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42.
- Creator:
- Northwestern Photographic Co.
- Published / Created:
- 1890-1891.
- Call Number:
- WA Photos 221
- Image Count:
- 36
- Abstract:
- Images created by George Trager and distributed by the Northwestern Photographic Company of views of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, South Dakota, including portraits of Dakota Indians and United States Army personnel, and the aftermath of the Wounded Knee Massacre, 1890-1891, Views of Dakota Indian encampments, include the Camp of Chief Fast Thunder and an overview of the United States Army disarming Dakota Indians on January 21, 1891. Other general views include Dakota Indians waiting to receive government rations on the platform of the reservation commissary and an interior of a frame house built for Chief Red Cloud in 1879, Portraits of Native Americans include a posed portrait of Little Chief, a Northern Cheyenne Indian, which depicts him giving his rifle to James H. Cook. Other discrete portraits of Dakota Indians include Young Man Afraid and Big Road in front of tipis, and an undernourished Dakota Indian woman recuperating in a tipi. Group portraits of Dakota Indians on horseback include Big Talk, Crazy Bear, Good Lance, High Hawk, Hollow Wood, Stinking Bear, and Two Strike, Views of United States Army encampments include the Second Infantry, the Sixth Cavalry, and the Seventh Cavalry, Images related to the Wounded Knee Massacre Include views the battlefield that show frozen bodies of Dakota Indians on the snow covered ground with the civilian burial party in January 1891, A group portrait of General Nelson A. Miles and his staff on January 13, 1891, includes Dallas Bache, Frank D. Baldwin, Sydney A. Cloman, Henry C. Corbin, Ezra P. Ewers, Charles F. Humphrey, Francis J. Ives, Jacob Ford Kent, John S. Mallory, Marion P. Maus, and Francis E. Pierce, and A group portrait of ten men in March 1891 includes five Dakota Indians, consisting of Big Talk, Good Lance, Kicking Bear, Short Bull, and Two Strike, as well as Major John Burke, the press manager of Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show; Frank Grouard, an Indian Scout in the United States Army; and John A. McDonough, a reporter for the New York World newspaper
- Description:
- George E. Trager began photographing army officers and Dakota Indians at the Pine Ridge Reservation in March, 1890. He later formed a partnership with Joseph Ford to sell photographs of Pine Ridge, including images following the Wounded Knee Massacre, and founded the Northwestern Photographic Company in January, 1891. In March 1891 they gained a half interest in Wilbur Springs, a source of mineral water, which they advertised as a cure for epilepsy on the verso of their photographs., Verso of two photographs carry advertisements for the Northwestern Photographic Co., Verso of six photographs carry advertisements for the Northwestern Photographic Co. and Trager & Ford's epilepsy cure., and Captions inscribed in negatives.
- Subject (Geographic):
- South Dakota, Pine Ridge, and Pine Ridge Indian Reservation (S.D.)
- Subject (Name):
- Ford, Joseph, fl. 1890-1892., Trager, George E., Buffalo Bill's Wild West Company, Northwestern Photographic Co., and United States. Army. Cavalry, 7th.
- Subject (Topic):
- Dakota Indians, Indians of North America, Indian reservations, and Wounded Knee Massacre, S.D., 1890
- Found in:
- Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library > Views of people and camps at the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, South Dakota
43.
- Published / Created:
- ca. 1870-1898.
- Call Number:
- WA Photos 89
- Image Count:
- 60
- Abstract:
- Photographs by William Henry Jackson and others of Utah, Colorado, Wyoming, and Idaho, including views in Utah of the San Juan and Colorado Rivers, the Great Natural Bridge, the Great Dragon Rock, Echo and Marble Canyons and Monument Park. There are also photographs of the Garden of the Gods and Uncompagre peak in the San Juan mountains of Colorado, and views of the Yellowstone River and of the Badlands in Wyoming, and Port Neuf Canyon in Idaho. In Mexico, there is a view of Popcatapetl peak
- Description:
- William Henry Holmes was a topographic artist with the Geological and Geographical Survey of the Territories under Ferdinand V. Hayden. In 1872 and again in 1878 he was with Hayden in the Yellowstone, and in 1874 he and the photographer William Henry Jackson explored the Mesa Verde region of Colorado. Holmes headed a division exploring the San Juan Region of Colorado in 1875, and was later in Idaho., Holmes continued his work as a geologist and topographer with the United States Geological Survey in the Grand Canyon in 1880, and his topographic drawings became the basic illustrations for Clarence E. Dutton's 'Tertiary History of the Grand Canyon.' He later served as chief of archaeological field work with the Bureau of Ethnology, Smithsonian Institution., and Manuscript captions written on verso of many photographs and inscribed into negatives of others. The single photograph by G. Wharton James bears a Bureau of Ethnology stamp.
- Subject (Geographic):
- Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Yellowstone River, Grand Canyon (Ariz.), and West (U.S.)
- Subject (Name):
- Holmes, William Henry, 1846-1933.
- Found in:
- Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library > W. H. Holmes collection of photographs of Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Wyoming Territories and Mexico [graphic].
44.
- Creator:
- Locke, H. R., photographer
- Published / Created:
- [circa 1892-1896]
- Call Number:
- WA Photos 127
- Container / Volume:
- Box 1
- Image Count:
- 32
- Resource Type:
- still image
- Abstract:
- Photographs taken by H. R. Locke and printed by H. R. Locke and Company, Locke and McBride, or Locke and Peterson of stops along the Burlington and Missouri River Railroad in South Dakota, Montana, and Wyoming, circa 1892-1896. Included are views of Deadwood, Lead City, Englewood, Needle Points in Custer Park, Horseshoe Curve near Custer, Spearfish Canyon, Bald Mountain, Knife Blade on Needle Rock in Elk Canyon, Harney's Peak (Black Elk Peak) in Black Hills, the Deadwood and Delaware Smelting Works and Homestake mines, and a photograph of I. V. Carlton, R. M. Welch, and D. A. Haggard "just back from work". Views in Wyoming show the Devil's Tower above the Belle Fourche River and Cambria; a view in Montana shows the Crow Agency. Advertisements on several of the versos are for "Easy to Reach Deadwood"; 2 photographs are stamped "J. T. Gillmore, Deadwood, South Dakota". A label affixed to a verso advertises E. F. King, Black Hills Jeweler
- Description:
- Henry Robinson Locke (1856-1927), photographer, ran a studio in Deadwood, South Dakota. Locke photographed the Black Hills area, Deadwood, Crow people, miners, and railroads., Captions in English., Title devised by cataloger., and Place of creation and date from captions.
- Subject (Geographic):
- Montana., Black Elk Peak (S.D.), Black Hills (S.D. and Wyo.), Cambria (Wyo.), Crow Agency (Mont.), Custer State Park (S.D.), Deadwood (S.D.), Lead (S.D.), South Dakota, and Spearfish Canyon (S.D.)
- Subject (Name):
- Carlton, I. V., Gillmore, J. T., Haggard, D. A., Locke, H. R., Welch, R. M., Burlington and Missouri River Railroad Company, Delaware Smelting (Deadwood, S.D.), H. R. Locke and Co., Homestake Gold Stamping Mill (Lead City, S.D.), Locke and McBride., and Locke and Peterson.
- Subject (Topic):
- Crow Indians and Indians of North America
- Found in:
- Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library > [Photographs of South Dakota and Wyoming].