The first expedition went to
Crow Agency, Montana, in 1908, and Dixon was accompanied by three photographers. It was endorsed by the
Commissioner of Indian Affairs. Dixon carefully directed filming and photographs as he tried to capture authentic images without "any hint of the white man's foot". In reality these images were romanticized and commercialized presentations of Native American life. A film version of "
The Song of Hiawatha" was recorded. Dixon cast actors in the roles through auditioning hundreds of people. The following year
A Wanamaker Primer on the North American Indians was published which suggested Natives had "Jewish blood in their veins", said "an Indian is always an Indian" and described them as "born to shirk tasks of toil". It describes a tragic but inevitable defeat of the Native Americans by white people. Also in 1909 Dixon returned to Crow Agency where he directed around 100 Native chiefs to film "The Last Great Indian Council" and a reenactment of the
Battle of the Little Bighorn. Dixon was also careful to document and record his photographing procedures.
Expedition for Citizenship In February 1913 ground was broken on a
National American Indian Memorial. Upon Dixon's request,
Franklin Knight Lane, the
United States Secretary of the Interior, approved another expedition. In June that year, Dixon set out with his son, Rollin, another photographer, John Scott,
James McLaughlin, and an employee of
Eastman Kodak on an "expedition of citizenship" that was sponsored by Wanamaker's and the
Pennsylvania Railroad, which provided a rail-car that had a darkroom, known as
Signet. (Native Americans were not recognized as citizens at this time, and did not have this status until a decade later, with the
Indian Citizenship Act of 1924). It was also supported by
Woodrow Wilson,
William Howard Taft, and
Thomas Edison. Funding was in part provided by a "Committee of One Hundred", which included wealthy Americans such as
John D. Rockefeller and
William Randolph Hearst. The expedition traveled by rail in around six months and visited 89 tribes. It raised an American flag in a ceremony everywhere it went and gifted every reservation an American flag. Additionally, the expedition had a "Declaration of Allegiance" for Natives to sign and recordings of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs and the President of the United States speaking. Not all tribes welcomed the Americans, notably the
Hopi,
Pueblo, and
Navajo peoples. == Results and legacy ==