The Man Who Documented Native American Cultures

Born on a Wisconsin farm in 1868, Edward Sheriff Curtis became fascinated with photography early on, building his own camera at the age 10. As a teenager his family relocated to Seattle, where he photographed Princess Angeline (aka Kickisomlo), the daughter of the Duwamish chief Seattle, after whom the city is named. Curtis recognized his life’s calling as a documentarian of Native American cultures and quickly joined expeditions to Montana and Alaska to do just that.


In 1906, Curtis was approached by the financier J.P. Morgan about funding a project on the indigenous people of the continent. They planned a 20-volume series called The North American Indian, from which the images below are culled. He received no salary for the project, which lasted more than 20 years, during which he created an estimated 40,000 images of over 100 tribes. A photographer turned ethnologist, he also made thousands of recordings of native language and music, and transcribed oral histories.

Though Curtis often romanticized his subjects, at times photographing them in ceremonial attire not regularly worn and wigs to conceal contemporary hair styles, he was an outspoken opponent of the devastating use of relocation and reservations. His photographs remain one of the only historical documents that offer insight into the lives of a people nearly driven to extinction.

Apsaroke, 1908

Sioux, 1907

Apache, 1910

Tewa, 1906

Apsaroke, 1908

Cheyenne, circa 1900

Siksika, circa 1910

Arikara, 1907

Wishham, 1911

Jicarilla, 1904

Hopi, circa 1900

Apache, 1905

Hopi, 1922

Koskimo, 1914

Apsaroke, 1908

Zuni, 1926

Nakoaktok, 1914

Qagyuhl, 1914

Qahatika, 1907

Hesquiat, 1916

Nez Perce, 1899

Tewa, 1922

Navajo, 1904

Kwakwaka’wakw, circa 1905

Apsáalooke, 1908

Apsaroke, 1908

Qagyuhl, 1914

Nakoaktok, 1914

Kwakiutl, 1914

Nunivak, 1928

Qagyuhl, 1914

Kwakiutl, 1914

Navajo, 1904

Papago, 1907

Piegan, 1900

Piegan, 1900

Kalispel, circa 1905

Kwakiutl, 1914

Piegan, circa 1900

Wishram, 1911

Nez Perce, 1911

Comments

  1. Merci pour ces documents relatifs aux Indiens d’Amerique. J’ai eu l’occasion d’en voir lors de mes voyages aux USA, en Arizona, état de Washington,

  2. In the last few years I have become absolutely 💯 infatuated with the perfect beauty of some of these lndian ladies. I was engaged to a young Goddess for 3 years who i still love with ALL THAT I AM. If I can’t reunite i hope to find another one

  3. I ALLOW MYSELF TO WONDER IF THE TRIBES FOUGHT EACH OTHER FOR POWER OR GOODS. I HAVE ALWAYS THOUGHT OF THE EUROPEANS BEING THE TRULY ‘BAD GUYS’ WHO CAME AND TOOK OVER A GOOD PEOPLE. MUCH TO UNDERSTAND. HOWEVER, THE WHITE MAN DID STEAL AND TAKE THE COUNTRY WITH A PROMISE OF SOME ‘PAYMENT/ WHICH I HAVE BEEN TOLD IS NOW LESS THAN 2% OF WHAT WAS PROMISED. I HELP WHERE I CAN.

  4. I just found these wonderful pictures of our ancestors. What a amazing tribute to the people of the land before the invasion!!

  5. Very interesting be ery nice collection. A lot of work and hours put in this collection

  6. What an amazing gift. How sad that we often think
    we have the right way when others have truth and
    we don’t recognize it. Remembering the wisdom
    …When the earth, sea, and sky are polluted, then
    they will discover that they can’t eat money.

  7. May 7, 1945, World War II ended. I was born July 29, 1937, so I was just 8 years old. I marveled how very fortunate I was to have good parents & not be persecuted like the Jews were in Germany. I prayed to thank God and asked Him what I could do to repay at least some of what He had done for me. It was a quick answer, “Help the American Indian.” ( I now say, “Native American,” but I may have not known what that would’ve meant back then.) I had never thought of that before and collected pictures of Native Americans and read a lot about them. Soon, I forgot about it, graduated from high school, went on to college but I had to go into the military for eight years. Ironically, I got stationed at an isolated radar site in Alaska and on weekends taught Sunday school to some Native American Indian children, they were called, “Alute”, (spelling?) anyway, I loved them. Another story too long for here. When I got out of the Air Force, I went directly to the campus of New Mexico Highlands University and it was there that I married my wife, Alicia Guadalupe Anaya. She told me she was a direct descendent of Geronimo. I have two children from her and two grandchildren. I had a head injury (TBI) & what is now called Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. (PTSD) resulting from the 1964 Alaska earthquake. That’s another long story.Four years ago a wonderful neurologist repaired my brain damage and a wonderful counselor help to me deal with a lot of bad memories. Now I am much better. I’m like Rip van Winkle.(spelling?) I feel like I’m waking up every day thinking better than before and now I realize I promised God I’d help the American Indians and He didn’t forget. My life has been influenced greatly by the Native Americans and now I seek to see what God wants me to do next. 💕✝️

