Photograph album relating to the Phoenix Indian School in Phoenix, Arizona. Included are views of both male and female students as they participate in several activities, among them a dress parade, a gardening project at the school, the girls' basketball practices, and military-type drills and in band uniforms with their instruments. Also included are views of the graduating classes of 1903 and 1904, as well as a photograph of the faculty.
Description:
C. W. Goodman was superintendent of the Phoenix Indian School between 1902 and 1915. and Manuscript captions accompany most photographs.
Subject (Name):
Brodie, Alexander O. (Alexander Oswald), 1849-1918, Goodman, C. W, and Phoenix Indian School--Pictorial works
Subject (Topic):
Indians of North America--Arizona, Indians of North America--Education--Pictorial works, and Indians of North America--Pictorial works
Argentum Photographic Services Fiske, Frank Bennett, 1883-1952 North Dakota Heritage Foundation Stemmens, Red. Frank Fiske and western photography Vyzralek, Frank. Frank Bennett Fiske
Published / Created:
1983
Call Number:
WA Photos Folio 50
Container / Volume:
Box 1
Image Count:
32
Abstract:
Accompanying leaflets consist of essays, "Frank Bennett Fiske," by Frank Vyzralek, and "Frank Fiske and Western Photography," by Rod Stemmens., Exterior portraits of Lakota men consist of an image of White Bull posed standing in a meadow holding a calumet, and an image of a man posed standing, wearing a feather headdress, and holding a bow, beaded quiver, and lance. An exterior view shows two council tipis decorated with depictions of horses., Group portraits of Lakota men include two Lakota men identified as wranglers, and an image of two Lakota men holding the outstretched wings of a dead golden eagle, with a man holding a rifle identified as Herbert Keeps Eagle. An additional studio portrait of nine unidentified men consists of three Lakota men and six white men in clerical dress, identified as priests at the mission., Lakota men portrayed include Black Bear, Gray Hawk, Iron Star, Kicks Iron, Kicks the Iron, One Bull, Rain in the Face, Red Fish, Red Fox, Sharp Horn Bull, White Bear, and Yellow Hawk. Studio portraits of Joe No Heart show him wearing traditional regalia in one and wearing contemporary clothing and a police badge in another. An additional studio portrait depicts Fiske as a child, holding a rifle, dressed in a fringed buckskin jacket and pants., Portraits originally created by Frank Bennett Fiske, primarily of Lakota (Teton) Indians, ca. 1895-1930. Most of the images were created at his photographic studio at Fort Yates, North Dakota, and most of the Lakota people in the images lived on the Standing Rock Agency. The photographic prints in these portfolios were printed from original and copy negatives by Argentum Photographic Services, Seattle, Washington, under the auspices of the North Dakota Heritage Society from original photographs in the Frank Fiske Photograph Collection of the State Historical Society of North Dakota,1983., Studio portraits of Lakota families include Paul Brave, his wife and their daughter; Red Fish and his daughters; and a family consisting of a man and two women with one of the women holding a coyote pup., and Studio portraits of Lakota girls and women include Mrs. Chasing Bear, Mrs. Jack Treetop, a girl from the Dunn family, and Mrs. Twin and her daughter.
Description:
In 2 boxes; box 1 digitized in its entirety. and Titles on cards mounted on cases: Portfolio I, Portfolio II. The Portfolio I card includes a reproduction of the image of Kicks Iron. The Portfolio I card includes a reproduction of the image of an unidentified man posed standing.
Publisher:
North Dakota Heritage Society,
Subject (Geographic):
Fort Yates (N.D.)--Pictorial works
Subject (Name):
Dunn family--Portraits, Fiske, Frank Bennett,--1883-1952, Fiske, Frank Bennett,--1883-1952--Portraits, Gray Hawk--Portraits, Iron Star--Portraits, Joe No Heart--Portraits, Kicks Iron--Portraits, Kicks the Iron--Portraits, and Loon--Portraits
Subject (Topic):
Coyote--Pictorial works, Golden eagle--Pictorial works, Indian women--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--North Dakota--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--North Dakota--Portraits, Teton Indians--Pictorial works, Teton Indians--Portraits, and Tipis--Pictorial works
Identified individuals include Anna Eustis, a Pawnee woman from Oklahoma, and a Brulé Sioux woman identified as the wife of Keeps the Mountain, probably Good Looking Woman. The unidentified woman wears a kerchief on her head and long beaded earrings., Studio portrait photographs of three Native American women and two Native American men., and Two of the photographs depict men with moustaches, possibly the same man. In one image he wears a paper pin on his lapel advertising "Banner Buggies", of the Banner Buggy Company, St. Louis, Missouri. In the other image he wears a round pin with a star-shaped symbol printed upon it.
