This photograph, taken in 1948, shows a man in a suit and tie weeping in front of a news camera.
His name was George Gillette.
Those tears were not tears of fear.
Those were tears shed out of helplessness and the inability to do anything about it.
He was the leader of the Mandan, Arikala, and Hidatsa tribes, and that day he was being forced to sign an agreement with the U.S. government to hand over his ancestral lands.
The purpose was to build a dam on the Missouri River.
That signature meant that over 600 square kilometers of land homes, schools, churches, fertile fields—would all be permanently submerged underwater.
Gillette understood.
What I'm selling isn't just land.
It is the very memory of the people.
But he had no choice.
If they refused to sign, the tribe would receive no compensation whatsoever.
His tear-stained face remains one of the most powerful records, symbolizing the wounded dignity experienced by Native Americans
