DC -- Natl Museum of the American Indian -- Exhibit: Patriot Nations: Native American in our Nation’s Armed Forces:
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Description of Pictures: Patriot Nations: Native American in our Nation’s Armed Forces
January 27, 2017 – January 2018
This banner exhibition chronicles the largely unknown history of Native American veterans. Native peoples have served the U.S. in every major military encounter from the Revolutionary War to today’s conflicts in the Middle East—and, at a higher rate in proportion to their population than any other ethnic group. Using art, photography and essays, the 16-panel show examines more than 300 years of Native peoples contributions to the U.S. military.
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Specific picture descriptions: Photos above with "i" icons next to the bracketed sequence numbers (e.g. "[1] ") are described as follows:
AMINPN_170130_005.JPG: Patriot Nations:
Native Americans in Our Nation's Armed Forces
AMINPN_170130_010.JPG: Patriot Nations honors the brave Native American men and women who have served our country throughout its history. A version of this exhibition is currently traveling the country to raise awareness and support for the creation of a national memorial to honor the service and sacrifice of all Native American veterans.
Taking up the charge by Congress to build the memorial in the heart of Washington, DC, the National Museum of the American Indian (NMAI) has been consulting with Native Nations and veterans' groups since 2015. An international juried competition for the memorial's design will launch in 2017. By Veterans Day 2020, the National Native American Veterans Memorial will stand on the NMAI's grounds, proudly attesting to the significant contributions made by Native Americans in the United States military.
For more information about the National Native American Veterans Memorial, please visit AmericanIndian.si.edu/NNAVM
AMINPN_170130_013.JPG: "We serve this country because it's our land. We have a sacred purpose to protect this place."
-- Jeffrey Begay, Diné [Navajo] veteran
American Indians have served in our nation's military since colonial times. In recent decades, they have served at a higher rate in proportion to their population than any other ethnic group. Why? For many military service is an extension of their warrior traditions. Others serve to reaffirm treaty alliances with the United States. Still others serve for sheer love of home and country.
Throughout Native America, servicemen and women are some of the most honored members of their communities. Yet they remain unrecognized by any landmark in our nation's capital. That will soon change.
The United States Congress has charged the National Museum of the American Indian with creating a memorial on its grounds to give all Americans the opportunity "to learn of the proud and courageous tradition of service of Native Americans." Their legacy deserves our recognition.
AMINPN_170130_020.JPG: George Washington peace medal, 1792
The United States often gave peace medals to tribal leaders to commemorate peaceful and friendly relations. This large silver medal depicts George Washington offering a pipe to a chief. In the background, a white man plows his fields with yoked oxen. On the reverse is an image of an eagle and the motto E pluribus unum.
AMINPN_170130_026.JPG: Horace Poolaw kneels in front of a P-40 Warhawk. MacDill Field, Tampa, Florida, ca. 1944.
AMINPN_170130_033.JPG: Why Do Native Americans Serve?
It doesn't seem to make sense: why would American Indians, Alaska Natives, and Native Hawaiians serve a government that overran their homelands, suppressed their cultures, and confined many of them to reservations? The reasons are complex.
For thousands of years, Native Americans have protected their communities and lands. A warrior's traditional role, however, involved more than fighting enemies. Warriors cared for people and helped in any time of difficulty. They would do anything to ensure their people's survival, including laying down their lives. Many Native Americans view service in the U.S. armed forces as a continuation of the warrior's role in Native cultures.
AMINPN_170130_039.JPG: Members of the Ton-Kon-Gah, or Kiowa Black Leggings Society, discuss what it means to be a veteran before the start of a ceremony in memory of those who fought. The tipi depicts battles in which Kiowas participated and lists the names of all Kiowas killed in combat since World War II. Near Anadarko, Oklahoma, 2014.
AMINPN_170130_044.JPG: American Indian students from Carlisle Indian Industrial School.
Hog Island Shipyard, Pennsylvania, September 4, 1918.
Native people served the war effort in many different ways, including working in defense industries. These students from the Carlisle, Pennsylvania, boarding school built ships during World War I.
