Papago Woman at the Well


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Unknown Unknown inpa1109pa.jpg IN-PA-1109 Hand-Tinted Color 1505-1109-0001 inpa1109pa Postcard 4x6 Historic Photographs 1900s Reproduction requires permission. Digital images property of SHM Library & Archives

Description

Papago woman at the well with ollas.  The olla or  water jar appears to be the most-used article among the present-day Papago. Many were observed beneath the ramadas of the houses, sometimes suspended from the cross-beams, sometimes placed in three-forked logs set upright in the ground. The majority of those  now  used are of a plain,  unslipped earthenware in the natural color of the clay. Apparently  a thin reddish wash is sometimes applied to the exterior. Several large storage ollas of  a grayish or brownish buff, decorated in a brownish red and very suggestive of ancient Hohokam ware.

When the Spanish came upon them, they called them Papago, but the people themselves have rejected this name and officially changed it to Tohono O'odham in the 1980s. Tohono O'odham means “Desert People.”

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