  8. Hi Or should I say “HOW” 🙂☺ !

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    As a American Indian 97.7 Chippewa and Lakota, Sioux Indian I heard from my father’ father my grandfather The native stories The American Indian was fighting against Other tribes… Fighting against Geronimo ,Crazy Horse, And then the white man custard and The Spanish man Pancho Via …. The trail of tears.. Was the venomous trail … Is the old goodnight walk through the snow from Minnesota all the way to Mexico… They died on the way …. I am still fighting for this land because I’m the one that was never given anything for the American Indian who “buried the hatchet” and took the white man’s way of life ….. …… What was the Native American indian given …. As a government contractor I can’t even get the contract to clean up the Snake River going into puget sound that is killing our salmon whales….. ….

    Warrior 353 Dam designs ….
    Get this out to our congressional leaders if we don’t clean up the water now and have a new hydro electric titanium generators / Reverse osmosis cleaning the water Before goes back into the Snake River…. / My dam also have solar panels…. …. Congress that Congress would not allow American Indian to fight for his own land , For salmon whales are dying from a parasite and polluted water eventually were gonna be dying eating our salmon and …. ….
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    Get this Message out to our new President Joe Biden 👏 ASAP !

  9. Breathtakingly beautiful, these masterpieces move me from tears to joy. They are nothing less than a treasure. Thank you for sharing.

  10. This absolutely beautiful and breathtaking I 💜 the native culture it us truly phenomenal Thank you for sharing the absolutely gorgeous pictures it capativates the Native culture.

  11. Wow I Can See My Family’s Faces In Alot Pics! Thank You Very Much For Sharing Thiese Pics How Can I Get A Copy Of The Original Please

  12. Loved seeing these wonderful photographs. I had no idea there were so many different tribes.
    I agree with the idea that they should have a National Holiday in their own name.
    Wish we knew more about them

  13. So much wisdom, strength, resilience and culture lost because we chose not to respect and live in peace with the other or the earth. When we ever learn? These pictures are a beautiful reminder of the true history of North America and its earliest settlers.

  14. I have seen a number of Curtis photos living in WY and now Montana;
    In researching some Plein-aire painters i stumbled into a fine exhibit of a Curtis contemporary but i forgot the Photographers name, However it mirrored this cultural composition in every way…curated by the great great great granddaughter whose ancestors were the photos. The curators presentation came with a similar thread of knowing that there was a contingent that didn’t care for this photographer for stealing their spirit with his camera!
    Be that as it may, the curator did a splendid job and her written piece on the show is break out the kleenex fershere
    So when is saw this link i gravitated right away… Such gentile if not fragile Mr Curtis works.
    He had to deal with what is a GOOD Piece of Photographic production…and the 1st rule is Composition and that separates the pro from the ho hum shoot from the hip snap shots…NO Sir, He ARRANGED his compositions, carefully ~ each delicate face and body angles ~ there is nothing slam bam about Mr. Curtis’s work.
    Essentially the sum of the parts is greater than the whole. These works are saturated with TLC and Talent.

  15. POIGNANT Photographs!

    Edward Curtis…Has Literally
    Gifted Us With Visionary Documentation…An Historic
    Journey Through The Archives
    Of The Many Diverse Tribes
    That Inhabited This Entire
    Continent…
    Can You IMAGINE What Our
    Society Would Look Like
    Without These Magnificent
    Photographs That Have Given
    Us…A Glance Into The Lives
    Of These Incredible People…
    Who Lived In Harmony With
    Mother Nature…
    Thank GOD That Edward Curtis
    Devoted His Life ….:
    To The CREATIVE Pursuit
    Of These Poignant Pictures!

  16. A wonderful record of what was. Now let’s take care of what we have. There are human tribes and animal species that could do with our support.I always loved American Indian tribes. This is a celebration!

  17. Curtis was an amazing ethnographer and photographer . He genuinely loved the aboriginal people’s of America. His work was lost for many years and once recovered gave the world an incredible gift.

