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Breastplate

Kickapoo

Not on view

This breastplate, worn by a man as a personal ornament, is unique. A Kickapoo silversmith fashioned the hair pipes (long tubular beads) by cutting and cold-hammering German silver—an alloy of copper, zinc, and nickel. Typically, Native artists used shell or bone pipe commercially manufactured by Euro-Americans for these ornaments. Popular during the later half of the 1800s, men’s breastplates often covered only the upper chest. Later, women created their own versions.

Breastplate, German silver, commercial and native-tanned leather, shell, wood, brass tacks, ring, and wire, Kickapoo

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