Native American Medicine Pouch by Lance Many Crows of Farmington, Maine
White leather medicine bag for collecting memories & artifacts. Lance Many Crows was a Native American of Chiricahua Apache descent; private and proud.
He was born in Florida and profoundly influenced by his maternal grandmother while living with her in New Mexico. He traveled extensively throughout the world, educating himself on many of the world’s religions and cultures.
Lance most loved being in the western mountains of Maine in his remodeled school buses which he made into motor homes and art studios. He attended art shows and Pow Wows all over the country, spending his last years of life in the east. His works of art portray native life and history from past to present. He passed in 2011 in his home in Farmington, Maine.
White leather medicine bag for collecting memories & artifacts. Lance Many Crows was a Native American of Chiricahua Apache descent; private and proud.
He was born in Florida and profoundly influenced by his maternal grandmother while living with her in New Mexico. He traveled extensively throughout the world, educating himself on many of the world’s religions and cultures.
Lance most loved being in the western mountains of Maine in his remodeled school buses which he made into motor homes and art studios. He attended art shows and Pow Wows all over the country, spending his last years of life in the east. His works of art portray native life and history from past to present. He passed in 2011 in his home in Farmington, Maine.
White leather medicine bag for collecting memories & artifacts. Lance Many Crows was a Native American of Chiricahua Apache descent; private and proud.
He was born in Florida and profoundly influenced by his maternal grandmother while living with her in New Mexico. He traveled extensively throughout the world, educating himself on many of the world’s religions and cultures.
Lance most loved being in the western mountains of Maine in his remodeled school buses which he made into motor homes and art studios. He attended art shows and Pow Wows all over the country, spending his last years of life in the east. His works of art portray native life and history from past to present. He passed in 2011 in his home in Farmington, Maine.