- Creator:
- Cotter, James L., 1839-1889
- Published / Created:
- ca. 1867-1870.
- Call Number:
- WA Photos 350
- Image Count:
- 9
- Abstract:
- Informal carte-de-visite photographs probably created by James L. Cotter documenting Inuit people and dwellings probably in the vicinity of the eastern coast of Hudson Bay or Belcher Islands, Canada, ca. 1867-1870. Images documenting the traditional costume of the Inuits include an informal portrait of a girl, in addition to group portraits of three women and two men and another group portrait of over sixty children, women, and men. Images documenting Inuit dwellings include a group of men and women in front of three igloos and sitting on top of a sled, two igloos without people, and a structure similar to a tipi with a wooden door.
- Description:
- James L. Cotter worked in various capacities from clerk to chief factor for the Hudson's Bay Company, 1857-1888., Manuscript inscriptions and signatures on the rectos and verso of the photographic prints., and The mount on one photographic print bears a mark for R. Smith, Port Hope and Peterborough, Ontario.
- Subject (Geographic):
- Hudson Bay
- Subject (Name):
- Cotter, James L.,--1839-1889 and Smith, R.,--photographer
- Subject (Topic):
- Indian architecture--Hudson Bay--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Pictorial works, Inuit--Canada--Pictorial works, and Inuit--Clothing--Pictorial works
- Found in:
- Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library > Carte-de-visite photographs of Inuit people and dwellings.
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- Creator:
- Bock, Harry V., 1865-1949
Brendel, Allwilda Belle Griffith
Dillon, Vince
Gillingham, David Gray Eagle
Pawnee Indian Baptist Church - Published / Created:
- 1911
- Call Number:
- WA MSS S-2546
- Container / Volume:
- Box 1 | Folder 3
- Image Count:
- 2
- Abstract:
- Journal kept in a composition book by clerks of the Pawnee Indian Baptist Church, Pawnee, Oklahoma, and related photographs depicting Pawnee Indian members of the church and other Native Americans, 1907-1920., Photographs in the collection consist primarily of images of members of the church. These images include a group portrait of the congregation at the church, and a group portrait of Maggie Knife Chief and family at the Pawnee Indian Agency School, 1911; group portraits of Pawnee Indians at a meeting of the Oklahoma Indian Baptist Association in Anadarko, Oklahoma, 1912; group portraits of Pawnee Indians at the railroad station at Darrow, Oklahoma, July 1914, with men identified in a portrait as White Horse, Robert Peters, Hole in the Ground, and Lester Pratt, and a receipt for two roundtrip tickets purchased on the St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad from Darrow to Pawnee; and images of a baptism of a man identified as the oldest Oto Indian, 1915., and Portraits of identified Pawnee Indians in the collection include David Gillingham and Hattie Smith Burns, identified as the wife of Benny Burns. Portraits related to Charles Knife Chief include images of him, his children, and of him with John Moses. A portrait of two Pawnee Indian women depicts Nettie Moses and Jenny Long Wolf, who attended the Chilocco Indian Boarding School in Chilocco, Oklahoma. An undated group portrait probably took place at a religious conference meeting and includes Harry Bock.
- Description:
- Manuscript inscription on the recto and verso of photographic prints. and Reverend Joseph Greenberry Brendel (1862-1926) founded the Pawnee Indian Baptist Church on September 20, 1908 and served as its minister until April 20, 1911, when Harry Bock (1865-1949) took charge of the church. Bock worked many years with western showman Gordon W. Lillie, also known as Pawnee Bill, until becoming a Baptist missionary.
- Subject (Geographic):
- Anadarko (Okla.)--Pictorial works, Darrow (Okla.)--Pictorial works, Oklahoma--Pictorial works, and Pawnee (Okla.)--Pictorial works
- Subject (Name):
- Knife Chief, Charles and Knife Chief, Maggie
- Subject (Topic):
- Baptists--Missions--Oklahoma, Baptists--Oklahoma, Indians of North America--Oklahoma--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Portraits, Missionaries--Oklahoma, and Pawnee Indians--Pictorial works
- Found in:
- Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library > Journal of the church clerk and photographs, 1907-1920.
