Apache Houses
Hogans were made with a frame of logs and sticks and usually covered with mud.
Hogan
Outside view of a mud hogan
Inside view of a hogan
Hogans are the name of one of the styles of homes that the Apache people lived in. Hogans were made with a frame of logs and sticks and usually covered with mud. Hogans were one room dwellings that were unique in the fact that they were classified as male or female dwelling according to their shape. A male Hogan was cone shaped, while a female Hogan was a six or eight sided dwelling. The door of a Hogan always faced east. The floor of the Hogan represented Mother Earth and the roof, Father Sky.
Kowa
In another variation, the thatched house was built into the side of a hill or a mound of dirt. This style house was later adopted by white settlers who homesteaded on the plains, until a more permanent house could be built. The settlers called them sod houses.
Apache Wickiup
Apache Indians Building Wickiup Art Print
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Framed Mounted
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