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President Zachary Taylor Cree-Métis Quilled Hide Frockcoat, acquired 1832
Cree-Métis, Red River Valley, Manitoba, Canada
Early 19th century, acquired 1832
Tanned deerskin, dyed porcupine quills, trade beads, cast brass button
Length 41 in (104 cm)
Provenance: Collected before or during the 1832 Black Hawk War by Zachary Taylor, twelfth President of the United States; given to his son, Richard Taylor; gifted by Richard Taylor to Professor James Luce Kingsley; descended in the Kingsley family until June 1931, when it was gifted to the New Haven Colony Historical Society
This Cree-Métis frockcoat was made in the Red River Valley, a major fur-trade crossroads where Indigenous and European traditions met in the early 19th century. Fashioned in the form of a Euro-American coat, it is constructed from tanned deerskin and decorated with dyed porcupine quillwork, trade beads, and a cast brass button. The floral and foliate quillwork reflects the distinctive Métis visual language that developed through the encounter between Native decorative traditions and imported European textiles.
The coat’s provenance gives it an unusually direct connection to Zachary Taylor, who collected it before or during the 1832 Black Hawk War and later became the twelfth President of the United States. Its later history through Richard Taylor, Professor James Luce Kingsley, and the New Haven Colony Historical Society provides a long documented chain of ownership. As a Native-made garment associated with a U.S. president and the Black Hawk War period, it stands at the intersection of Cree-Métis artistry, Plains-frontier history, and early American collecting.
We ship free anywhere in the world, fully insured, packed by hand.
Cree-Métis, Red River Valley, Manitoba, Canada
Early 19th century, acquired 1832
Tanned deerskin, dyed porcupine quills, trade beads, cast brass button
Length 41 in (104 cm)
Provenance: Collected before or during the 1832 Black Hawk War by Zachary Taylor, twelfth President of the United States; given to his son, Richard Taylor; gifted by Richard Taylor to Professor James Luce Kingsley; descended in the Kingsley family until June 1931, when it was gifted to the New Haven Colony Historical Society
This Cree-Métis frockcoat was made in the Red River Valley, a major fur-trade crossroads where Indigenous and European traditions met in the early 19th century. Fashioned in the form of a Euro-American coat, it is constructed from tanned deerskin and decorated with dyed porcupine quillwork, trade beads, and a cast brass button. The floral and foliate quillwork reflects the distinctive Métis visual language that developed through the encounter between Native decorative traditions and imported European textiles.
The coat’s provenance gives it an unusually direct connection to Zachary Taylor, who collected it before or during the 1832 Black Hawk War and later became the twelfth President of the United States. Its later history through Richard Taylor, Professor James Luce Kingsley, and the New Haven Colony Historical Society provides a long documented chain of ownership. As a Native-made garment associated with a U.S. president and the Black Hawk War period, it stands at the intersection of Cree-Métis artistry, Plains-frontier history, and early American collecting.
We ship free anywhere in the world, fully insured, packed by hand.

