Digital collection of original photographs and documents about the Northwest Coast and Plateau Indian cultures, complemented by essays about both particular tribes and cross-cultural topics.
Online collection of oral histories of local residents gathered by students in the UW Tacoma "Doing Community History" class, which includes collection of oral histories with Native Americans in the region.
Digital documents, from the Lillian Goldman Law Library at Yale, relevant to the fields of Law, History, Economics, Politics, Diplomacy and Government.
Library of Congress's preserved collection of primary law sources of Indigenous nations, which are sovereign governments by treaty with the United States.
Audio recordings of 47 contemporary Native American poets reading and discussing original work, part of Poet Laureate Joy Harjo’s “Living Nations, Living Words” signature project.
2,481 photographs, taken by field photographer Richard Throssel of daily life, ceremonies, portraits and village scenes of the Crow and Northern Cheyenne tribes; ranching; and scenery of southern Montana and northern Wyoming (1902-ca. 1920s).
Typescripts of interviews (1967 -1972) conducted with hundreds of Indians in Oklahoma regarding the histories and cultures of their respective nations and tribes.
Original manuscripts and published accounts of first hand descriptions of the Native American experience in New York. These resources span four centuries, beginning with the Dutch colony of New Netherland and continuing to the close of the American frontier in western New York and beyond.
Part of the Library of Congress American Memory Project, this site contains traditional Omaha music from the 1890s-1980s. Also includes correspondence, essays, and photos from the 1983 Pow Wow, and 1985 concert.
Over 2,000 documents and images dating from 1730 to 1842 on the history of Native Americans in the Southeastern U.S., letters, legal proceedings, military orders, and more.