Native american tribe virginia Black & White Stock Photos
RMHRKRNH–Native American Indian Cooking, 1588
RM2B00YB5–USA: Pocahontas (c. 1595-1617), daughter of Wahunsunacawh, Chief of the Powhatan Tribe, Virginia. Copper engraving by Simon van de Passe (1595-1647), 1616. Pocahontas (c. 1595 – March 21, 1617), later known as Rebecca Rolfe, was a Virginia Indian chief's daughter notable for having assisted colonial settlers at Jamestown. She converted to Christianity and married the English settler John Rolfe. After they traveled to London, she became famous in the last year of her life. She was a daughter of Wahunsunacawh, better known as Chief or Emperor Powhatan (to indicate his primacy).
RMERG2F2–American aboriginal Indian village in Virginia. 'Report of the new found land of Virginia.' 1590. Published Frankfurt
RMBA7XKA–Pocahontas (Matoaka), circa 1595 - 21.3.1617, Native American, full length, rescuing John Smith before burning by her tribe, copper engraving, 17th century, Artist's Copyright has not to be cleared
RM2HM77DG–Sequoyah (c1770–1843), son of a Cherokee woman and a fur trader from Virginia, was a warrior, hunter, and silversmith who for twelve years worked to devise a method of writing for the Cherokee language. (From a painted portrait by Henry Inman, c1830, after an earlier portrait by Charles Bird King which was destroyed in the Smithsonian Castle fire of 1865.)
RMERG6A8–English colonists fighting against Native Americans on the Virginia Frontier, published in 1887. Clashes between colonists and
RF2DCD8P5–Battle of Point Pleasant, 1774
RM2B00YB4–USA: Pocahontas (c. 1595-1617), daughter of Wahunsunacawh, Chief of the Powhatan Tribe, Virginia. Engraving by B. Eyles from 'World Noted Women', by Mary Cowden Clarke (1809-1898), 1883. Pocahontas (c. 1595 – March 21, 1617), later known as Rebecca Rolfe, was a Virginia Indian chief's daughter notable for having assisted colonial settlers at Jamestown. She converted to Christianity and married the English settler John Rolfe. After they traveled to London, she became famous in the last year of her life. She was a daughter of Wahunsunacawh, better known as Chief or Emperor Powhatan.
RMERG61W–Chief Powhatan, otherwise known as Wahunsenacawh or Wahunsunacock, was the leader of the Powhatan, a powerful tribe of Virginia
RM2F6280W–Battle of Point Pleasant, 1774
RM2BDY8KX–Pocahontas Saving Captain John Smith, 1607
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