Three children sit near the porch of a building. One child sits on a wooden box, another child sits in a rocking chair and holds an infant. A horse and wagon are in the background.
Two children, Agnes and Theo, sit on a heifer in front of the door to what is probably a barn. A man stands in front of the cow. Glacier National Park, Montana.
Alaxchíiahush's thumbprint in "American: The Life Story of a Great Indian: Plenty-coups, Chief of the Crows," which signified that he approved the book.
Anthropologist Aaron Brien, the great-great-grandson of Shitchísh and Basáakoosh, holding up Shitchísh’s father’s war shield, which is held by the Chicago Field Museum.
Postcard titled “How Custer Fell. Apsáalooke scouts (left to right) White Man Runs Him, Hairy Moccasin, Curly, and Basáakoosh / Goes Ahead stand near the place of Custer’s death.
Senator Mike Mansfield with 36th President of the United States Lyndon Johnson. Though members of the same political party, Mansfield disapproved of President Johnson’s escalation of the Vietnam War.
Senator Mike Mansfield with Senator Everett Dirksen and
Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey after cloture was invoked to break a filibuster and allow a vote on the civil rights bill
Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield and Senate Minority Leader Everett Dirksen phone President Lyndon Johnson to tell him the Senate is ready to adjourn the session that passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Senator George Aiken’s response to Mansfield’s letter about the passage of the Civil Rights Act. Mansfield ate breakfast with his Republican colleague every morning before heading to work in the Senate.
Copy of letter written by Mike Mansfield to Everett Dirksen after the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. This letter was sent to all 99 US senators, regardless of how they voted.
Senator Mansfield with President Kennedy, possibly in Oval Office. The two men sit side-by-side at a desk. A model ship is on the credenza behind the men and in front of a window. Flags are on either side of the men.