559 of 289 lots
559
[INDIAN WARS]. 3 cabinet cards of Ute Chiefs involved with the Battle of Milk Creek, incl. Chiefs Canavish (Johnson), Quinkent (Douglass), and Colorow. Denver, CO: W.G. Chamberlain, ca 1870s.
Estimate: $1,500-$2,500
Sold
$1,300
Live Auction
American Historical Ephemera and Early Photography
Description

[INDIAN WARS]. 3 cabinet cards of Ute Chiefs involved with the Battle of Milk Creek, incl. Chiefs Canavish (Johnson), Quinkent (Douglass), and Colorow. Denver, CO: W.G. Chamberlain, ca 1870s.



[INDIAN WARS]. 3 cabinet cards of Ute Chiefs involved with the Battle of Milk Creek, incl. Chiefs Canavish (Johnson), Quinkent (Douglass), and Colorow. Denver, CO: W.G. Chamberlain, ca 1870s.

3 cabinet card portraits, each with W. G. Chamberlain's pictorial imprint on verso, printed subject identification on recto, and multiple ink stamps for John P. Lower, Denver, Colorado. Lower was a white gunsmith and dealer who developed a close relationship with many Utes in Denver.

Includes: Portrait of 3 "Ute Braves," including Medicine Man and Chief Canavish (also identified as "Johnson") standing in the back, holding a pistol and a pair of human scalps on a staff to his side. -- Standing portrait of Chiefs Quinkent (also identified as "Douglass") and Canavish, each holding a handgun. -- Seated portrait of an aged Chief Colorow, wearing a blanket over his shoulders. -- Together, 3 cabinet cards.

The Battle of Milk Creek and the "Meeker Massacre" occurred on 29 September 1879, both eruptions of tensions in the Ute Indian territory of the White River Valley in northwest Colorado. The so-called massacre was aimed largely at Indian Agent Nathan C. Meeker, upon whose appointment the Bureau of Indian Affairs had adopted a new policy providing that Ute men must participate in agriculture or have food withheld from them. This policy and other threats made by Meeker fueled resentment among the Ute men, culminating in the events of 29 September that ended in the death of Meeker and 11 of his employees, and the capture of women and children at the agency. That same day, Major Thomas Thornburgh, who had been sent to White River from Fort Steele in response to heightened Ute hostility, engaged with Utes just after crossing Milk Creek into the reservation. Thornburgh, along with thirteen of his men, were killed in the battle. 

Chiefs Canavish, Quinkent, and Colorow were involved the that played out on 29 September, damaging the relationship between the White River Utes and the US government, leading to their ultimate removal from Colorado to reservation lands in Utah.

Chief Canavish was at the White River Indian Agency during the Battle of Milk Creek and the Meeker incident. He would testify after the fact that he traveled south as soon as the first shots were fired.

Chief Quinkent was the head chief at the White River Indian Agency at the time of both the Battle of Milk Creek and the Meeker incident.

Northern Ute Chief Colorow led the Utes in the Battle of Milk Creek. Thereafter, he and his band continued their nomadic lifestyle in northwest Colorado until they were pushed back into Utah by the US government in the late 1880s.

Condition
Each card retaining mostly rich tonality, but with varying degrees of wear, especially to mounts including pinholes, discoloration, and surface rubbing. Portrait of Quinkent and Canavish with area of discoloration/staining to lower portion.