:File:Rosebud Yellow Robe's Sled.png

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|Article = Rosebud Yellow Robe

|Description = Rosebud Yellow Robe's Sled. A child's sled (c. 1900) one of 77 artifacts on display for the opening of the Diker Pavilion of New York City's Heye Center, the National Museum of the American Indian. Donated to the National Museum of the American Indian by Rosebud Yellow Robe and her husband Alfred A. Franz.

|Source = http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/gathering-rosebuds-142199643/?no-ist=

|Portion = Photo capture from Smithsonian.com of Owen Edwards, “Gathering Rosebuds, Did a Native American Actress inspire one of Hollywood’s most celebrated symbols?, Smithsonian Magazine, January 2007.

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|Purpose = For identification and comparison with one of the most prized artifacts in film history, the photo of the pine Rosebud sled from Orson Welles's 1941 film, Citizen Kane, File:Rosebud-Pine.jpg. It is one of the most prized pieces of film memorabilia in existence.

|Replaceability = No; this image is from the National Museum of the American Indian that presents the best available image and relates the artifact's provenance.

|other_information = In 1961, Rosebud Yellow Robe and her husband Alfred A. Franz donated this late 19th century Lakota sled fashioned from eight buffalo ribs to the National Museum of the American Indian in New York City. While the precise provenance of the sled is unknown, it believed to be the childhood sled of Rosebud's father, Chauncey Yellow Robe.

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