American Indian Villages
To the north and across the pedestrian way, stretches the area in which the North American Indians live, during the Fair, in as close an approximation of their native life as it is possible to attain. A section of a Northwest Coast village is reproduced, with plank house and wigwams and practicing a limited agriculture. In contrast to these are the tipi-dwellers of the plains, whose greatest source of food supply was the buffalo hunt. Then come the Navajo, roaming people, in some measure, and the Pueblos, with terraced villages.
Official Guide
Book Of The Fair
1933
Published by
A Century Of Progress
Administration Building
Chicago