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The Museum will be closed to the public on Friday, December 20 for a private event.

Parfleche

Unknown

Central Plains, Cheyenne

circa 1860

Rawhide, leather, natural paint

H.192.02 and 03

On View

Daily Life

Gift of Mrs. Doane Farr

The use of painted rawhide containers was common before European contact. They are a characteristic art form of the Plains and Plateau regions. The termed applied to these containers dates back to the 1700s and originated with French traders impressed with their hard surfaces. In French, parfleche means “to parry an arrow.”

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