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A.5141.42-124 - Double Saddle Blanket
A.5141.42-124_001
Catalog Number: A.5141.42-124
Object Name/Descriptor Double Saddle Blanket
Provenience North America, USA, Southwest
Culture/People/Style Navajo (Dine)
Period c. 1880 - 1895
Date Accessioned February, 1942
Material Type(s) Cloth - Wool
Length (cm) 136.400
Width (cm) 95.000
Other Information Associated Text from the Native American Hall (1992-2006):

Blankets meant to be used as padding under saddles were made of heavy yarns. Weavers used relatively simple patterns and the more durable diamond twill weaving technique.

Blankets for Trade
"Blankets of rare beauty and excellence."
- Josiah Gregg, 1844
In the first half of the 1800s the Navajo became known throughout the Southwest and across the Plains for their boldly patterned weavings. Contact with the Spanish provided Navajo weavers with new yarns and dyes, which they used to develop a series of complex designs expressing their Navajo aesthetic.
Until the mid-1800s, the Navajo lived in mobile family groups, supporting themselves through a mixture of hunting, gathering, herding, farming, trading, and raiding for horses and sheep. In 1863, United States troops rounded up the entire tribe, burned their peach trees and corn fields, and killed their sheep and horses. Families were forced to walk hundreds of miles to Bosque Redondo, near Fort Sumner, New Mexico. They spent the next four years as government prisoners of war.
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