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Guide to Indian
Country
- June, 2003
Adventure
in traditional lands
Festival
celebrates
Métis culture
Exhibit
explores work of
Native glass artists
Tales
of war and madness
new fare of festival
Travel
the Great Spirit
Circle Trail
Newcastle
Island-
Must-do while in B.C.
Flathead
treasures housed
at Ninepipes
In
the spirit of Crazy Horse,
work continues
Southwest
Alberta has
summer fun by the bucketful
The
Native side of the
Calgary Stampede
Northern
Secwepemc
culture on display
Man's
hobby becomes
life's work
Tiny
Abegweit hosts
popular powwow
Call
the Bear's Inn home
for the night
Follow
the drum
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WINDSPEAKER'S ABORIGINAL TOURISM SUPPLEMENT
Phone: (780) 455-2700 Fax
(780) 455-7639
Email: edwind@ammsa.com

Flathead treasures housed at Ninepipes
Matt Ross
Windspeaker Contributor
CHARLO, Montana
He found his first artifact by accident when he was just 10
years old. Today, the fire that was sparked a half-century ago
by that find still burns hot in the heart of Bud Cheff, Jr.,
whose passion for collecting can be seen in the variety and scope
of artifacts on display at the Ninepipes Museum of Early Montana.
"When I was 10 years old and our car broke down, my sister
and I hiked back and found a war club near Columbia Falls,"
Cheff, now 66, recalled. "We could imagine Indians dying
after the battle," because this was an area that was described
in the stories told to him by local Elder Eneas Conko.
The Ninepipes Museum of Early Montana lies in the shadow of the
Rocky Mountains in Charlo, one hour north of Missoula, and contains
well over 1,000 artifacts, photographs, paintings and original
documents that detail the rich history of the area and the lives
of the Salish-Kootenai of the Flathead reservation.
Cheff has supplied the majority of the pieces and, in addition
to being the museum's president, he is also the tribe's historian,
because he can relay the stories behind the artifacts and the
Salish-Kootenai traditions.
One of the objects on display that Cheff is most proud of is
an eagle feather headdress given to him by George Kickingwoman,
one of the last medicine men of the area.
Kickingwoman respected Cheff's work and wanted his possessions
to be preserved at Ninepipes. A painting of Kickingwoman hangs
beside the bonnet.
A tribute to frontier artist E.S. Paxson is on display in the
main room, complete with the easel and painting supplies that
he used. Paxson is renowned for his masterpiece Custer's Last
Stand at Little Big Horn, painted in 1897.
Several of his portraits line three walls. On the floor is one
attempt by the artist at sculpting-a two-foot-tall piece depicting
Sacajawea, the Indian guide for the Lewis & Clark expedition.
The Paxson items were acquired a quarter-century ago, said Cheff.
"Our museum could never buy these items now because of how
much money they're worth," Cheff said. Interest by dealers
has pushed prices up ten-fold, he estimates.
A step around the corner from the Paxson exhibit is a display
of more than 200 photographs dating back to the turn of the 20th
century, evidence of the day-to-day conditions on the reservation
and in rural Montana.
Cheff points out how fortunate the Flathead reservation was to
have two skilled photographers living there at the time.
"The photos bring visitors closer to history. They'll see
the artifacts and then to see the people. [It] makes the history
real."
The photography room is divided evenly in half, the right side
with pictures of Native people, the left side documenting the
cowboy and rural lifestyle.
A significant event from the area captured on film was the buffalo
roundup. When the land was being surveyed and sectioned for private
ownership the buffalo were driven out of the valley. The last
of the beasts were loaded onto trains and transported out of
the country. Ironically, the national government established
the National Bison Range only a few years later in nearby Moiese.
Now retired, Cheff laughs about the time and effort it takes
to maintain the museum. It's equivalent to a full-time job, but
he wouldn't have it any other way.
"It's a turn-on when I see somebody interested in the old
things and the more people who enjoy it, the more apt it will
be to preserve the history."
The museum is located at 40962 Highway 93 in Charlo, Montana.
They are online at www.ninepipes.com.
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