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ANTIQUE INDIAN CHIEF TWO MOONS CHEYENNE BATTLED GEN CUSTER AMERICAN OIL PAINTING

$ 1478.39

Availability: 62 in stock
  • Condition: Brilliant colors with grime and glazing evidence as pictured.
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted

    Description

    An antique oil on board painting measuring approximately 16 x 20 inches in a larger frame.  Artist may have painted this on a trip out to the western plains.  Last origin was the Chicagoland area.  Thanks for looking.
    American master Joseph Henry Sharp (1859-1953) also painted Chief Two Moons and many Plains Indians.
    Two Moons (1847–1917), or Ishaynishus (Cheyenne: Éše'he Ôhnéšesêstse), was one of the Cheyenne chiefs who took part in the Battle of the Little Bighorn and other battles against the United States Army.
    Two Moons was the son of Carries the Otter, an Arikara captive who married into the Cheyenne tribe. Perhaps known best for his participation in battles such as the Battle of the Rosebud against General Crook on June 17, 1876, in the Montana Territory, the Battle of Little Big Horn on June 26, 1876 and what would prove to be his last battle which was that of the Battle of Wolf Mountain on January 8, 1877. Two Moons defeat in the battle at Wolf mountain by General Nelson A. Miles would inevitably lead to the surrender of his Cheyenne band at Fort Keogh in April, 1877.
    After the surrender of the Cheyenne band he led in 1877, Two Moons chose to enlist as an Indian Scout for the same General, Nelson A. Miles to whom he had not long since surrendered. As a result of Two Moons' pleasant personality, the friendliness that he showed towards the whites as well as his ability to get along with the military, General Miles appointed him head Chief of the Cheyenne Northern Reservation. As head Chief, Two Moons would prove to play a crucial role in facilitating the surrender of Chief Little Cow's
    Two Moons traveled on multiple occasions to Washington, D.C., to discuss and fight for the future of the Northern Cheyenne people and to better the conditions that existed on the reservation. In 1914, Two Moons met with President Woodrow Wilson to discuss these matters.  Two Moons was one of the models selected for James Fraser's famous Buffalo Nickel.  Source:wiki
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