Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Bored Panda
Bored Panda
Edvinas Jovaišas

43 Rare Colour Photos Of Native Americans From The 19th And 20th Century

Article created by: Greta Jaruševičiūtė

Film-maker Paul Ratner developed a passion for researching old photographs of indigenous people while making "Moses on the Mesa", a film about a German-Jewish immigrant who fell in love with a Native-American woman and became governor of her tribe of Acoma Pueblo in New Mexico in the late 1800s.

“What has been most gratifying to me about researching old photos of Native Americans is when the relatives of the people featured in the photos discover them through our popular Facebook page," Ratner told Bored Panda. "Many of them have never seen these photos and are excited to find them. It is also exciting when folks correctly identify the people and the tribes pictured in the photos since the archives or vintage photo auctions often have incorrect or incomplete information. I feel like through this process we are reclaiming some lost history.”

More info: filmsbygiants.com | Facebook (h/t: huffpost)

#1 Minnehaha. 1904

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#2 Bone Necklace. Oglala Lakota Chief. 1899. Photo By Heyn Photo

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#3 Blackfeet Tribal Camp With Grazing Horses. Montana. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide By Walter Mcclintock

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#4 Eagle Arrow. A Siksika Man. Montana. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide By Walter Mcclintock

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#5 Blackfeet Girl. Montana. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide By Walter Mcclintock

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#6 Chief James A. Garfield. Jicarilla Apache. 1899. Photo By William Henry Jackson

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#7 "Painted Tipis Of The Headmen". Blackfeet. Montana. Early 1900s. By Walter Mcclintock

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#8 Arrowmaker, An Ojibwe Man. 1903

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#9 Handpainted Print Of A Young Woman By The River. Early 1900s. Photo By Roland W. Reed

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#10 Charles American Horse (the Son Of Chief American Horse). Oglala Lakota. 1901. Photo By William Herman Rau

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#11 Chief Little Wound And Family. Oglala Lakota. 1899. Photo By Heyn Photo

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#12 Cheyenne Chief Wolf Robe. Color Halftone Reproduction Of A Painting From A F. A. Rinehart Photograph. 1898

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#13 ”In Summer”. Kiowa. 1898. Photo By F.a. Rinehart

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#14 “Songlike”, A Pueblo Man, 1899. Photo By F.a. Rinehart

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#15 Walks-in-the-water (soya-wa-awachkai) And Her Baby Koumiski (round Face). Siksika. Montana. Ear

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#16 Amos Two Bulls. Lakota. Photo By Gertrude Käsebier

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#17 She Who Travels In The Sky. Ojibwe. 1908. Photo By Roland Reed

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#18 Northern Plains Man On An Overlook. Montana. Early 1900s. Hand-colored Photo By Roland W. Reed

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#19 Blackfeet Children (including "sa-ko-uka-etsusin"). Montana. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide B

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#20 Mrs. Bad Gun. 1879. Cheyenne. Photo By L.a.huffman

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#21 Handpainted Print Depicting Five Riders Going Downhill In Montana. Early 1900s. Photo By Roland W. Reed

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#22 Si Wa Wata Wa. A Zuni Elder. New Mexico. 1903. Photo By Edward S. Curtis

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#23 A Blackfoot Couple. Montana. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide By Walter Mcclintock

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#24 "Coming Running". Blackfeet Woman With Children. Montana. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide By W

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#25 Ojibwe Woman. Early 1900s. Photo By Roland Reed

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#26 Piegan Couple. Ca. 1890-1910. Glacier National Park, Montana. Colorized Photo/postcard

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#27 Night-herder On Lookout Butte Overlooking Old Man's River. Blackfeet. Montana. Early 1900s. Gla

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#28 Red Stripe Tipi And The Thunder Tipi. Siksika Camp. Montana. Early 1900s

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#29 Blackfeet Family. Montana. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide By Walter Mcclintock

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#30 Broken Arm. Oglala Lakota. Ca. 1899. Photo By F.a. Rinehart

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#31 Acoma Pueblo. New Mexico. Early 1900s. Photo By Chicago Transparency Company

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#32 Geronimo (goyaałé). Apache. 1898. Photo By F.a. Rinehart

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#33 Piegan Men Giving Prayer To The Thunderbird Near A River In Montana. 1912. Photo By Roland W. Reed

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#34 Ute Chief Ignacio. 1870-1890

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#35 A Woman By The Star Tipi In Blackfoot Camp. Early 1900s

Image credits:

#36 Riders With Coup Sticks. Blackfeet. Montana. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide By Walter Mcclint

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#37 "Hiawatha's Return." 1904. Photo By Detroit Photographic Co

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#38 Thunder Tipi Of Brings-down-the-sun. Blackfoot Camp. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide By Walte

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#39 Old Coyote (aka Yellow Dog). Crow. Original Photo Circa 1879 (color Tinted Circa 1910)

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#40 Strong Left Hand And Family. Northern Cheyenne Reservation. 1906. Photo By Julia Tuell

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#41 Bear Chief Cutting A Green Hide. Blackfeet. Montana. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide By Walter

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#42 Chief Mad Wolf. Blackfeet. Montana. Early 1900s. Glass Lantern Slide By Walter Mcclintock

Image credits: Paul Ratner

#43 Chief Hollow Horn Bear. Sicangu Lakota. 1905. Photo By Delancey W. Gill

Image credits: Paul Ratner

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.