AMINPN_170130_047.JPG: Honor dance welcoming home Pascal Cleatus Poolaw Sr. (right, holding the American flag) after his service in the Korean War. To his right are members of the Kiowa War Mothers. Carnegie, Oklahoma, ca. 1952.
Poolaw (Kiowa, 1922–1967) remains the most decorated American Indian soldier in history, having earned 42 medals and citations during three wars: World War II, Korea, and Vietnam.
AMINPN_170130_060.JPG: Conflicting Loyalties
When the War of Independence began in 1775, the opposing powers sought first to secure the neutrality of, then to forge alliances with, powerful Indian Nations. Most nations sided with the British, who Native people considered less threatening than the land-hungry colonists.
American victory in the Revolutionary War proved disastrous for American Indians. Abandoned by their British allies, Indian tribes were left to face Americans, who considered them conquered peoples. Still viewing Britain as their last, best hope against U.S. expansion, many Native Nations fought alongside the British during the War of 1812.
All tribes, whether they supported the British or fought with the Americans, came to regret the U.S. victories of 1783 and 1814. Settlers now flooded their lands and set into motion the conflicts, land loss, and removals to come.
AMINPN_170130_065.JPG: Military service record of John Montour, ca. 1781
John Montour (Lenape [Delaware]/Métis, 1744–1788) was a cultural mediator during the Revolutionary War between his people and Euro-Americans. He also served the Americans as captain of a company of Lenape [Delaware] soldiers.
AMINPN_170130_068.JPG: Pushmataha, 1837
Choctaw chief Pushmataha (ca. 1760–1824) allied with the Americans during the War of 1812. Impressed by Pushmataha's achievements in both battle and diplomacy, U.S. army officers dubbed him the Indian General.
AMINPN_170130_071.JPG: Pipe tomahawk presented to Chief Tecumseh, ca. 1812
Chief Tecumseh (Shawnee, 1768–1813), with his brother Tenskwatawa (also called the Shawnee Prophet, 1775–1837), traveled the Ohio Valley and succeeded in creating a pan-Indian tribal coalition that sided with the British in the War of 1812.
AMINPN_170130_077.JPG: The Civil War
Conflicting loyalties continued to torment Indian Country during the Civil War. Approximately 20,000 American Indians fought in the Civil War, most of them for the Confederacy -- a choice informed by the southern origins of many tribal nations, bitter memories of the Indian removals of the 1830s, and tribal grievances against federal treaty violations.
Wearing blue uniforms were 3,600 American Indian soldiers who served bravely in the Union Army. The Native people who fought for the Union hoped their alliance would improve conditions in and defend their tribal homelands.
American Indian volunteers on both sides wore their uniforms as proudly as their non-Native comrades did, and suffered the same appalling casualty rates. Of the 135 Oneida volunteers from Wisconsin in the Union Army, only 55 returned home -- a mortality rate of nearly 60 percent.
AMINPN_170130_084.JPG: General Ulysses S. Grant (fourth from left) and his staff, including Lieutenant Colonel Ely S. Parker (second from the right), late spring, 1864
AMINPN_170130_089.JPG: Ely S. Parker, 1860–65
At the surrender at Appomattox in 1865, Ely S. Parker (Seneca, 1828–1895) was the highest ranking American Indian in the Union Army, a lieutenant colonel. As General Ulysses S. Grant's secretary, he drafted the terms of surrender. General Lee, noticing that Parker was an American Indian, remarked, "I am glad to see one real American here." Parker later recalled, "I shook his hand and said, ‘We are all Americans.'"
AMINPN_170130_096.JPG: William Terrill Bradby, dressed traditionally and holding a club, October 1899
William Terrill Bradby (Pamunkey, 1833–?) and other men from Virginia's Pamunkey and Mattaponi Nations served as river pilots, land guides, and spies for the Union army during the 1862 Peninsular Campaign. They piloted steamers, tugboats, gunboats, and torpedo boats during the remainder of the Civil War.
