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Browse: Fort Reno Ledger Drawings, 1879 and 1887

In the collection of the Thomas Gilcrease Institute of American History and Art are two ledger books of drawings produced by Southern Cheyenne and Arapaho warriors who were employed as U.S. Army Scouts at Fort Reno, Indian Territory. One of the books was produced in 1879—before the formal organization of the Indian Scout unit—and the second in 1887. The books’ drawings document a crucial period in the complex history of Southern Cheyenne and Arapaho people as they transitioned from the freedom of living as Great Plains buffalo hunters to the confinement and unfamiliar surroundings of the reservation. In the books, the men recount their war records through drawings of encounters with Pawnee, Crow, Shoshone and other enemies and scenes of domestic life and courtship, and new experiences engendered by their military service.[1]

There are few records in the Gilcrease Museum Archives concerning the provenance of the two ledger books and how they came into Thomas Gilcrease’s collection. An inscription in the 1879 book states that the book was created with an “intent to illustrate the Cheyenne method of recording history.” It is signed by H.M. Creel, 7th U.S. Cavalry/detached/service with Cheyenne Indians, Fort Reno, Indian Territory in September-October, 1879. While leading the Cheyenne Scouts in 1879, he worked to develop a Cheyenne dictionary and grammar. In the book are 118 drawings (measuring 12 ½ by 7 ½ inches) drawn in ink and colored pencil and varying greatly in level of completion and details. None of the artist’s names are written in the book, and, like other Plains ledger books, the ledger book represents a communal production with several men recording their and other experiences.[2] 

Consisting of 139 drawings (with dimensions of 12 ½ by 7 ½ inches) in ink, graphite and colored pencil, and watercolors, the subjects of the 1887 ledger book re primarily warfare and courtship. The drawings are more detailed and finely executed than those of the 1879 book, and the war images include exciting details of actions against Pawnee, Crow, Shoshone, and other enemies identified by their clothing, regalia, and hair styles. The Cheyenne or Arapaho warriors are identified by their shield designs, clothing, accouterments, weapons, and regalia. Some of the drawings show Crow enemies wearing capotes—long hooded coats made from woolen blankets—indicating that the fight took place in cold weather.[3] 

With the inclusion of individual names, the 1887 ledger book presents tremendous potential for research… In 1891, Standing Bull and Red Wolf, whose names appear on the drawings, were part of a Cheyenne and Arapaho delegation who visited Wovoka to learn more about the Ghost Dance. Washee—also named in the book—traveled with an Arapaho delegation to visit Wovoka and investigate the Ghost Dance in 1889 and 1892.[4] 

Other names, both artist and subjects, inscribed on the drawings in the 1887 book include Red Wolf, Bird Chief, Big Horn, Tall Red Bird, Yellow Eyes, Heap of Birds, and Elk Woman among others. Additional research potentially could expand the interpretation of the drawings through determining tribal identities and as much as can be learned about the lives of these Cheyenne and Arapaho men and women. Resources for this research include ethnographies, census and muster rolls, allotment records, agency and tribal files, oral histories, and family remembrances. The vibrant and detailed drawings in both the 1879 and 1887 Fort Reno ledger books stand alone as exquisite examples of late nineteenth century Plain Indian artistry. As testaments of conflict, struggle, cultural changes, and personal experiences, the drawings also provide significant insights for later generations about Cheyenne and Arapaho people at a crucial time in their histories—the end of the buffalo-hunting era and the transition to settle reservation life.[5]

Excerpt from Chapter: Hansen, Emma I. "Preserving History in the Southern Plains: Cheyenne and Arapaho Ledger Drawings from Fort Reno," in Plains Indian Art. Tulsa: Helmerich Center for American Research at Gilcrease Museum, 2017.

See all of the Fort Reno Ledger Drawings.

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[1] Emma I. Hansen, “Preserving History in the Southern Plains: Cheyenne and Arapaho Ledger Drawings From Fort Reno,” (Tulsa: Helmerich Center for American Research at Gilcrease Museum, 2017): 33.

[2] Emma I. Hansen, “Preserving History in the Southern Plains: Cheyenne and Arapaho Ledger Drawings From Fort Reno,” (Tulsa: Helmerich Center for American Research at Gilcrease Museum, 2017): 45.

[3] Emma I. Hansen, “Preserving History in the Southern Plains: Cheyenne and Arapaho Ledger Drawings From Fort Reno,” (Tulsa: Helmerich Center for American Research at Gilcrease Museum, 2017): 49.

[4] Emma I. Hansen, “Preserving History in the Southern Plains: Cheyenne and Arapaho Ledger Drawings From Fort Reno,” (Tulsa: Helmerich Center for American Research at Gilcrease Museum, 2017): 50.

[5] Emma I. Hansen, “Preserving History in the Southern Plains: Cheyenne and Arapaho Ledger Drawings From Fort Reno,” (Tulsa: Helmerich Center for American Research at Gilcrease Museum, 2017): 53.

Fort Reno Ledger Drawing

Three identically dressed women in print dresses and red blankets sit with Howling Water as one of the women takes off his bandolier. His hat, quirt, belt, and knife sheath are on the ground. His beautiful spotted horse is tied to a tree in the background. From the article: Preserving History in the Southern Plains: Cheyenne and Arapaho Ledger Drawings from Fort Reno, Plains Indian Art, Created in Community. Emma I. Hansen, Curator Emerita and Senior Scholar for the Buffalo Bill Center of the West, 2016.

