KA-NA-PI-MA,
AN OTTAWA CHIEF
No 31     RICE, RUTTER & CO, Publishers

This image from Vol. I of the 1872 Octavo edition will also include the biography pages from the text.  The biographical account accompanying this portrait explains that it was an admirable likeness of KANAPIMA, who was the ruling chief of the Ottawa, a tribe whose numbers were dwindling. 

This hand colored plate features KANAPIMA dressed in a dark blue suit with a vest and blue neck wrap over his white blouse.  He has a short haircut and looks quite dapper.  See pictures.

Hand colored lithograph color plates were by Henry Inman based on paintings by Charles Bird King, James Otto Lewis, and Peter Rindisbacher.  Most of the original paintings were destroyed in a fire and the Henry Inman lithographs preserve the images.

This image is from the 1872 octavo edition of:
HISTORY OF THE INDIAN TRIBES OF NORTH AMERICA
WITH BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES AND ANECDOTES
OF THE
PRINCIPAL CHIEFS
EMBELLISHED WITH
One Hundred Portraits from the Indian Gallery
IN THE
WAR DEPARTMENT AT WASHINGTON
BY THOMAS L. McKENNEY,
Late of the Indian Department, Washington,
In Two Volumes
VOL. I

PHILADELPHIA:
PUBLISHED BY D. RICE & CO.
508 MINOR STREET.
1872

Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1868, by
RICE, RUTTER & CO.,
In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Eastern District
of Pennsylvania.

CAXTON PRESS OF
SHERMAN & CO., PHILADELPHIA.