AMINPN_170130_100.JPG: Stand Watie, 1860–65
Stand Watie (or Degataga, Cherokee, 1806–1871) was a controversial figure during one of the Cherokee Nation's darkest times. Occurring only a few decades after the tribe's removal to Indian Territory (present-day Oklahoma), the Civil War split the Cherokee and caused widespread destruction.
Watie was elected principal chief of the Confederate-aligned Cherokee, and was awarded the rank of brigadier general -- the only American Indian to achieve that rank in the Civil War -- as commander of the Indian Cavalry Brigade.
AMINPN_170130_106.JPG: Army Scouts
The end of the Civil War marks the beginning of a turbulent and tragic chapter in American Indian history. Enraged by increasing settlement on tribal lands, the expansion of railroads, the slaughter of bison herds, and government efforts to confine Indians to reservations, many Native Nations in the West took arms to defend their homelands and cultures.
Faced with a shrinking army and a huge territory to protect, Congress in 1866 authorized the War Department to enlist up to a thousand Indians to act as scouts for the U.S. Army. Receiving the same pay and allowances as cavalry soldiers, Native American scouts played a critical role in tracking and engaging "hostile" Indian groups during the so-called Indian Wars of the mid-to-late 19th century.
AMINPN_170130_112.JPG: Bankston Johnson, 1898
Bankston Johnson (Choctaw, 1862?–?) was a trooper in Theodore Roosevelt's First Volunteer Cavalry Regiment, popularly known as the Rough Riders. The regiment was mustered in 1898 for the Spanish–American War. Victory in that war began a process that transformed the United States into a major world power.
AMINPN_170130_119.JPG: San Carlos Apache scouts. Arizona, ca. 1885
AMINPN_170130_126.JPG: World War I
When the United States entered "the war to end all wars" in April 1917, Native Americans signed up to fight in and support it. Three thousand to six thousand Native men enlisted and another 6,500 were drafted. About two-thirds served in the infantry, winning widespread praise for bravery and achievement. But the cost was high: about 5 percent of Native combat soldiers were killed, compared to 1 percent of American forces overall.
American Indians supported the war in other ways. At home, some 10,000 Indian women joined the Red Cross, donating time, money, and clothing. Native people also bought war bonds. By the war's end in November 1918, American Indians owned $25 million in bonds, about 75 dollars for every Native man, woman, and child.
After fighting for democracy in Europe, many Native veterans expected that the United States would reward their patriotism by granting all of their people citizenship and recognizing the right of tribal self-determination.
AMINPN_170130_132.JPG: Charlotte Edith Anderson Monture, 1919
Charlotte Edith Anderson Monture (Six Nations of the Grand River, 1890–1996) was the first Native Canadian registered nurse. Rejected from Canadian nursing schools because of her Native heritage, she sought training in the United States. In 1917, she volunteered for the U.S. Medical Corps and served in a hospital in France. She was one of 14 Native Canadian women who served in the Army Nurse Corps during World War I.
AMINPN_170130_137.JPG: Joseph Oklahombi (Choctaw), right, with John Golombie (Chickasaw) and Czarina Colbert Conlan (Choctaw/Chickasaw) at Oklahombi's home. Near Wright City, Oklahoma, May 12, 1921.
Joseph Oklahombi (Choctaw, 1895–1960) was a code talker in the Choctaw language. He received a Silver Star and the French Croix de Guerre after he and 23 other soldiers captured 171 and killed 79 German soldiers.
AMINPN_170130_140.JPG: Ferdinand Clark, 1922
Ferdinand Clark (Nanticoke, 1891–1932), who served with the Second Engineers in World War I, fought in the battles of Chateau Thierry, Soissons, St. Mihiel, Mont Blanc, Attigny, Argonne, and the Rhine. He was chief of the Nanticoke from 1928 to 1932.
AMINPN_170130_145.JPG: Code Talkers
During World War I and World War II, a variety of American Indian languages were used to send secret military messages -- codes that enemies were never able to break.
In World War I, Choctaw and other American Indians transmitted coded messages by telephone in their tribal languages. Although not used extensively, the telephone squads were key in helping the United States win several battles that ended the war.
