Native American History

Native American History 🐺Native American Indians are an important part of the culture of the United States.🔥

I don't know why this hasn't received more publicity, but this fifty-foot sculpture was unveiled recently in South Dakot...
06/05/2026

I don't know why this hasn't received more publicity, but this fifty-foot sculpture was unveiled recently in South Dakota.
It's called 'Dignity' and was done by artist Dale Lamphere to honor the women of the Sioux Nation.

Saw this in Idaho a few years agoGrace Sjaarda
06/05/2026

Saw this in Idaho a few years ago
Grace Sjaarda

first scarecrow
06/05/2026

first scarecrow

Preserving the map — does it keep the spirit alive, or just ease our conscience?🔥 This map is availlable here: 👇 https:/...
06/05/2026

Preserving the map — does it keep the spirit alive, or just ease our conscience?
🔥 This map is availlable here: 👇 https://www.nativepridestores.com/poster20

LOSS — FORGOTTEN — RESISTANCE
A map does not merely trace the land, it draws the spirit of the past.

On this map, once-radiant faces now linger as silent portraits. Tribes that once sang and danced beneath the open skies, who told stories of the wind, the mountains, and the rivers — now their voices have faded. Each name, each symbol whispers of profound loss — of land, of language, of culture, and of countless lives.

Time, like a relentless wind, has swept away what was once sacred.
Many tribes now exist only in books, while others have been entirely forgotten.
No storytellers remain. No drums summon the spirits of the ancestors.
This silence — that is the greatest sorrow.

Yet, within that silence echoes a voice — resistance.
This map is not merely a relic. It is proof of existence, a testament to the will not to be erased. Today, Indigenous peoples continue their journey — preserving language, keeping traditions alive, passing down songs, and fiercely guarding their cultural flame.

Thus, this map is more than just an image.
It is a mirror of memory, a bridge connecting past and present.
It reminds us that history must never be forgotten.
Each time someone pauses, gazes deeply, and listens to what this map has to say, they help rekindle the flame of remembrance.

For as long as there are those who remember and honor them — nothing is ever truly lost.
❤️ Thank you for taking some time to view my article!
❤️ Proud to be a Native American 🔥Poster Native Tribes of North American central America and the Caribbean Vertical!
🔥Visit the store to support Native American products 👇
Order from here🔥 This map is availlable here: 👇 https://www.nativepridestores.com/poster20

Thanks for service
06/04/2026

Thanks for service

A mystery in Georgia: Shockingly little is known about this Native American effigy mound Rock Eagle has a bird image on ...
06/04/2026

A mystery in Georgia: Shockingly little is known about this Native American effigy mound Rock Eagle has a bird image on its top, made of quartzite rocks hauled to the side, that spans 120 feet wing to wing, slightly longer than a Boeing 737. The mound is estimated at at least 2,000 years old.
Photographer Stephen Alvarez shot the image
Credit: National Geographic

50,000 acres returned to the Yurok Tribe, healing both land and culture
06/03/2026

50,000 acres returned to the Yurok Tribe, healing both land and culture

Legend of the White BuffaloSioux (lakota)The White Buffalo are sacred to many Native Americans. The Lakota (Sioux) Natio...
06/03/2026