Subject (Name):
Banner Buggy Co, Eustis, Anna, and Good Looking Woman,--1859-
Subject (Topic):
Brulé Indians--Pictorial works, Brulé Indians--Portraits, Indians of North America--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Portraits, Pawnee Indians--Pictorial works, and Pawnee Indians--Portraits
Photographs by William Hillman Shockley that document a trip to Peru, May-October 1903, probably in support of mining interests. Images include views of urban and rural areas throughout Peru, as well as mining camps. Locations photographed by Shockley en route to and from Peru include Colón, Panama; Puente del Inca and Aconcagua in Argentina, and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Locations in Peru include Ancón, Arequipa, Asilio, Huanchaco, Juliaca, Limbani, Matucana, Monte Bello, Paita Bay, Salaverry, Santo Domingo, and Tirapata. Depictions also include the Vacamayo River and Surprise River, as well as the mountains of Huascarán Mountain and Las Cuevas. Informal portraits consist of indigenous peoples, including Aymara Indians and Quechua Indians, and self-portraits of Shockley and his colleagues.
Description:
Purchased from Serendipity Books on the Edwin J. Beinecke Book Fund, 2007., Several images have duplicate photographic prints., Title devised by cataloger., Typescript and manuscript inscription on versos., and William Hillman Shockley (1855-1925) was a mining engineer and botanist. His son was William Bradford Shockley (1910-1989), winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1956.
Subject (Geographic):
Aconcagua (Argentina : Mountain)--Pictorial works, Ancón (Peru)--Pictorial works, Arequipa (Peru)--Pictorial works, Asilio (Peru)--Pictorial works, Colón (Panama)--Pictorial works, Huanchaco (La Libertad, Peru)--Pictorial works, Huascarán Mountain (Peru)--Pictorial works, Juliaca (Peru)--Pictorial works, Limbani (Peru)--Pictorial works, Matucana (Peru)--Pictorial works, Monte Bello (Peru)--Pictorial works, Paita Bay (Peru)--Pictorial works, Peru--Pictorial works, Puente del Inca (Argentina)--Pictorial works, Rio de Janeiro (Brazil)--Pictorial works, Salaverry (Peru)--Pictorial works, Santo Domingo (Piura, Peru : District)--Pictorial works, Tirapata (Peru)--Pictorial works, and Vacamayo River (Peru)--Pictorial works
Subject (Name):
Shockley, William Hillman,--1855-1925
Subject (Topic):
Aymara Indians--Pictorial works, Indians of South America--Andes Region--Pictorial works, Mines and mineral resources--Peru--Pictorial works, and Quechua Indians--Pictorial works
Photographs by William Hillman Shockley that document a trip to Peru, May-October 1903, probably in support of mining interests. Images include views of urban and rural areas throughout Peru, as well as mining camps. Locations photographed by Shockley en route to and from Peru include Colón, Panama; Puente del Inca and Aconcagua in Argentina, and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Locations in Peru include Ancón, Arequipa, Asilio, Huanchaco, Juliaca, Limbani, Matucana, Monte Bello, Paita Bay, Salaverry, Santo Domingo, and Tirapata. Depictions also include the Vacamayo River and Surprise River, as well as the mountains of Huascarán Mountain and Las Cuevas. Informal portraits consist of indigenous peoples, including Aymara Indians and Quechua Indians, and self-portraits of Shockley and his colleagues.
Description:
Purchased from Serendipity Books on the Edwin J. Beinecke Book Fund, 2007., Several images have duplicate photographic prints., Title devised by cataloger., Typescript and manuscript inscription on versos., and William Hillman Shockley (1855-1925) was a mining engineer and botanist. His son was William Bradford Shockley (1910-1989), winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1956.