Beginning in 1940, the army used American Indian recruiters to find Native-language speakers who were willing to enlist. The Marine Corps recruited Diné [Navajo] code talkers in 1942 and very soon established a code-talking school.
AMINPN_170130_151.JPG: Medal awarded by the Code Talkers Recognition Act of 2008 to the Tlingit Tribe of southeast Alaska for its service in World War II.
United States Mint. Designed by Susan Gamble, engraved by Renata Gordon and Joseph Menna, 2013; gold; diam. 3 in.
AMINPN_170130_156.JPG: Choctaw telephone squad, returned from fighting in World War I. Camp Merritt, New Jersey, June 7, 1919. From left: Corporal Solomon B. Louis, Private Mitchell Bobb, Corporal Calvin Wilson, Corporal James Edwards, Private George Davenport, Captain E. H. Horner.
AMINPN_170130_160.JPG: These are the American Indian code talkers' languages and the numbers of tribal members who served as code talkers, if known.
WORLD WAR I
Cherokee
Cheyenne
Choctaw (15)
Comanche
Mohawk
Osage
Pawnee
Ponca
Sac and Fox (Meskwaki)
Sioux -- Lakota and Dakota dialect
WORLD WAR II
Acoma and Laguna Pueblo
Apache
Assiniboine
Cherokee
Chippewa
Choctaw
Comanche (17)
Apsáalooke [Crow]
Ho-Chunk
Hopi (11)
Kiowa
Menominee
Mohawk
Muscogee [Creek]
Oneida
Navajo (about 420)
Osage
Pawnee
Ponca
Sac and Fox (Meskwaki) (19)
Seminole
Sioux -- Lakota and Dakota dialect
Tlingit
AMINPN_170130_173.JPG: World War II
American Indians, Alaska Natives, and Native Hawaiians served in overwhelming numbers after the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. Forty-four thousand of a total Native American population of 350,000 saw active duty, including nearly 800 women. For this service they earned at least 71 Air Medals, 34 Distinguished Flying Crosses, 51 Silver Stars, 47 Bronze Stars, and five Medals of Honor.
More than 2,000 Native Hawaiians served in the U.S. Army, and over 6,000 Alaska Natives served in the Alaska Territorial Guard.
AMINPN_170130_177.JPG: General Douglas MacArthur, commander-in-chief of the Allied forces in the South Pacific, on an inspection trip of American battle fronts, late 1943. From left, Staff Sergeant Virgil Brown (Pima), First Sergeant Virgil F. Howell (Pawnee), Staff Sergeant Alvin J. Vilcan (Chitimacha), General MacArthur, Sergeant Byron L. Tsingine (Diné [Navajo]), Sergeant Larry Dekin (Diné [Navajo]).
AMINPN_170130_183.JPG: Marine Corps Women Reservists, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, October 16, 1943. From left, Minnie Spotted Wolf (Blackfoot), Celia Mix (Potawatomi), and Viola Eastman (Chippewa).
AMINPN_170130_187.JPG: Leonard Lowry, ca. 1955
Lieutenant Colonel Leonard Lowry (Mountain Maidu/Pit River/Washo/Modoc, 1920–1999) was one of the most decorated Native Americans to serve in World War ll. Lowry also served in Korea, earning during his career a Distinguished Service Cross, two Silver Stars, five Purple Hearts, a Legion of Merit, and a World War II Victory Medal.
AMINPN_170130_191.JPG: President Obama awards Joseph Medicine Crow (Apsáalooke [Crow], 1913–2016) the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Washington, DC, August 2009.
The Apsáalooke [Crow] people named Medicine Crow a war chief for his military exploits in Europe during World War II.
AMINPN_170130_199.JPG: Ira Hayes
Corporal Ira Hamilton Hayes (Pima, 1923–1955) remains one of the best-known American Indians to serve in World War II. In 1945, Hayes was one of the six servicemen who raised the American flag during the Battle of Iwo Jima in the South Pacific -- a moment captured in a celebrated photograph. The men became national heroes.
