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- Crow People, Wyoming Territory, 1882 - The Apsaalooke (Crow) occupied the game rich lands in the Yellowstone River basin of Wyoming and Montana. By the second half of the 1800s, encroachment by other Native American tribes and the influx of white settlers constricted the size of their traditional hunting grounds. Treaties signed with the U.S. government in 1868 and 1882 ultimately confined the Apsaalooke to a reservation in south central Montana.

- 1882
- Collections - Artifact
Crow People, Wyoming Territory, 1882
The Apsaalooke (Crow) occupied the game rich lands in the Yellowstone River basin of Wyoming and Montana. By the second half of the 1800s, encroachment by other Native American tribes and the influx of white settlers constricted the size of their traditional hunting grounds. Treaties signed with the U.S. government in 1868 and 1882 ultimately confined the Apsaalooke to a reservation in south central Montana.
- Ledger Drawing, 2022 -

- 2022
- Collections - Artifact
Ledger Drawing, 2022
- "Portrait of an Indigenous Womxn [Removed]" by Anna Tsouhlarakis, 2023 - In 2019, eighteen-year-old Kaysera Stops Pretty Places, from the Crow and Northern Cheyenne Reservations, went missing and was later found murdered in Hardin, Montana. Her story is part of the epidemic of violence against Indigenous women, where four in five will experience violence in their lifetime, and murder is the third leading cause of death. This sculpture brings greater awareness to these issues.
!["Portrait of an Indigenous Womxn [Removed]" by Anna Tsouhlarakis, 2023](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcollections-media.thehenryford.org%2FCollectionImages%2F_detail%2Fphotos%2Fthf198387.jpg&w=3840&q=75)
- 2023
- Collections - Artifact
"Portrait of an Indigenous Womxn [Removed]" by Anna Tsouhlarakis, 2023
In 2019, eighteen-year-old Kaysera Stops Pretty Places, from the Crow and Northern Cheyenne Reservations, went missing and was later found murdered in Hardin, Montana. Her story is part of the epidemic of violence against Indigenous women, where four in five will experience violence in their lifetime, and murder is the third leading cause of death. This sculpture brings greater awareness to these issues.