Cherokee  Indian  Art
Tahlequah Oklahoma

HOME MAIN GALLERY CREATE A GIFT STUDIO 1 STUDIO 2 STUDIO 3 STUDIO 4 PRINT SHOP 1 PRINT SHOP 2 MASTER ARTISTS GICLEE ART PRINTS GIFT SHOP CHEROKEE STUFF TRIBAL PRIDE HOUSEMINDERS LITTLE PEOPLE JOHN'S BIO OUR FAVORITES ARTISTS BLOG NATIVE MEDICINE TALKING LEAVES INCOME ONLINE LIBRARY

 

 




QUATIE’S BLANKET
16 x 26" double matted and framed in gunmetal
$ 265

Quatie’s Blanket is an addition of 250 with 25 artist proofs.
During the winter of 1838-39 the entire Cherokee Nation was removed from their homeland in the Southeastern United States and marched overland to Indian Territory. Everyone suffered the hardships along what people refer to today as the Trail of Tears. Chief John Ross led the last detachment made up of many elderly people and children. Among the people lost was the Chief’s beloved wife Quatie. Though already suffering she gave up the only blanket shielding her from the elements. The compassion Quatie showed a sick child cost her, her life.

The quote in the painting is from Pvt. Burnett’s letters home to his wife. He stood guard over Quatie the night she died. " Chief Ross led in prayer and when the bugle sounded and the wagons started rolling, many of the children waved their little hands goodbye to their mountain homes."

Rather have Just the Print?

CLOSE-UP    Pvt.  John Burnett's Account

Quatie's Blanket $265 + $35 shipping

VisaMastercardAmerican ExpressDiscovereCheckPayPal
 

 

 
War Woman: A Novel of the Real People

War Woman
Author: Robert J. Conley


The early history of the encounter between the Real People, or Cherokee, and Western Europeans is vividly imagined in this latest saga by a prolific Cherokee writer. Using a few isolated but historically supported discoveries of the use of guns by Cherokees during the early European-American invasion, the ruins of an old Spanish gold mine in Cherokee country, the building of a Cherokee town on the site of an abandoned village near Jamestown, VAAthe author creates a fast-moving novel of how these things might have happened. It is told from the view point of War Woman, a name Whirlwind achieves through her extraordinary skills and abilities during each of the various events. This history parallels Whirlwind/War Woman's development from girlhood to maturity and eventually death. Cherokee beliefs, traditions, and way of life are interwoven throughout the story as the Real People come face to face with the beliefs, traditions, and customs of the invading peoples. This is an excellent novel that features strong female protagonists; there are also love interests and fierce battle scenes. It presents a Native American viewpoint of early American history and offers alternative explanations for some of the archaeological discoveries still not explained completely.

 

What is Cast Paper ?

Book Mark Guthrie Studios
Cherokee Indian Art

Cherokee Indian Art
P.O. Box 751
Tahlequah, Ok 74465

Telephone (918)-458-1814
E-Mail Cherokee Indian Art & Guthrie Studios

RV Travels   Studio Shops   Boating  

   
Ecomrider      66more
    Cherokee Art     101place   
   
 
Native Medicine
   Super Search