"Sometimes I wish that guy had never made that picture," confessed Hayes, who afterward attempted without success to lead a private life. Uncomfortable with fame, Hayes succumbed to alcoholism and died at age 33. He was buried with full honors at Arlington National Cemetery.
AMINPN_170130_205.JPG: Ira Hayes, age 19, at the U.S. Marine Corps Parachute Training School, where he was dubbed Chief Falling Cloud. San Diego, California, 1943.
AMINPN_170130_210.JPG: The historic photograph by Joe Rosenthal, taken on February 23, 1945, depicts five Marines and a Navy corpsman raising a U.S. flag atop Mount Suribachi during the battle for the island of Iwo Jima in World War II. Ira Hayes is on the far left.
AMINPN_170130_218.JPG: Marine Private First Class Ira Hayes illustrates the part he played in raising the American flag on Mount Suribachi by pointing to his image on the historical photo of the event, April 1945.
AMINPN_170130_228.JPG: The Thunderbirds
One of America's most acclaimed World War II combat units was the 45th Infantry Division, known as the Thunderbirds for their distinctive insignia. Many American Indians served in the 45th, including three who received the Medal of Honor: Jack Montgomery (Cherokee, 1917–2002), Van T. Barfoot (Choctaw, 1919–2012), and Ernest Childers (Muscogee [Creek], 1918–2005).
Formed as a National Guard unit in 1923, the Thunderbirds were deployed to North Africa in June 1943. After invading Sicily and participating in the invasions of Salerno and Anzio in Italy, the division invaded southern France and fought in fierce combat in the Vosges Mountains before crossing the border into Germany. There, the unit liberated Dachau concentration camp, freeing more than 30,000 prisoners.
General Patton said to the Thunderbirds, "You are one of the best, if not the best, divisions in the history of American arms."
AMINPN_170130_234.JPG: Thunderbird shoulder patch
The Thunderbirds got their name from their shoulder patch. Each side of the square represents one of the four states -- Oklahoma, Colorado, Arizona, and New Mexico -- that originally populated the division. The colors reflect the Hispanic heritage of those states.
Originally a traditional American Indian design similar to the Nazi swastika, the emblem had to change once Hitler rose to power and the symbol took on a different meaning. After holding an art competition, the division adopted in 1939 the thunderbird motif, designed by Kiowa artist Woody Big Bow (1914–1998).
AMINPN_170130_237.JPG: Three American Indian members of the 180th Infantry Regiment, 45th Infantry Division. Pier 8, Hampton Roads Port of Embarkation, Newport News, Virginia, June 5, 1943. From this port, more than 700,000 soldiers traveled overseas during World War II. From left: First Lieutenant Howard Kilpatrick (Cherokee), Private First Class Everett B. Bevenue (Muscogee [Creek]), Private First Class Henry T. Lukee (Zuni Pueblo).
AMINPN_170130_245.JPG: After the soldiers of the 42nd and 45th Infantry Divisions of the 7th US Army arrived, prisoners at the Dachau concentration camp rejoiced in their freedom by raising a homemade American flag. Dachau, Germany, April 30, 1945.
AMINPN_170130_250.JPG: Recruiting from Chilocco Indian School
In the late 1800s, the U.S. government founded boarding schools where American Indian children were sent to be assimilated into mainstream American culture. Many of the schools were run in a military style, with organized companies, uniforms, and strict discipline. This made them a target of recruitment for the U.S. armed forces.
Founded in 1884, the Chilocco Indian Agricultural School educated boys and girls from tribes across the United States. In 1923, the 180th Infantry Regiment, 45th Infantry Division, of the Oklahoma National Guard recruited from local National Guard units, which included many current and former Chilocco students. After the attack on Pearl Harbor, many of Chilocco's staff and students enlisted in all military branches. Two notable Chilocco graduates who joined the 45th Division are Ernest Childers (Muscogee [Creek]) and Jack Montgomery (Cherokee), both of whom earned the Medal of Honor.
AMINPN_170130_256.JPG: Chilocco Company C, 279th Infantry Regiment, in front of the school entrance. Near Newkirk, Oklahoma, ca. 1950.
