Peter Foss

Peter Foss

Embracing the beautiful chaos of life, one adventure at a time!🤘

20/12/2023

Great Photography 💯

17/12/2023

If you support Native American people's, history & culture 🥰Say.. "Yes

15/12/2023

I need a big legends YEs ❤️ from a true fan❤️❤️❤️

14/12/2023

Happy native family 😍❤️

08/12/2023

I need a big YEs ❤️ from a true fan

07/12/2023

Seneca woman Ah-Weh-Eyu (Pretty Flower), 1908.
The Seneca are a group of Indigenous Iroquoian-speaking people who historically lived south of Lake Ontario, one of the five Great Lakes in North America. Their nation was the farthest to the west within the Six Nations or Iroquois League (Haudenosaunee) in New York before the American Revolution.
A Seneca oral tradition states that the tribe originated in a village called Nundawao, near the south end of Canandaigua Lake, at South Hill. Close to South Hill stands the 865 foot (264 m)-high Bare Hill, known to the Seneca as Genundowa. Bare Hill is part of the Bare Hill Unique Area, which began to be acquired by the state in 1989. Bare Hill had been the site of a Seneca (or Seneca-ancestral people) fort.

05/12/2023

If You truly love native American Mom can I get a big YESS❤️ !!!!!

30/11/2023

Natives american girls ❤️

29/11/2023

TODAY IS MY BIRTHDAY DON'T EVEN GET A WISH 🎉🥰💖

27/11/2023

If You're a huge fan of Native Culture can I get a big YESS !!!!!💖💖💖

26/11/2023

I feel like our lovely ❤️fans are no longer active can I get a Hi if you are active.respect ❤️

25/11/2023

If You're true fan of Native American can i get a big yea ❤️🥰😍💯🥰

20/11/2023

A big YES❤️

17/11/2023

Respect &support ❤️

09/11/2023

The Ho-Chunk are unique among American Indians of the Northeast culture area. The tribe traditionally spoke a language of the Siouan language family. Although many Siouan-speaking tribes once lived in the Northeast, most of them moved west in the 1500s and 1600s and are usually considered to be part of the Plains culture area. Only the Ho-Chunk continued to live in the Northeast in large numbers. Their name means “people of the first voice.” Neighboring peoples gave them the name Ouinepegi, which government agents heard as Winnebago. This was the official name until 1993, when the Ho-Chunk took back their original name.
The Ho-Chunk traditionally lived in villages of dome-shaped wickiups (or wigwams). These dwellings consisted of a wood frame covered with sheets of bark or mats woven from plant materials. The Ho-Chunk took advantage of a variety of food resources. They raised crops of corn (maize), squash, and beans. They hunted bears, elk, deer, and other animals in the forests and took part in communal bison (buffalo) hunts on the prairies to the southwest. The Ho-Chunk were also fishers, and they harvested wild rice, nuts, berries, and other wild plant foods.
The Ho-Chunk lived near Green Bay, in what is now eastern Wisconsin, when the French explorer Jean Nicolet encountered them in 1634. Over the next several decades the tribe was devastated by diseases brought by the French—especially smallpox—and by war with neighboring tribes. During the mid-1600s the Ho-Chunk began moving west. By the early 1800s they claimed most of what are now southwestern Wisconsin and the northwestern corner of Illinois.
Pressured by the U.S. government, the Ho-Chunk gave up their Wisconsin land in a series of treaties signed in the 1820s and ’30s. Some Ho-Chunk fought with the Sauk and Fox (Meskwaki) tribes against white settlers in the Black Hawk War of 1832 (see Black Hawk). After the Indians were defeated, most of the Ho-Chunk were moved by the U.S. government, first to Iowa, then to Minnesota, and later to South Dakota.
World War I: Ho-Chunk soldier
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc...

08/11/2023

This is so beautiful. If you support native american people's, history & culture 🥰Say.. "Yes

06/11/2023

If you support native american people's, history & culture 🥰Say.. "Yes

03/11/2023

Beautiful family ❤️💋❤️

26/10/2023

Dahteste was a famous Apache woman warrior, and it was widely known that she could out-ride, out-shoot, out-hunt, out-run, and out-fight her peers, both male and female. She took part in battles and raiding parties alongside her husband and best friend Lozen, another Apache woman warrior. She and Lozen were good friends with Geronimo, and he chose her to be his official translator in his talks with the US Cavalry. After negotiating treaties with the US government, she was imprisoned in Alabama and Florida, and later, Fort Sill, surviving both tuberculosis and pneumonia. 19 years later, she was released and lived out the rest of her life on the Mescalero Apache reservation.

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