Visual Materials
Pedro Rios, San Juan vaquero
You might also be interested in

Construction of breakwater, San Pedro
Visual Materials
Photo of a man and railroad crane on trestle next to the rocks of the breakwater.
photCL Pierce 05735

Beacon St. between 5th and 6th looking east, San Pedro
Visual Materials
A street scene with a dirt road lined with shops and people along the street. A man on a bicycle rides towards the viewer.
photCL Pierce 05625

The Times Los Angeles Fiesta Number Los Angeles, April 25, 1897
Visual Materials
Image of a man dressed in Mexican ethnic costume on horseback with arm outstretched; flowers in the air and underfoot give a festive atmosphere to the scene printed on the cover of a special Los Angeles Times Fiesta Number issue commemorating La Fiesta de Los Angeles, a great Southern California carnival held in the spring of 1897.
priJLC_FAIR_001698

Captain Pedro Publo, Pechango Indian at his home
Visual Materials
An adobe house with Captain Pedro Publo and other Indian men and women and a young boy. One of the Indians is on horseback.
photCL Pierce 01717
Image not available
Old tile roof, San Juan [Mission San Juan Capistrano]
Visual Materials
This disbound album contains 123 photographs taken by photographer A. Frank Randall between 1883 and 1888. The images include studio and field photographs of Apache Indians taken during the United States military campaign to capture Apache renegades during the Apache Wars. The majority of Randall's photographs are portraits of men, women, and children from various Apache tribes in Arizona and New Mexico. Among these photographs are images of a fox tamer; a fiddler; a flutist; a well-dressed, possibly high ranking Apache man; medicine men; young girls; mothers and their infant children; and Apache chiefs. Portraits of United States Army officers and scouts include Nelson A. Miles, Leonard Wood, Wilber E. Wilder, Roger Ames, Henry W. Lawton, William A. Thompson, Amos S. Kimball, John A. Dapray, Thomas J. Clay, Frank P. Bennett, Buffalo Jack, an Arizona female scout, and Apache scouts. Randall also included photographs of Rancho Camulos, many of which show people dramatizing scenes from Helen Hunt Jackson's novel "Ramona." Antonio Franco Coronel appears in some scenes. Other images include views of Missions Santa Barbara and San Juan Capistrano, what may be Vasquez Creek and Tujunga Canyon near Los Angeles, and views of Guaymas, Mexico.
photCL 101