AMINPN_170130_261.JPG: Chilocco alumnus Ernest Childers (Muscogee [Creek]) receives the Congressional Medal of Honor from Lieutenant General Jacob L. Devers (left). 5th Army headquarters, April 8, 1944.
Lieutenant Childers received the honor because, working under heavy enemy fire, he wiped out 2 German machine gun nests near Oliveto, Italy, killing enemy snipers and capturing an artillery observer.
AMINPN_170130_269.JPG: Company I of the 180th Infantry Regiment, 45th Infantry Division. Camp Barkeley, Texas, April 5, 1941.
Many students from Chilocco were members of Companies C and I of the 180th Infantry Regiment. Lieutenant Jack Montgomery (Cherokee) is seated in the front row, far right. Montgomery earned the Medal of Honor for his bravery during the Battle of Anzio, Italy. His actions led to 11 enemy killed and 32 taken prisoner.
AMINPN_170130_277.JPG: "People ask me, ‘Why did you go? Look at all the mistreatment that has been done to your people.' Somebody's got to go, somebody's got defend this country. Somebody's got to defend the freedom. This is the reason why I went."
-- Chester Nez (Diné [Navajo]), World War II and Korean War veteran
Korea
The Korean War began in June 1950, when Communist North Korean troops crossed the 38th parallel dividing the Korean Peninsula. For the next three years, American forces -- including approximately 10,000 American Indian soldiers -- along with troops from 15 other nations, fought to prevent a Communist takeover. Considered a "police action" because Congress issued no formal declaration of war, the Korean War was nevertheless bloody and brutal. Some 33,739 American soldiers died in battle, including 194 Native Americans.
AMINPN_170130_280.JPG: Master Sergeant Woodrow Wilson Keeble, ca. 1955
Woodrow Wilson Keeble (Eastern Sioux, 1917–1982) was a veteran of World War II and the Korean War. For his actions in combat, he received the Distinguished Service Cross, the Silver Star, the Bronze Star, 2 Purple Hearts, and the Combat Infantryman Badge. In 2007, his Distinguished Service Cross was posthumously upgraded to the Medal of Honor for his bravery during the Korean War.
AMINPN_170130_288.JPG: John Emhoolah, ca. 1950
John Emhoolah (Kiowa/Arapaho, b. 1929) was one of five brothers who served in the military. Upon his return from the Korean War, he became active in the fight to restore Native Nations' treaty rights.
AMINPN_170130_296.JPG: Vietnam
Of the 42,000 American Indians who served in the U.S. armed forces during the Vietnam conflict (1964–75), 90 percent were volunteers. Approximately one of every four eligible Native people served, compared with one of twelve in the general population. Of those, 226 died in action and five received the Medal of Honor.
Like many other Vietnam veterans, American Indians were often deeply traumatized by what they experienced. Some noticed similarities between the Native and Vietnamese colonial experiences. As one veteran observed, "We went into their country and killed them and took land that wasn't ours. Just like the whites did to us. We shouldn't have done that. Browns against browns. That screwed me up, you know."
When the veterans returned, many found solace and healing in their communities' ceremonies and honors. Many also joined political organizations, such as the American Indian Movement and the National Indian Youth Council, to work for social justice and change.
AMINPN_170130_303.JPG: Jefferson Keel (right, shown here with Jacqueline Pata [Tlingit]), 2013
Jefferson Keel (Chickasaw, b. 1947) received the Bronze Star for valor, two Purple Hearts, and numerous other awards for heroism. Currently the lieutenant governor of the Chickasaw Nation, he achieved the rank of army captain during 20 years of active duty, which included two tours in Vietnam as an Airborne Ranger.
AMINPN_170130_308.JPG: Donna Loring, 1966
Donna Loring (Penobscot, b. 1948) served in 1967 and 1968 as a communications specialist at Long Binh Post in Vietnam, where she processed casualty reports from throughout Southeast Asia. She was the first woman police academy graduate to become a police chief in Maine, serving as the Penobscots' police chief from 1984 to 1990. In 1999 Maine governor Angus King commissioned her to the rank of colonel and appointed her his advisor on women veterans' affairs.
