John Hillers, an early American photographer, took this remarkable photograph known as the “Indian Boy and His Dog,” in 1874. The youth in the tea-colored photograph belonged to the Uintah, one of 12 bands of the Ute tribe, and lived in Utah's Unita (no “h” at the end) Valley (Simmons, 2000). “Uintah Utes” refers to western Ute bands who were relocated after 1863, by the federal government, from central Utah to the Uintah Reservation (Jones, 2019). This band lived in the Unita Basin to the area around the Green River and the Tavaputs Plateau (Cuch, 2000).
This young man is in his late teens, perhaps 17. This is the age when Chief Ouray joined his father’s warriors (C. Kaelin, personal communication, August 28, 2022). Warriors were highly respected because they offered their lives to protect their people. This teen spent much of his time hunting, fishing, and making weapons to hunt with and for protection (Pettit, 1990). Although his name is not recorded, he too may have joined a warrior band.
The young Ute is not wearing his everyday outfit. He
is undoubtedly attired for the photographer, who asked him to don all his
regalia. The teenage Ute is wearing his hair in traditional Ute style with two
braids hung over his chest. The Utes never cut their hair (Rockwell, 1998). Ethnographer
Ann Smith reports: “Men wore their hair parted in the middle and arranged in
two braids, with otter or weasel skin braided in towards the ends for
decoration” (Smith, 1974, p. 78). The cylinders covering his braids are likely
made of buckskin decorated with colored porcupine quills. A length of fur from an
animal—possibly otter, mink, or the summer fur of a weasel—is attached.
He parted his hair in
the middle, and put decorations in his part, doubtless disks of dentalium
shells, as they have a consistent size and shape (C. Kaelin, personal
communication, August 10, 2022). These shells were cherished trade commodities
and are still worn on regalia. The large shell that crests the three disks in
his part is an olivella shell (a medium-sized to large marine snail), also
a coveted trade item that is found in abundance in Ute territory.
The young man is
wearing what appears to a necklace made of bone or shell beads strung together
with a sinew string. According to Celinda Kaelin, noted historian, “The pendent
is quillwork in the shape of the Four Directions symbol. This symbol is sacred
to the Ute and is represented in their Medicine Wheels” (C. Kaelin, personal
communication, August 10, 2022).
A sinew-wrapped bow and
several arrows are spread out across the Ute teen’s lap. Arrows shot from bows
were lethal up to 70 yards (Rockwell, 1998). One arrow point might be obsidian,
making him a person with sacred abilities. Other points were made of metal. The
Utes were practical. They would utilize metal for tips if it could be easily
found. If not, they would resort to using stone points. Smith (1974. P. 111) reports:
Arrow points were described as being from ¾
inch long from point to beginning of the tang up to 2 ½ or 3 inches long. The
end of the arrow was split, the tang inserted, and that section of the arrow
was wrapped with sinew. No glue was used. Old arrow points, discovered when the
people were roaming, were picked up, sharpened and used. Some hunters fashioned
their own arrow points; others had them made by skilled old men.
The young Ute is in
common men’s wear of leggings and a breech cloth. He is also barefoot, which is
common in the summer and depends on personal preference.
Dogs were important to
Ute culture, and they were often large. According to Pettit (1990), “This
well-bred dog may have been obtained through trade or was a gift.” Utes denied
ever eating dogs (Pettit, 1990). Dogs barked whenever an enemy approached and
provided an alarm for the Ute warriors. Dogs also guarded against wolves. Since dogs
were never fed, they cleaned up all waste around a village (Pettit,
1990). Each family owned between one and twelve dogs. Other animals, such
as hawks and fawns, were kept by children (Pettit, 1990). This photo shows how
much the Utes loved their pets. All animals were considered relatives in their cosmology.
John Hillers (1843 - 1925), who took this photograph, began making photographs in 1871 while part of Major John Wesley Powell’s second expedition of the Colorado River (Fowler, 1972). Hillers was nine years old when he emigrated from Hanover, Germany with his family to the United States in the 1850s (Fowler, 1972). He spent several years in the army and saw some action during the Civil War (Pitt Rivers Museum). At the end of the war, he re-enlisted and was posted to several Western forts (Fowler, 1972). Following his discharge from the army, Hillers worked a variety of jobs. In 1871, the 28-year-old veteran army sergeant worked as a boatman on John Wesley Powell’s expedition to map the Colorado River. While on Powell’s boat, the Emma Dean (named after Powell’s wife), he entertained the crew with rollicking stories and spirited songs (Flemming and Luskey, 1988). He quickly became interested in the survey’s photography and was soon the photographer’s assistant (Fowler, 1989). By 1872, Hillers was the expedition photographer (Getty Museum Collection).
After Hillers saved Powell from drowning in a stretch of rough rapids, they formed a friendship that was to last over three decades (Fleming and Luskey, 1986). He was one of the first to photograph the Grand Canyon.
Hillers
worked for the entirety of his extraordinary 29-year career as a photographer
for the federal government and made more than two thousand negatives of
anthropological and geological subjects (Fowler, 1972). He left
behind possibly the most spectacular visual record of the 19th
century West. His work contributed to transforming
American photography from being strictly utilitarian into an art form (Foresta
1996).
References and further reading
Cuch, F.S. (ed), 2000, A History of Utah’s
American Indians: Salt Lake City, Utah State Division of Indian Affairs and
the Utah State Division of History.
Flemming, P. R., and J. Luskey, 1988, The
North American Indians in Early Photographs: New York, Dorset Press.
Fowler, D. D., 1972, Photographed All the
Best Scenery: Jack Hiller’s Diary of the Powell Expedition, 1871-1875, Salt
Lake City: University of Utah Press.
Fowler, D. D. 1989, The Western Photographs
of John K Hillers: Myself in the Water: Washington, D.C., Smithsonian Institution
Press.
Foresta, M. A., 1996, American Photographs:
The First Century: Washington, D.C., National Museum of American Art with
the Smithsonian Institution Press.
Getty Museum Collection: John K. Hillers. Retrieved
from https://www.getty.edu/art/collection/person/103KGQ on August 8, 2020.
Jones, S. G., 2019, Being and Becoming Ute:
The Story of an American Indian People: Salt Lake City, The University of
Utah Press.
Pettit, J., 1990, Utes: The Mountain People:
Boulder, Johnson Printing Company.
Pitt Rivers Museum: Among the Pueblos, John K.
Hillers. Retrieved from https://www.prm.ox.ac.uk/event/among-the-pueblos on
August 8, 2020.
Rockwell, W., 1998, The Utes: A Forgotten
People: Ouray, Colorado, Western Reflections.
Simmons, V. M., 2000, The Ute Indians of
Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico: Boulder, University of Colorado Press.
Smith, A. M., 1974, Ethnography of the
Northern Utes: Papers in Anthropology (Museum of New Mexico), no. 17: Santa
Fe: Museum of New Mexico Press.
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