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War bonnet

Gallery Location
Not on View
Maker
Belonged to Chief Sitting Bull, Hunkpapa Lakota (Sioux)
Medium Golden eagle tail feathers, weasel skins, glass beads, dressed hide
Geography
Montana or North/South Dakota, USA; collected in southern Saskatchewan, Canada
Date c. 1870
Dimensions 50.5 x 41 x 65 cm
Object number 915X36.A
Credit Line Gift of Sir William C.C. Van Horne
Cataloguer Arni Brownstone ROM Staff, 1974-2022
Description

Sitting Bull’s war bonnet and its storage case were given to the ROM in 1915 by Sir William Van Horne, President of the Canadian Pacific Railway. He received these from Major James Walsh of the North West Mounted Police. It seems they were presented to Walsh by Sitting Bull. Sitting Bull, the Hunkpapa Lakota chief and holy man, and over four thousand Lakotas found refuge at Wood Mountain, Saskatchewan, after defeating General Custer and his Seventh Cavalry at the battle of Little Bighorn in 1876.

The war bonnet embodies sacred powers and also represents its owner’s war achievements. The feathers symbolize the eagle carrying prayers to the Creator; their radiating form makes a visual reference to the sun.

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