  18. Beautiful images. As one commenter noted, the artistry of the work is beyond compare. One observation, if I may be permitted, from the perspective of a descendent of the Uncompahgre Ute Tribe. Can we please just appreciate this collection for what it is, and not use it as a reason to hate on White North Americans? The indigenous peoples of North America were as vast and as varied in genetics and culture as are the current inhabitants of the continent. There never was, and never could be, any single “Indian nation” or culture. Tribes made war against each other, often committing genocide and practicing torture and the taking and keeping of slaves for millennia before Europeans ever found their way across the oceans. Please, people. Let us stop with the guilt, the accusations, and the divisiveness. Let us all endeavor to see ourselves as members of the human race. Only then can we find peace, and begin to heal ourselves.

  19. Wonderful. I gave a “Book” of Curtis’s
    photos to a lovely lady in Lincoln neb.
    She part charakee sorry it’s misspelled.

  20. Beauty preserved. Very educational , had no idea there are so many tribes. Thank you for your land. They need a national holiday just for themselves.

  21. Incredibly BEAUTUFUL peoples!! Love the photos depth…. Loved seeing some with sasquatch attire!! I am a believer…i believe these shoukd be in our historical teachings in every school. Just sad that so many are no more. Im so thankful to have seen these .

  22. It’s not just the fantastic historical and anthropological value. This is photography of the highest level, a sustained work of art with powerful composition and depth of field, lighting, and framing. This is a photographer in perfect control of his craft, producing work that would be immortally beautiful even if we knew nothing of the context

  23. THIS IS BEAUTIFUL WORK OF ART I REALLY ENJOYED READING AN LOOKIN AT THE PICTURES GREAT WORK .

  24. Ámultam ennyi büszke-szép arcú ember láttán , egy tiszteletlenül leigázott nép utolsó sarjai… Én kislányként az Irokézek fia című gyerekregényen szocializálódtam, azóta is érdeklődéssel figyelem sorsukat. Bízom benne,hogy sokakban kelt részvétet, tiszteletet az esztétikai élményen túl ez a fotósorozat.

  25. I feel so much gratitude for these photos as well as deep grief for the near extinction of these beautiful peoples and great shame that we Euro-Americans have perpetrated these unspeakable crimes. We have robbed them of life, dignity and freedom and we have deprived ourselves and the world of so much of their wisdom and the beauties of their life ways.

  26. Beautiful thank you for sharing as a Native myself Nez Perce Nimiipuu in our language

  27. A delightful and informative historical record. We much to learn from these tribes. A group that values the wisdom of and cares about their elders.

  28. Mesmerizing, magnificent and poignant images…
    as an Anglo Saxon I am just coming to learn so much about these peoples lumped together as ‘native Americans’, and most often referenced in the ‘past tense’…
    I am learning that the ‘Indian wars’ are still being fought, and big time! It is a viscous war of attrition…

  29. I was interested in the lack of facial hair on the men. The one man with a mustache stood out.These photos show tribes I have never heard of as well as Navajo and some I have. Wonderful images!

  30. Did any Indians have facialrow hair, grown out? Didn’t see any Iroquis. Lovely photos.

  31. An Amazing Collection…never seen anything like it before…he really new what he was doing with his camera…EXQUISITE Images…..

  32. Gr8 have much a look like Asian people, even the hair cutting style of a Hopi Mady reminds to anient Noble Lady from Tibeg

  33. I really would like to know more about the Sioux woman. I look just like her. My grandfather was given up for adoption I’m Montana or one of the dakotas. I’m very curious if anyone has information on her.

  34. This is just wonderful I’m Chippewa European and I’m proud of my heritage and I’ve always been thank you for this wonderful siteLFA

  35. My soul is singing and crying in gratitude and grief. My tribe is from the Pacific Northwest. Thank-you Susie for thinking of me and sharing them with me. My grandmother’s name was Suzan.

  36. Extremely interesting. Thank you for shareing these photos and historical comments.

  37. The detail captured in each and every photograph was remarkable. I perused them for a long while and every time I returned to a photograph I found something I had missed. Such a treasury of keepsake memorabilia.

  38. TRULLY AMAZING ! FOR THE VERY FIRST TIME I SAW PICTURES FROM THE Kwakiutl TRIBE THAT I WAS STUDYING FOR 3 OUT OF MY 4 YEARS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF SOCIAL AND ANTHROPOLOGICAL STUDIES…

  39. The best collection of Native American photos that I have seen to date. I need days to study all that is captured by this artist.

  40. Oh, the beautiful faces, amazing. What a magnificent body of work he’s left us. Would love to sit in a quiet library and take in every page. Thank you, thank you.

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