Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Osage Indians and other tribes traveled among a variety of routes later named "Osage Trails" by European settlers; the famous Route 66 through southern Missouri Ozarks follows the route of one such "Osage Trail" and U.S. Route 24 through central Missouri follows the route (from Franklin, Missouri westward) of the "Great Osage Trail", which ...
Anita Fields (born 1951) is an Osage/Muscogee Native American ceramic and textile artist based in Oklahoma.She is an enrolled citizen of the Osage Nation.. Fields is recognized internationally for her work in ceramics, often rendering functional items such as purses, moccasins, and dresses in clay. [1]
Mel Cornshucker, Keetoowah Band Cherokee, (born 1952); Anita Fields, Osage/Muscogee, (born 1950); Bill Glass Jr., Cherokee Nation Anna Mitchell, Cherokee Nation (1926–2012), revived the art of Cherokee pottery for the Western Cherokee
News. Science & Tech
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Grand Pass was named from the Great Osage Trail that passed through the town. [4]In 1943, German and Italian prisoners of World War II were brought to Missouri and other Midwest states as a means of solving the labor shortage caused by American men serving in the war effort.
Gina Gray (Osage name: Pa-Pe Son-tse): [1] (1954 – 20 December 2014) was an Osage artist born in Pawhuska, Oklahoma, [2] to Andrew and Margaret Gray. [3] She was the great-granddaughter of Henry Roan Horse. [4]
On August 22, 1908, Gilcrease married Belle M. Harlow, a member of the Osage Nation. [2] He fathered two sons with Belle: William Thomas Gilcrease, Jr., who was born on July 23, 1909, in Oklahoma and died on March 16, 1967, in Nacogdoches, Nacogdoches County, Texas, and Barton Eugene Gilcrease, who was born on April 12, 1911, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and died on September 25, 1991, in San Antonio ...