Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Osage Nation (/ ... 1808, by which the Osage made a major cession of land in present-day Missouri. Under the Osage Treaty, they ceded 52,480,000 acres ...
The Osage Village State Historic Site is a publicly owned property in Vernon County, Missouri, maintained by the Missouri Department of Natural Resources. The historic site preserves the archaeological site of a major Osage village, that once had some 200 lodges housing 2,000 to 3,000 people. [ 4 ]
On the south side of the Missouri River across from the Missouria was an Osage village. These were the "Little Osages" a splinter of the main group of Osage then living about 100 miles (160 km) away on the Osage River and its tributaries. They had split from the main Osage tribe a few years earlier and moved to the Missouri River for unknown ...
The Oklahoma tourism department and Osage Nation are encouraging tourists to be courteous and responsible when they visit Osage Country.
Osage Nation’s Chief Geoffrey Standing Bear on how Osage storytelling connects us with our past and our present.
This site was occupied by the Big Osage tribe of Native Americans from around 1775–1825, and was the group's last area of residence in the southwestern portion of Missouri, as they were later confined to a Kansas reservation.
The principal chief of the Osage Nation was in the audience at Hollywood's Dolby Theatre on March 10 when a group of Osage singers, drummers and dancers performed live during the 96th Academy ...
As the Osage ceded more and more of their land, the US established a new trading post at Fort Scott, Kansas, closer to the ancestral villages near the headwaters of the Osage River near Nevada, Missouri. Fort Osage formally was closed in 1822, but remained a landmark on the Santa Fe Trail and a transit point for supplies going north. By 1836 it ...