Six single-unit votive slips. Each is divided in two sections; top sections contain various objects, bottom contains multicolored floral and vine pattern with black and white votive slips against left border edge.
Single-unit votive slip with black border, interior divided in two halves. Top half contains image of painted axe head near red bowl. Bottom half has multicolored floral and vine pattern against yellow background with black and white votive slip against left border edge.
Anna Coyote, a Cayuse Indian woman, sits outside before a backdrop wearing a hat, a beaded dress, leggings, plain moccasins, necklaces, a choker, earrings, belt, and a bracelet and holding a whip and an axe adorned with fur and beadwork.
A Native American tomahawk from the collection of relics of the Whitman massacre, 1847 in the Oregon Historical Society is shown against a dark background. The tomahawk has a wooden handle with ornaments and beadwork and a metal head or blade with a heart motif and border designs.
Display of weapons on a beaded box: two hatchets, one sword and scabbard, one bone knife, two staffs: one with a metal top and one with a leather strap on the top.
A Native American man identified as Joe Bennett of the Walla Walla tribe stands in traditional Native American clothing near a tipi. He wears a buckskin shirt with fringe, a headband with an eagle feather, a choker, necklaces, and a breechcloth with a geometric motif. He holds a tomahawk and a fur and has a knife in a scabbard tucked in his belt. The man wears his hair in braids.
Depicts relics from the Whitman massacre housed at the Oregon Historical Society are displayed in a room through a wooden doorway. A set of antlers adorn the top of the door. Relics include hatchets, rifles, powderhorns, bowls and stones.
Two pipe hatchets displayed on cloth background. Hatchet on left has heart-shaped cutout on diamond-shaped blade with two curved decorations near handle. Incised decorations on blade and handle. Hatchet on right is plain, with wooden, pointed stake handle.