AMINPN_170130_317.JPG: Vietnam Era Veterans Inter-Tribal Association Color Guard (VEVITA) leads the grand entry at the National Powwow. Washington, DC, 2007.
AMINPN_170130_321.JPG: Kiowa Marine veteran Master Gunnery Sergeant Vernon Tsoodle's dance regalia blends United States and tribal military traditions. A Marine Corps medallion hangs on a beaded necklace beside a gourd rattle made from a Vietnamese hand grenade. The fan is made with bald eagle feathers, which represent strength. The beaded pin indicates that Tsoodle is a descendant of Red Tipi, father of Satanta, one of the best known Kiowa war chiefs.
AMINPN_170130_328.JPG: Global Conflicts in the 21st Century
Since the Gulf War (1990–91), the United States has been engaged in an ongoing series of conflicts, primarily in Afghanistan and Iraq. American Indian, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian men and women continue to serve in high numbers at home and abroad. According to the Department of Defense, more than 24,000 of the 1.2 million current active-duty servicemen and women are American Indians.
AMINPN_170130_336.JPG: Desert Thunder, an all-Cherokee drum group. Al Taqaddum Air Base, Iraq, 2004.
During the Iraq War the 120th Engineer Combat Battalion of Okmulgee, Oklahoma, hosted a powwow at Al Taqaddum Air Base near Fallujah, Iraq, on September 17 and 18, 2004, to offset pangs of homesickness. "The beat of the drum is a part of the heartbeat of a Native American," said Sergeant Debra Mooney (Choctaw), who planned the event.
AMINPN_170130_342.JPG: Lori Ann Piestewa, ca. 2003
Private First Class Lori Ann Piestewa (Hopi, 1979–2003) was the first woman killed in action during Operation Iraqi Freedom and the first known Native American woman to die in combat.
AMINPN_170130_347.JPG: Joshua Wheeler, 2015
Master Sergeant Joshua Wheeler (Cherokee, 1975–2015) was a member of the army's elite Delta Force and the recipient of 11 Bronze Stars during his military career. Wheeler died on October 22, 2015, while rescuing prisoners from the so-called Islamic State (ISIS) near Hawijah in northern Iraq. He was the first known U.S. military casualty in the fight against ISIS.
AMINPN_170130_351.JPG: Our Spirits Will Protect You
One of the important ways Native Americans have maintained the health of their communities is through ceremonies. An important way of safeguarding individuals and communities from sickness, disharmony, and social breakdown, ceremonies prepare and protect warriors before they leave for the battlefield. When they return, other ceremonies welcome, heal, honor, and help them let go. Today, many Native communities continue traditions that help returned veterans heal in mind and spirit or assist those who died in finding their way in the afterlife.
AMINPN_170130_357.JPG: Staffs tied with eagle feathers at a Ton-Kon-Gah, or Black Leggings Society, ceremonial honoring Kiowa military veterans. Near Anadarko, Oklahoma, 2014.
AMINPN_170130_361.JPG: Specialist Leslie Montemayor (Muscogee [Creek]/Seminole) dances alone in memory of a fellow warrior, September 2004.
During a powwow in Iraq, an honor ceremony was held for Private Raymond Bryan Estes III (Ponca, 1979–1998). His family sent a dance shawl to be used in the powwow.
AMINPN_170130_362.JPG: The Native American Women Warriors lead the grand entry during a powwow in Pueblo, Colorado, June 14, 2014.
From left: Sergeant First Class Mitchelene BigMan (Apsáalooke [Crow]/Hidatsa), Sergeant Lisa Marshall (Cheyenne River Sioux), Specialist Krissy Quinones (Apsáalooke [Crow]), and Captain Calley Cloud (Apsáalooke [Crow]), with Tia Cyrus (Apsáalooke [Crow]) behind them.
The organization, founded by Mitchelene BigMan in 2012, raises awareness about Native American women veterans and provides support services in health, employment, and education.