- Creator:
- Bock, Harry V., 1865-1949
Brendel, Allwilda Belle Griffith
Dillon, Vince
Gillingham, David Gray Eagle
Pawnee Indian Baptist Church - Published / Created:
- 1911 January 22
- Call Number:
- WA MSS S-2546
- Container / Volume:
- Box 1 | Folder 3
- Image Count:
- 2
- Abstract:
- Journal kept in a composition book by clerks of the Pawnee Indian Baptist Church, Pawnee, Oklahoma, and related photographs depicting Pawnee Indian members of the church and other Native Americans, 1907-1920., Photographs in the collection consist primarily of images of members of the church. These images include a group portrait of the congregation at the church, and a group portrait of Maggie Knife Chief and family at the Pawnee Indian Agency School, 1911; group portraits of Pawnee Indians at a meeting of the Oklahoma Indian Baptist Association in Anadarko, Oklahoma, 1912; group portraits of Pawnee Indians at the railroad station at Darrow, Oklahoma, July 1914, with men identified in a portrait as White Horse, Robert Peters, Hole in the Ground, and Lester Pratt, and a receipt for two roundtrip tickets purchased on the St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad from Darrow to Pawnee; and images of a baptism of a man identified as the oldest Oto Indian, 1915., and Portraits of identified Pawnee Indians in the collection include David Gillingham and Hattie Smith Burns, identified as the wife of Benny Burns. Portraits related to Charles Knife Chief include images of him, his children, and of him with John Moses. A portrait of two Pawnee Indian women depicts Nettie Moses and Jenny Long Wolf, who attended the Chilocco Indian Boarding School in Chilocco, Oklahoma. An undated group portrait probably took place at a religious conference meeting and includes Harry Bock.
- Description:
- Manuscript inscription on the recto and verso of photographic prints. and Reverend Joseph Greenberry Brendel (1862-1926) founded the Pawnee Indian Baptist Church on September 20, 1908 and served as its minister until April 20, 1911, when Harry Bock (1865-1949) took charge of the church. Bock worked many years with western showman Gordon W. Lillie, also known as Pawnee Bill, until becoming a Baptist missionary.
- Subject (Geographic):
- Anadarko (Okla.)--Pictorial works, Darrow (Okla.)--Pictorial works, Oklahoma--Pictorial works, and Pawnee (Okla.)--Pictorial works
- Subject (Name):
- Bock, Harry V., 1865-1949, Brendel, Allwilda Belle Griffith, Brendel, Joseph Greenberry, Burns, Hattie Smith, Dillon, Vince, Gillingham, David, Gray Eagle, Hole in the Ground, Knife Chief, Charles, Knife Chief, Maggie, Long Wolf, Jenny, and Moses, John
- Subject (Topic):
- Baptists--Missions--Oklahoma, Baptists--Oklahoma, Indians of North America--Oklahoma--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Portraits, Missionaries--Oklahoma, and Pawnee Indians--Pictorial works
- Found in:
- Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library > Journal of the church clerk and photographs, 1907-1920.
- Creator:
- Bock, Harry V., 1865-1949
Brendel, Allwilda Belle Griffith
Dillon, Vince
Gillingham, David Gray Eagle
Pawnee Indian Baptist Church - Call Number:
- WA MSS S-2546
- Container / Volume:
- Box 1 | Folder 11
- Image Count:
- 2
- Abstract:
- Journal kept in a composition book by clerks of the Pawnee Indian Baptist Church, Pawnee, Oklahoma, and related photographs depicting Pawnee Indian members of the church and other Native Americans, 1907-1920., Photographs in the collection consist primarily of images of members of the church. These images include a group portrait of the congregation at the church, and a group portrait of Maggie Knife Chief and family at the Pawnee Indian Agency School, 1911; group portraits of Pawnee Indians at a meeting of the Oklahoma Indian Baptist Association in Anadarko, Oklahoma, 1912; group portraits of Pawnee Indians at the railroad station at Darrow, Oklahoma, July 1914, with men identified in a portrait as White Horse, Robert Peters, Hole in the Ground, and Lester Pratt, and a receipt for two roundtrip tickets purchased on the St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad from Darrow to Pawnee; and images of a baptism of a man identified as the oldest Oto Indian, 1915., and Portraits of identified Pawnee Indians in the collection include David Gillingham and Hattie Smith Burns, identified as the wife of Benny Burns. Portraits related to Charles Knife Chief include images of him, his children, and of him with John Moses. A portrait of two Pawnee Indian women depicts Nettie Moses and Jenny Long Wolf, who attended the Chilocco Indian Boarding School in Chilocco, Oklahoma. An undated group portrait probably took place at a religious conference meeting and includes Harry Bock.
- Description:
- Manuscript inscription on the recto and verso of photographic prints. and Reverend Joseph Greenberry Brendel (1862-1926) founded the Pawnee Indian Baptist Church on September 20, 1908 and served as its minister until April 20, 1911, when Harry Bock (1865-1949) took charge of the church. Bock worked many years with western showman Gordon W. Lillie, also known as Pawnee Bill, until becoming a Baptist missionary.
