Feature Points
- VINTAGE MAP REPRODUCTION: You'll love this high quality historic reproduction of 1890 Map of Linguistic Stocks of American Indians Poster. Our museum quality prints are archival grade, which means it will look great and last without fading for over 100 years. Our print to order maps are made in the USA and each map is inspected for quality. This beautiful artwork is a perfect addition to your themed decor. Vintage maps look great in the home, study or office. They make a perfect gift as well.
- MUSEUM QUALITY: This high quality map print will be a great addition to your vintage-themed wall. Don't waste money on cheap-looking, thin paper posters. We use thick, fine art print quality matte paper. Our professional's choice matte paper displays artwork in high detail without glare. The color is vibrant and text is easy to read. When framed, this map looks absolutely stunning.
- A LOOK BACK AT HISTORY: This is an impressive, historic reproduction of 1890 Map of Linguistic Stocks of North American Indians. A true piece of history. See our product description section for more fascinating information about this historic map and its significance.
- READY TO FRAME: This print includes a 0.2 inch border for a perfect frame fit and look. Our maps are designed to fit easy-to-find standard frame sizes, saving you money from having to pay for a custom frame. Each map is inspected for quality and shipped in a rigid tube.
- HISTORIX: We love history and art. Sometimes old maps have tears, folds, separations and other blemishes. We digitally restore and enhance maps while keeping its historical character. All our maps are proudly made in the USA. Customers all over the world love our vintage maps and we know you will too.
Additional Information
Prolific scholar, geologist, adventurer, and professor John Wesley Powell created this map of North American Indigenous languages, which became one of the most essential pieces of ethno-etymology in the United States during the latter portions of the nineteenth century as scores of indigenous tribes were moved from ancestral lands to reservations across the Oklahoma territory and other regions of the American Southwest as well as the Pacific Northwest and areas of Florida and the East Coast. Powell endeavored on numerous trips down the Green and Colorado Rivers following the conclusion of the American Civil War, where he conducted the first official US expedition through the Grand Canyon in 1869.
Powell was appointed as the director of the Bureau of Ethnology at the Smithsonian Institution in 1879, a post he would hold until his death and where he would create this work which classifies and chronicles the Indigenous Languages and gives historians insights into their pasts, cultural development, and distinct differences among tribes across North America. This print illustrates the vast differences between tribes with a visually stunning representation that bears a distinctive aesthetic and unique style that immediately transports the viewer back in time, creating a link between the past and present.
This production became a time capsule of North American Indigenous People's linguistic heritage and legacy. It remains an essential piece of their cultural evolution and development as immigrants from Western Europe and The United States established new towns and communities across the American West and Pacific Northwest.