AMINPN_170130_369.JPG: Be Part of a Historic Moment:
The National Native American Veterans Memorial
Native Americans have participated in every major U.S. military encounter from the Revolutionary War to today's conflicts in the Middle East, yet no landmark in our nation's capital recognizes this contribution.
The Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian will create that landmark: the National Native American Veterans Memorial. The anticipated dedication of this tribute to Native heroes will be on Veterans Day 2020.
The National Museum of the American Indian is depending on your support to honor and recognize these Native American veterans for future generations.
AMINPN_170130_374.JPG: United States senators Ben Nighthorse Campbell, dressed in ceremonial Northern Cheyenne regalia, and Daniel K. Inouye, a member of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee, stand with members of the Vietnam Era Veterans Inter-Tribal Association during the groundbreaking ceremonies for the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian. Washington, DC, September 28, 1999.
Campbell (Northern Cheyenne, b. 1933), a Korean War veteran, is one of the few American Indians to ever serve in the U.S. Congress.
For his actions during World War II, Inouye (1924–2012) received the Distinguished Service Cross (later upgraded to the Medal of Honor), Bronze Star Medal, two Purple Hearts, and 12 other medals and citations. He was posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
AMINPN_170130_383.JPG: "This is a tremendously important effort to recognize Native Americans' service to this nation. We have so much to celebrate."
-- The Honorable Ben Nighthorse Campbell (Northern Cheyenne)
AMINPN_170130_385.JPG: This traveling exhibition is made possible by the generous support of the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians.
AMINPN_170130_388.JPG: The Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian, 2004
AAA "Gem": AAA considers this location to be a "must see" point of interest. To see pictures of other areas that AAA considers to be Gems, click here.
Bigger photos? To save server space, the full-sized versions of these images have either not been loaded to the server or have been removed from the server. (Only some pages are loaded with full-sized images and those usually get removed after three months.)
I still have them though. If you want me to email them to you, please send an email to guthrie.bruce@gmail.com
and I can email them to you, or, depending on the number of images, just repost the page again will the full-sized images.
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2004_DC_AmerInd_Our_Univ: DC -- Natl Museum of the American Indian -- Exhibit: Our Universes: Traditional Knowledge Shapes Our World (5 photos from 2004)
2009_DC_AmerInd_Our_Univ: DC -- Natl Museum of the American Indian -- Exhibit: Our Universes: Traditional Knowledge Shapes Our World (6 photos from 2009)
2015_DC_AmerInd_Our_Univ: DC -- Natl Museum of the American Indian -- Exhibit: Our Universes: Traditional Knowledge Shapes Our World (10 photos from 2015)
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2005_DC_AmerInd_Our_Peoples: DC -- Natl Museum of the American Indian -- Exhibit: Our Peoples: Giving Voice to Our Histories (19 photos from 2005)
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2004_DC_AmerInd_Contemporary: DC -- Natl Museum of the American Indian -- Exhibit: Our Lives: Contemporary Life and Identities (4 photos from 2004)
2017 photos: Equipment this year: I continued to use my Fuji XS-1 cameras but, depending on the event, I also used a Nikon D7000.
Trips this year:
Civil War Trust conferences in Pensacola, FL, Chattanooga, TN (via sites in Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennessee) and Fredericksburg, VA,
a family reunion in The Dells, Wisconsin (via sites in Ohio, Indiana, and Wisconsin),
New York City, and
my 12th consecutive San Diego Comic Con trip (including sites in Arizona).
For some reason, several of my photos have been published in physical books this year which is pretty cool. Ones that I know about:
"Tarzan, Jungle King of Popular Culture" (David Lemmo),
"The Great Crusade: A Guide to World War I American Expeditionary Forces Battlefields and Sites" (Stephen T. Powers and Kevin Dennehy),
"The American Spirit" (David McCullough),
"Civil War Battlefields: Walking the Trails of History" (David T. Gilbert),
"The Year I Was Peter the Great: 1956 — Khrushchev, Stalin's Ghost, and a Young American in Russia" (Marvin Kalb), and
"The Judge: 26 Machiavellian Lessons" (Ron Collins and David Skover).
Number of photos taken this year: just below 560,000.
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