Featured in this lot is a Rare 1895 D. F. Barry Photograph of "Rain-in-the-Face and His Squaw" at Standing Rock Indian Reservation on his wedding day. This photograph is of Rain-in-the-Face and his wife, Sati, both standing in front of a tipi (teepee). The chief is standing using crutches. Provenance: From the John Kleinschmidt collection which was on loan to the C.M. Russell Museum from 1987 to 1993 and included in the "The Cowboy West: 100 Years of Photography 1992-1993 exhibit. An attached museum tag reads, "1396-87 O'Dell". David Francis Barry (1854-1934) was one of the most noted photographers of the American Indian and U.S. Army participants in the Sioux War of 1876 and is attributed with some of the most recognizable surviving images from this period in the history of the American West. Barry first came to the west in the 1870’s to apprentice under photographer O.S. Goff, who worked as the photographer at Fort Abraham Lincoln. It was from this post the Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer led his Seventh U.S. Cavalry division in May 1876 to the battle of the Little Bighorn in southwestern Montana. This is considered one of the largest collections of Barry photographs from one historic Montana family offered for public sale. Rain-in-the-Face was a Hunkpapa war chief of the Lakota tribe of Native Americans. His mother was a Dakota related to the band of famous Chief Inkpaduta. In 1876, he participated in the Battle of the Little Bighorn that defeated the 7th Cavalry Regiment under Lt. Colonel George Armstrong Custer, and he has often been linked to the death of Custer. The photograph is in amazing preserved condition, mounted in a wood frame and sits behind glass to protect its already preserved condition. The visible art measures 10.25"W x 13.5"L, frame is 11.375" W x 14" L x .75" D. Weight is 1lb, 8oz.