- Subject (Geographic):
- Anadarko (Okla.)--Pictorial works, Darrow (Okla.)--Pictorial works, Oklahoma--Pictorial works, and Pawnee (Okla.)--Pictorial works
- Subject (Name):
- Bock, Harry V., 1865-1949, Brendel, Joseph Greenberry, Knife Chief, Charles, and Moses, John
- Subject (Topic):
- Baptists--Missions--Oklahoma, Baptists--Oklahoma, Indians of North America--Oklahoma--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Portraits, Missionaries--Oklahoma, and Pawnee Indians--Pictorial works
- Found in:
- Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library > Journal of the church clerk and photographs, 1907-1920.
- Published / Created:
- ca. 1890.
- Call Number:
- WA PHOTOS 301
- Image Count:
- 14
- Abstract:
- Photographs show groups of Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians posed in front of tipis, tents, and trees, most likely in what is now Oklahoma. A few wear western clothing, and a white man and boy appear in some images. Individuals pictured include Mrs. Scabby Bull, Ethel Black Wolf, Rabbit Run, Wolf Chase, Coal A Fire, Strik-em-First, Singing Man, Jay Gould, Big Timber, and Myrtle Bad Man, among others. Two views of the Arapaho camp and one of the Cheyenne camp are taken from a distance. The album also contains two photographs of Niagara Falls.
- Description:
- Manuscript captions throughout. and Photographer unidentified.
- Subject (Geographic):
- Cheyenne and Arapaho Reservation (Okla.)--Pictorial works, Niagara Falls (N.Y.)--Pictorial works, and Oklahoma--Pictorial works
- Subject (Topic):
- Arapaho Indians--Portraits, Cheyenne Indians--Portraits, Indian reservations--Oklahoma--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Pictorial works, and Tipis--Pictorial works
- Found in:
- Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library > Photograph album of Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians.
- Published / Created:
- ca. 1900.
- Call Number:
- WA Photos 29
- Image Count:
- 101
- Abstract:
- Internal evidence suggests that the album dates before 1902 (the year White Antelope, who is portrayed, died)., Photograph album by an unidentified photographer of Cheyenne, Arapaho and Kiowa Indians, probably taken in or around the Cheyenne-Arapaho Agency in Darlington, Canadian County, Oklahoma. The outdoor scenes include a large number of family groups, women, and children, many identified with Americanized names., and There are also notable images of the baptism of a Kiowa man, the "crow dance," meat drying on racks, Arapaho school girls, and a single image of what appear to be not Indian women but white woman dressed in Indian clothing, identified as "Calumet Squaws" (Calument was a town close to the agency).
- Description:
- Individual photographs measure 10 x 12.5 cm, and have manuscript captions and numbers.
- Subject (Geographic):
- Darlington (Okla.)--Pictorial works
- Subject (Topic):
- Arapaho Indians--Pictorial works, Baptism--Pictorial works.--lctgm, Cheyenne Indians--Pictorial works, Cheyenne-Arapaho Indian Agency (Okla.), Indian reservations--Oklahoma--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Pictorial works, Kiowa Indians--Pictorial works, and Missionaries--Oklahoma--Pictorial works
- Found in:
- Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library > Photograph album of Cheyenne, Arapaho and Kiowa Indians in Oklahoma [graphic].
- Published / Created:
- 1910
- Call Number:
- WA Photos 44
- Image Count:
- 19
- Abstract:
- Photograph album of unidentified views of Indian men dancing and running races, women with children, and Indian children at school, including "before and after" photographs and class portraits.
- Description:
- Individual prints are 11.4 x 9.4 cm. or smaller.
- Subject (Topic):
- Indians of North America--Education--Pictorial works and Indians of North America--Pictorial works
- Found in:
- Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library > Photograph album of Indian ceremonials and schools [graphic].
- Creator:
- Beaman, E. O
Fennemore, James
Hillers, John K., 1843-1925
Powell, John Wesley, 1834-1902 - Published / Created:
- 1871-1874.
- Call Number:
- WA Photos 54
- Image Count:
- 104
- Abstract:
- Finally, there are several views of the Marble Canyon, the Grand Canyon, the Green River, the Virgin River, the Sevier River, Pine Creek, Kanab Creek, and a series of portraits by Hillers of Paiute, Ute and Pueblo Indians. Portraits of Hopi and Zuni Indians were probably taken by Beaman., Photograph album of John Wesley Powell's Second Colorado River Expedition, containing photographs by E. O. Beaman, James Fennemore, and John K. Hillers. The first 118 photographs are attributed to Beaman, and depict the start of the expedition at the Green River Station in Wyoming, and the journey through the Red Canyon, Brown's Park, the Lodore Canyon, the Canyon of Desolation, the Cataract Canyon, and Salt Lake City, Utah., and The next set of photographs in the album was probably taken by James Fennemore, showing views of Powell's expedition after his departure from Salt Lake City. They illustrate the journey from the mouth of the Dirty Devil River down through Glen Valley, Nevada.
