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Indians of North America -- Alcatraz

Photo Collection One

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Loose barbed wire hung free all over the island. The wind played with it,and the singing sound of the wire could be heard everywhere.


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Occupiers on the dock.
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Belvia Cottier (Sioux) and a young friend on Alcatraz, May 31, 1970. Cottier assisted in the planning of the 1964 and 1969 occupations of Alcatraz Island.
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Indian people and their supporters wait for the ferry.
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Indian boys stand amidst the empty prison cells in the main cellblock.
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This young Navajo man came from Arizona to join the occupation. It was his first time away from the reservation.
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Norren and Meade Chibathi, Comanche Indians from Oklahoma, spent time on Alcatraz in 1970, teaching Indian music and dance.
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Waiting for the boat in the fog is Ed Castillo on the right (wrapped in a blanket). With him is Gail Treppa, a Pomo Indian woman. Ed is now a professor in the Native American studies program at Sonoma (California) State University. In the middle are Sue Tiger and her sister. Sue died in1992.
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The spirit of Alcatraz spread far, as demonstrated by this Paiute Indian from Nevada.
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An Indian occupier waits for a boat to the mainland. Island residents often traveled back and forth to attend school, to work on the mainland, or just to take showers and relax.
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Two Indian children play on abandoned Justice Departmant equipment on Alcatraz Island, 1970.
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Eighteen-year-old Oohosis and friend stand at Pier 40 after the removal. "The Indians were finally standing up and really doing something against what the government has done to us."
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One of the last occupiers leaves Alcatraz Island, June 11, 1971.
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For many people, the occupation was the first time they had been surrounded by other Indian people. The experience was one of cultural renewal, exhilaration, and a new-found sense of Indianness.
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The fog comes in over Alcatraz. An Indian woman walks toward the Ira Hayes House on the lower level of the island.
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On the mainland, on June 11,1971, Harold Patty (left), a Paiute Indian from Nevada, and Oohosis (second from left), a young Cree Indian from Canada, join two friends in demonstrating that the spirit will continue.
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This drawing indicates that the government had forcibly taken back - "ripped off" - Alcatraz Island. "Hoka Hay!!" translates roughly as "It Is Over." This poster appeared in Berkeley, California, the morning after the removal.
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In this view of Alcatraz from an approaching boat, the main cellblock is clearly visible on the upper level of the island.
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Alcatraz Island appeared this way from a passing boat follwing the June 1970 fire. Note the burned-out buildings and scorched lighthouse on the upper level.
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Leaders of the occupation met in this tipi to consider government offers and to plan responses.
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Michael Leach (Colville/Sioux) stand in the boat on the way to Alcatraz Island.
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Signs hung on the dock on Alcatraz Island read, from left to right, "Red Power. Indians," "Human Rights, Free Indians," "Remember this land was taken from us!" "Alcatraz for Indians."
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An Indian man arrives at Pier 40 on the mainland following the removal in June 1971. Indians of All Tribes operated a receiving facility on Pier 40, where donated materials were stored and where Indian people could wait for boats to transport them to Alcatraz Island.
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On Alcatraz Island, May 31, 1970, an unidentified Indian woman waits for the ferry.
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An Indian woman on Alcatraz Island.
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Alcatraz Island!
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The industries building on the lower level of Alcatraz Island was in bad repair and very dangerous.
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William Lope (Pit River/Pomo) and a playmate run into the sunshine.
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Donna Cottier, daughter of Belvia Cottier, stands with a young Chicano friend on Alcatraz Island in 1970.
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An occupier, arriving on the mainland after the June 11, 1971 removal, is greeted by the press.
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