Legend of the White Buffalo
Sioux (lakota)
The White Buffalo are sacred to many Native Americans. The Lakota (Sioux) Nation has passed down The Legend of the White Buffalo–a story now approximately 2,000 years old–at many council meetings, sacred ceremonies, and through the tribe’s storytellers. There are several variations, but all are meaningful and tell of the same outcome. Have communication with the Creator through prayer with clear intent for Peace, Harmony, and Balance for all life living in the Earth Mother.
Spirituality among Natives Americans and non-Native Americans has been a strong force for those who believe in the power of the Great Spirit or God.
It matters not what you call the Creator. What matters is that you pray to give thanks for your blessings and trust the guidance given to you from the world of Spirit. Many truths about Spirit are told and handed down from one generation to the next.
The legend of the White Buffalo Calf Woman tells how the People had lost the ability to communicate with the Creator. The Creator sent the sacred White Buffalo Calf Woman to teach the People how to pray with the Pipe. With that Pipe, seven sacred ceremonies were given for the people to abide in order to ensure a future with harmony, peace, and balance.
Legend says that long ago, two young men were out hunting when from out of nowhere came a beautiful maiden dressed in white buckskin. One of the hunters looked upon her and recognizing her as a wakan, or sacred being lowered his eyes. The second hunter approached her with lust in his eyes desiring her for his woman. White Buffalo Calf Woman beckoned the lustful warrior to her, and as he approached a cloud of dust arose around them causing them to be hidden from view. When the dust settled, nothing but a pile of bones lay next to her.
As she walked toward the respectful young hunter, she explained to him that she had merely fulfilled the other man’s desire, allowing him, within that brief moment, to live a lifetime, die and decay. White Buffalo Calf Woman instructed the young man to go back to the People and tell them to prepare for her arrival to teach them of the way to pray. The young hunter obeyed.
When White Buffalo Calf woman arrived with the sacred bundle (the prayer pipe) she taught the People of the seven sacred ways to pray. These prayers are through ceremonies that include the Sweat Lodge for purification; the Naming Ceremony for child naming; the Healing Ceremony to restore health to the body, mind and spirit; the adoption ceremony for making of relatives; the marriage ceremony for uniting male and female; the Vision Quest for communing with the Creator for direction and answers to one’s life; and the Sundance Ceremony to pray for the well-being of all the People.
When the teaching of the sacred ways was complete, White Buffalo Calf Woman told the people she would again return for the sacred bundle that she left with them. Before leaving, she told them that within her were the four ages and that she would look back upon the People in each age, returning at the end of the fourth age, to restore harmony and spirituality to a troubled land. She walked a short distance, she looked back towards the people and sat down. When she arose they were amazed to see she had become a black buffalo. Walking a little further, the buffalo laid down, this time arising as a yellow buffalo. The third time the buffalo walked a little further and this time arose as a red buffalo. Walking a little further it rolled on the ground and rose one last time as a white buffalo calf signaling the fulfillment of the White Buffalo Calf prophecy.
The changing of the four colors of the White Buffalo Calf Woman represents the four colors of man–white, yellow, red and black. These colors also represent the four directions, north, east, south, and west. The sacred bundle that was left to the Lakota people is still with the People in a sacred place on the Cheyenne River Indian reservation in South Dakota. It is kept by a man known as the Keeper of the White Buffalo Calf Pipe, Arvol Looking Horse.
The legend of the White Buffalo Calf Woman remains ever promising in this age of spiritual enlightenment and conscious awareness. In today’s world of confusion and war, many of us are looking for signs of peace.
“With the return of the White Buffalo, it is a sign that prayers are being heard, that the sacred pipe is being honored, and that the promises of prophecy are being fulfilled. White Buffalo signals a time of abundance and plenty.”
Though harsh as the world we live in may be throughout recorded history there have been spiritual leaders teaching peace, hope, and balance (synergy) amongst all life. This was taught by great teachers such as Jesus, Buddha, the Dali Lama’s, and Native American leaders.
Chief Crazy Horse, Chief Seattle, and Chief Red Cloud are a few of the visionary leaders who committed their lives to bring peace, and internal happiness to all who they touched. They were tangible signs of goodwill toward all men, women, and children

Time to go German immigrant!
06/03/2026

Time to go German immigrant!

This is Peanut. 🐢🥜 Her figure-eight shell was the result of crawling into a plastic six-pack ring when she was very youn...
06/02/2026

This is Peanut. 🐢🥜 Her figure-eight shell was the result of crawling into a plastic six-pack ring when she was very young. That was in 1984.
The Missouri Dept. of Conservation says "her one-of-a-kind shape became her superpower" and that "her mighty message continues to remind people to put litter in its place."
Now, Peanut is turning 41 years old, and a big birthday celebration is planned for Saturday.

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