Subject (Geographic):
Aconcagua (Argentina : Mountain)--Pictorial works, Ancón (Peru)--Pictorial works, Arequipa (Peru)--Pictorial works, Asilio (Peru)--Pictorial works, Colón (Panama)--Pictorial works, Huanchaco (La Libertad, Peru)--Pictorial works, Huascarán Mountain (Peru)--Pictorial works, Juliaca (Peru)--Pictorial works, Limbani (Peru)--Pictorial works, Matucana (Peru)--Pictorial works, Monte Bello (Peru)--Pictorial works, Paita Bay (Peru)--Pictorial works, Peru--Pictorial works, Puente del Inca (Argentina)--Pictorial works, Rio de Janeiro (Brazil)--Pictorial works, Salaverry (Peru)--Pictorial works, Santo Domingo (Piura, Peru : District)--Pictorial works, Tirapata (Peru)--Pictorial works, and Vacamayo River (Peru)--Pictorial works
Subject (Name):
Shockley, William Hillman,--1855-1925
Subject (Topic):
Aymara Indians--Pictorial works, Indians of South America--Andes Region--Pictorial works, Mines and mineral resources--Peru--Pictorial works, and Quechua Indians--Pictorial works
Photographs of Salt Lake City and Great Salt Lake resorts, Utah.
Container / Volume:
Box 1 | Folder 8
Image Count:
4
Abstract:
Photographs created by Frank H. King, a photographer from Richfield, Utah, of locations in Salt Lake City, Utah, ca. 1892. Images consist of views of the gravesite and residences of Brigham Young, including the Beehive and Lion houses, and the Gardo House. Other scenes include the Salt Lake City and County Building, interiors of the Mormon Tabernacle, and a location identified as Rose Bank Cottage in the 20th Ward of Salt Lake City. The collection also includes views of the pavilion at Saltair Resort, including a photograph of a drawing, and of the Garfield Beach Resort, administered by the Union Pacific Railway Company, featuring surf bathers and the mooring of a large steamboat, probably the General Garfield, also known as the City of Corinne.
Alternative Title:
Saltair Resort
Subject (Geographic):
Salt Lake City (Utah)--Pictorial works
Subject (Name):
King, Frank H and Saltair Resort (Utah)--Pictorial works
Photographs of the Apache Indian Reservation in San Carlos, Arizona, including views of the new guardhouse, a scouts camp, and Indian children at school.
Description:
Manuscript captions on verso of some mounts.
Subject (Geographic):
San Carlos Indian Reservation (Ariz.)--Pictorial works
Subject (Topic):
Apache Indians--Pictorial works, Indian reservations--Arizona--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Arizona, and Indians of North America--Pictorial works
Also included are portraits of school children at the mission school at Unalaska, and of native Aleutes [sic] and Esquimo [sic] aboard ship and in villages and of their dwellings, boats and totems. and Some views are commercially produced, though most appear to be personal photographs. There are individual and group portraits of the crews, passengers and officers of several ships, both on board and on shore, and a listing of the crew of the Bear appears on the fly leaf of the album. The photographs also record whalers and other ships encountered along the way.
Description:
Alfred L. Broadbent (A.L.B.?) was an engineer on the U.S.S. Bear, a revenue cutter active in the Arctic during the 1890s. and Photographs are accompanied by manuscript captions. Of the loose photographs, most are inscribed with the initials "A.L.B" with the exception of single images credited to Curtis of Seattle, T. Saiki, and McMurry of Port Townsend, Washington Territory.
Subject (Geographic):
Alaska--Pictorial works and Unalaska (Alaska)
Subject (Name):
Bear (Ship) and Broadbent, Alfred L
Subject (Topic):
Indians of North America--Alaska and Indians of North America--Pictorial works
Alfred L. Broadbent (A.L.B.?) was an engineer on the U.S.S. Bear, a revenue cutter active in the Arctic during the 1890s. and Photographs are accompanied by manuscript captions. Of the loose photographs, most are inscribed with the initials "A.L.B" with the exception of single images credited to Curtis of Seattle, T. Saiki, and McMurry of Port Townsend, Washington Territory.
Subject (Geographic):
Alaska--Pictorial works and Unalaska (Alaska)
Subject (Name):
Bear (Ship), Broadbent, Alfred L, and World’s Columbian Exposition (1893 : Chicago, Ill.)
Subject (Topic):
Indians of North America--Alaska and Indians of North America--Pictorial works