- Description:
- Individual prints consist of 452 stereo-sized photographs, measuring 7.6 x 11.0 cm. or smaller, 52 larger photographs, measuring 18.5 x 10.9 cm. or smaller, and 5 photographs measuring 24.2 x 18.2 cm. or smaller. The photographs are generally not captioned. Attribution is based on secondary sources. and Insect damage to some pages, not affecting photographs.
- Subject (Geographic):
- Cataract Canyon Wilderness (Utah)--Pictorial works, Colorado River (Colo.-Mexico)--Pictorial works, Grand Canyon (Ariz.)--Pictorial works, and United States--Exploring expeditions
- Subject (Name):
- Powell, John Wesley,--1834-1902
- Subject (Topic):
- Hopi Indians--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Pictorial works, Paiute Indians--Pictorial works, Ute Indians--Pictorial works, and Zuni Indians--Pictorial works
- Found in:
- Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library > Photograph album of John Wesley Powell's Second Colorado River Expedition [graphic].
- Creator:
- Buechel, Eugene
- Published / Created:
- ca. 1928-1931.
- Call Number:
- WA Photos 345
- Image Count:
- 51
- Abstract:
- Events documented include horseback trips to the White River, a powwow with traditional Lakota costume and dancing, mourners at a cemetery, Lakota women on horseback, and games of football and basketball. Images documenting agricultural events include threshing wheat and castrating calves., Informal portraits include individuals, couples, and groups. Specific student groups including a group of young women from Holy Rosary Mission school, the St. Francis Mission marching band, the St. Francis Mission football team, a dance troupe of girls, and a student theatrical group at the St. Francis Mission in costume and wearing blackface makeup. Informal portraits also depict Lakota people wearing modern and traditional costumes, in addition to Anglo American people wearing traditional Lakota costumes. The only identified individual is Peter Scherer, who directed the St. Francis Mission marching band in 1930-1931., Other images include exterior views of the missions, homes, farms, and oil wells, while interiors views exist of a gymnasium and dining halls at the missions., Photograph album of images created by Eugene Buechel of Oglala Lakota and Sicangu Lakota people and environs in southern South Dakota, ca. 1928-1931., and The Jesuit priest, Eugene Buechel (1874-1954) served as a superior at the mission schools of Holy Rosary Mission (1908-1916), Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, and St. Francis Mission (1916-1923), Rosebud Indian Reservation, afterwards working to document Lakota language and culture in the region until his death.
- Description:
- Manuscript captions in German on the verso of several photographs, which are available on photocopies provided with the album. and Photographs in album 8.7 x 14.8 cm. and smaller.
- Subject (Geographic):
- Pine Ridge Indian Reservation (S.D.)--Pictorial works and Rosebud Indian Reservation (S.D.)--Pictorial works
- Subject (Name):
- Buechel, Eugene, Catholic Church--Missions--South Dakota, Jesuits--Missions--Pine Ridge Indian Reservation (S.D.), Jesuits--Missions--Rosebud Indian Reservation (S.D.), and Scherer, Peter,--band director
- Subject (Topic):
- Brulé Indians--Pictorial works, Cemeteries--South Dakota--Pictorial works, Dakota Indians--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Rites and ceremonies--Pictorial works, Mission schools, Oglala Indians--Pictorial works, and Teton Indians--Pictorial works
- Found in:
- Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library > Photograph album of Lakota Indians in southern South Dakota.
- Creator:
- Schwemberger, George Charles, 1867-1931
Schwemberger, Simeon - Published / Created:
- c1905-c1906.
- Call Number:
- WA Photos 28
- Image Count:
- 53
- Abstract:
- Photographs of Navajo medicine and sweat lodge ceremonies, including views of the construction of the lodges, preparations for the ceremonies, sandpaintings, and participants. There are also photographs of family groups, the ruins in Canyon de Chelly, sheep and goat herds, and of foot and horse racing.
- Description:
- George Schwemberger joined the Franciscan order as a lay brother, adopting the name Simeon and moving to the mission at St. Michael's, Arizona in 1901. In late 1907 he left St. Michael's to open a photo gallery in Gallup, New Mexico. and Individual photographs are 11.6 x 16.6 cm., with copyright statement inscribed. Letterpress or manuscript captions accompany each photograph, 32 of which form a numbered series with descriptive captions.
- Publisher:
- Simeon Schwemberger,
- Subject (Geographic):
- Chelly, Canyon de (Ariz.)--Pictorial works
- Subject (Topic):
- Indians of North America--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Rites and ceremonies, Navajo Indians--Pictorial works, Navajo Indians--Rites and ceremonies, and Sweatbaths--Pictorial works.--aat
- Found in:
- Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library > Photograph album of Navajo medicine lodge ceremonies. [graphic].