shaped like a horse facing both ways. Two Leggings thus became a war-leader. In pursuing some Piegan who had killed a woman in the Apsaroke camp opposite Fort C. F. Smith on the Bighorn, he counted dakshe and captured a gun by the same act - a high honor. Led two parties against the Hunkpapa Sioux, each time taking scalps. Captured fifty horses from the Yanktonai at Fort Peck, and with Deaf Bull led a party that brought back eighty horses from the Teton Sioux. Portrait, folio plate 113."
Condition Report: Excellent. Minor discoloration on edges.

[ translate ]
Sale price
Unlock
Estimate
Unlock
Time, Location
01 Dec 2021
USA, Tucson, AZ
Auction House
Unlock
View it on