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The Fan and the Parasol

This ledger drawing was created by warrior and artist Red Wolf (Arapaho, Cheyenne) in 1887. Although this ink and graphite work follows the Plains figurative painting techniques of the Cheyenne and Arapaho Nations, the art in the Fort Reno ledger book remains distinct as one of the earliest examples of figurative painting using Western media by artists from the two nations. Here, Red Wolf has created an autobiographical narrative scene from memory of a couple engaged in formal courtship, with himself on the right and a young woman wrapped in a Ghost Dance blanket on the left. Their clothing reflects the height of late nineteenth-century Indigenous fashion. Red Wolf’s beaded top hat (adorned with a red feather) and the woman’s red parasol with blue beaded tassels highlight the intersections between Indigenous fashion, trade textiles, and select elements of Western garb. Red Wolf wears a cotton cloth shirt, a black waistcoat, black wool leggings, and a red wool breechcloth. His horse has been decorated with starlike paintwork, and its yellow saddle is lined with red and blue wool. A red knife and sheath ornamented with feathers is affixed to the saddle.  

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Fort Reno Ledger Drawing

This drawing summarizes a variety of actions in a few symbols. The warrior in an eagle feather bonnet and trailer is shown from the back as he uses a tomahawk to count coup on an opponent. Three shots have been fired from behind a bluff. The Cheyenne's horse with his tail tied and decorated for battle and an eagle feather and bandana hanging from its chin, stands by as he has been trained to do. From the article: Preserving History in the Southern Plains: Cheyenne and Arapaho Ledger Drawings from Fort Reno, Plains Indian Art, Created in Community. Emma I. Hansen, Curator Emerita and Senior Scholar for the Buffalo Bill Center of the West, 2016.

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Fort Reno Ledger Drawing

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Fort Reno Ledger Drawing

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Fort Reno Ledger Drawing

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Fort Reno Ledger Drawing

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Fort Reno Ledger Drawing

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Fort Reno Ledger Drawing

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Fort Reno Ledger Drawing

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Fort Reno Ledger Drawing

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Fort Reno Ledger Drawing

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Fort Reno Ledger Drawing

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Fort Reno Ledger Drawing

Three identically dressed women in print dresses and red blankets sit with Howling Water as one of the women takes off his bandolier. His hat, quirt, belt, and knife sheath are on the ground. His beautiful spotted horse is tied to a tree in the background. From the article: Preserving History in the Southern Plains: Cheyenne and Arapaho Ledger Drawings from Fort Reno, Plains Indian Art, Created in Community. Emma I. Hansen, Curator Emerita and Senior Scholar for the Buffalo Bill Center of the West, 2016.

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Fort Reno Ledger Drawing

In a running battle on horseback, a Cheyenne, wearing a vest, calico shirt, painted and beaded leggings, German silver hair plates, and a peace medal (or similar medallion), attempts to count coup on a Pawnee warrior painted entirely in blue and wearing only a breechcloth and moccasins. As he aims his bow and arrow, the Pawnee's previous four arrows have passed by the Cheyenne. From the article: Preserving History in the Southern Plains: Cheyenne and Arapaho Ledger Drawings from Fort Reno, Plains Indian Art, Created in Community. Emma I. Hansen, Curator Emerita and Senior Scholar for the Buffalo Bill Center of the West, 2016.

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Fort Reno Ledger Drawing

Two men on horseback greet two other men wrapped in red and blue blankets, one with a beaded blanket strip, and wearing similar red quillwork hair ornaments. Ledger drawings usually show horses in profile, but in this case a horse – with split ears indicating his value in hunting buffalo and warfare – is facing forward. Umbrellas, such as the two carried by the men, are commonly featured in Southern Plains reservation-era ledger drawings. From the article: Preserving History in the Southern Plains: Cheyenne and Arapaho Ledger Drawings from Fort Reno, Plains Indian Art, Created in Community. Emma I. Hansen, Curator Emerita and Senior Scholar for the Buffalo Bill Center of the West, 2016.

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Fort Reno Ledger Drawing

In one of two courting scenes in the 1879 book, a man on horseback greets a woman dressed in a cotton dress, concho belt with drop, and shawl around her waist, while a second man looks on. Both men carry umbrellas and have their bow cases and quivers by their sides. The horse on the left is distinguished by split ears. From the article: Preserving History in the Southern Plains: Cheyenne and Arapaho Ledger Drawings from Fort Reno, Plains Indian Art, Created in Community. Emma I. Hansen, Curator Emerita and Senior Scholar for the Buffalo Bill Center of the West, 2016.

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Fort Reno Ledger Drawing

In this drawing from the 1879 ledger book, a Cheyenne warrior counts coup on a fallen adversary as he attempts to shoot his arrow. The artist drew the enemy with few details while his own self-portrait includes identifying features – the black shirt and hat with a silver pin, German silver pendant, bandana with a silver slide, silver arm bands and hair plates, and a shield with images of the sun and full and crescent moons. From the article: Preserving History in the Southern Plains: Cheyenne and Arapaho Ledger Drawings from Fort Reno, Plains Indian Art, Created in Community. Emma I. Hansen, Curator Emerita and Senior Scholar for the Buffalo Bill Center of the West, 2016.

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Fort Reno Ledger Drawing

Dressed in a soldier's uniform and wearing a hair pipe breast plate and distinctive kit fox skin that symbolizes his position, a leader of the Kit Fox warrior society, struggles for a knife in hand-to-hand combat with a Nez Perce. The Nez Perce wears a short capote and blue pants with garters. This drawing likely shows the same event illustrated by an unknown artist in the Little Wolf Band Ledger (Powell, 1975, pp. 46-47). From the article: Preserving History in the Southern Plains: Cheyenne and Arapaho Ledger Drawings from Fort Reno, Plains Indian Art, Created in Community. Emma I. Hansen, Curator Emerita and Senior Scholar for the Buffalo Bill Center of the West, 2016.

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