A complete set of The North American Indian is comprised of twenty individually bound books, each with an average of 250 pages and 75 photogravure images, and twenty accompanying portfolios, each with an average of 36 large image plates housed in a folding case.

Curtis first developed the idea of a multi-volume set of books about Native Peoples around 1903, but it was not until he secured substantial funding from financier J. P. Morgan in 1906 that his project began in earnest. He originally proposed that it would take five years to complete the publication, but, due to a continuing series of complications, it was 24 years until the last volume was completed. Volume I was printed in late 1907, and Volume XX finally appeared in 1930.

The sets were available by subscription only. The standard edition, with photogravures printed on Van Gelder paper or Japanese vellum, was initially priced at $3,000 for the complete set. A deluxe edition, with photogravures printed on Japanese tissue, cost $3,750.  

Curtis began The North American Indian with the stated intention of publishing a limited edition of 500 sets. Due to the high cost of the publication and the prolonged publication cycle, he did not reach his goal. It’s thought that no more than 300 sets were produced while Curtis was in charge. Today, most of these sets are in libraries, museums, and private collections.

Throughout the nearly 32 years that Curtis worked on his project, he continually struggled to find enough money to complete it. Although Morgan's money helped to launch the work, it did not pay for the substantial cost of printing and selling the lavish books. In return for multiple financial loans to Curtis, the Morgan family took over all the ownership interests in The North American Indian, including all of Curtis' copyrights to his photos.

By the time Curtis completed his project in 1930, the public’s interest in it and in the plight of Native Peoples, in general, had significantly diminished. In 1935 the Morgan family decided they had no financial or legal reason to hold onto the photographs and research that Curtis had produced, and they sold all of the assets of The North American Indian, Inc. to Charles Lauriat Books of Boston.

 

Included in the assets that were sold were fourteen complete bound sets of The North American Indian; enough printed text pages and photogravures to assemble an additional 34 complete sets; approximately 285,000 photogravures and original prints produced by Curtis during the project; all the documentation, recordings, and research notes collected during the project, and the original text drafts for the books. The Lauriat Company paid $1,000 for the entire collection.

Lauriat eventually sold all the assets in small lots, and for many years the importance of The North American Indian was forgotten. It was finally rediscovered in the 1970s and is now recognized for its inherent beauty and historical significance.

  • Tribal Table of Contents

  • Tribal Table of Contents

  • Complete Volume

  • Volume I

  • Volume II

  • Volume III

  • Volume IV

  • Volume V

  • Volume VI

  • Volume VII

  • Volume VII

  • Volume IX

  • Volume X

  • Volume XI

  • Volume XII

  • Volume XIII

  • Volume XIV

  • Volume XV

  • Volume XVI

  • Volume XVII

  • Volume XVIII

  • Volume XIX

  • Volume XX