Osage Indian - Blackwater, MO
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member YoSam.
N 38° 58.765 W 092° 59.608
15S E 500565 N 4314491
Monument to Osage Indians and a gift to Pierre Chouteau...
Waymark Code: WM120N8
Location: Missouri, United States
Date Posted: 01/25/2020
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Jake39
Views: 3

County of art: Cooper County
Location of art: Main St., E. of Dodderidge Ave., Blackwater
Artist: Stacey Robinson

This wooden Indian statue, is located on Main St., next to an area that looks like a should be a park...with a gazebo and veterans memorial...but the statue is covered in dried out weeds (I was there in December) from the overgrowth than must have covered it in summer.
That clue says it is not cared for nor any effort to maintain it.
The Osage Chief himself, is seated with a scroll in his proper right hand and a war-club in his proper left hand. With Mohawk style haircut, he is staring forward and seated in a hewn log to resemble a chair, and the entire statue is mounted upon a three foot high stone cairn.


"Complete with staff and scroll, presented to Pierre Chouteau, serving as a deed for 38,000 acres in 1792. Stacey Robinson, artist." ~ LASR Community


"I walked another block to the remarkable chainsaw carving of an Osage Indian chief. He holds a scroll, a deed of title to about 30,00 acres the Osage tribe gave to trading partner and friend Pierre Chouteau. The federal government didn't recognize the scroll as a true deed of title, saying the Louisiana Purchase made the contract moot. Chouteau sued, and won." ~ Coastal Missouri: Driving on the Edge of Wild,   by John Drake Robinson, on Google


The quote here is from a book published in 2008. It refers to a plaque next to this statue...the plaque no longer exists.

"In the Village of Blackwater, the U. S. Army funded a small obelisk dedicated to "all veterans past, present and future." A plaque near a wooden carving of an Indian chief reads:
  The Osage Indians thought so much of the French explorer, [Jean] Pierre Chouteau, as a fur trader, that on
  March 19, 1792, they gave him land along the Lamine River, including what is now Blackwater township.
~ Blue Bug, Red Road,   By Gaines Post, Jr., on Google

Type of wood carving: Chainsaw carving

Artist's Name: Stacey Robinson

Approximate size/height: stands about 15 feet tall more than 4 feet wide

Type of wood: Oak

Other type: Not listed

Visit Instructions:
All logs must be the result of an actual visit to the wooden carving.
"Visited" only remarks will not be accepted.
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freezer54 visited Osage Indian - Blackwater, MO 05/10/2021 freezer54 visited it