1.
- Creator:
- Hoard & Tenney (Winona, Minn.)
Martin's Art Gallery
Upton, Benjamin Franklin, 1818-
Whitney, Joel E. (Joel Emmons), 1822-1886
Whitney's Gallery - Published / Created:
- 1857-1863 [i.e. 1865]
- Call Number:
- WA Photos 281
- Image Count:
- 38
- Abstract:
- Carte-de-visite photographs of Sioux and Chippewa Indians in Minnesota, Fort Snelling, Fort Garry; of Red River train carts in St. Paul; and of people escaping from the Red River uprising. There are many portraits of Sioux Indians, some of them identified as having been executed for their part in the Red River massacre. There are also images of Sioux Indians in camps, of Chippewa chiefs, as well as of an Indian school run by "Miss Allen," and of Sioux Indian boys at the Bishop Seabury Mission School in Faribault, Minnesota. Photographers include Joel E. Whitney, Benjamin F. Upton, Hoard & Tenney, and S. J. Morrow. Many of the photographs are on Martin's Art Gallery mounts, or variants: Martin's Gallery of Indian Portraits, Martin's Gallery of Minnesota Views.
- Alternative Title:
- Martin's Gallery of Indian Portraits., Martin's Gallery of Minnesota Views., Upton's Collection of Photographic Views., and Upton's Series of Minnesota Views.
- Description:
- Album rebound by Conservation Studio so that verso captions may be seen. Original photograph sleeves have been retained for caption information., Manuscript and letterpress captions on mounts., and Title and dates from typescript title page.
- Subject (Geographic):
- Minnesota--History--Pictorial works
- Subject (Name):
- Bishop Seabury Mission
- Subject (Topic):
- Dakota Indians--Portraits, Dakota Indians--Wars, 1862-1865--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Minnesota, Indians of North America--Portraits, and Prisoners--Portraits
- Found in:
- Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library > The Sioux uprising and massacre of 1862 : a collection of original photographic prints including important scenes and events in the early history of the Northwest / by pioneer photographers Joel E. Whitney and B.F. Upton, 1857-1863.