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Photographs of Europe and Apache women

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    Europe 1983. 32 printed materials

    Manuscripts

    Subjects include: Paris, France (LCSH); Palace of Fontainebleau (LCSH); Geneva (Switzerland) (LCSH); Currency convertibility (LCSH); Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II (Milan, Italy) (LCSH); Verona (Italy) (LCSH); Venice (Italy) (LCSH); Piazza San Marco (Venice, Italy) (LCSH); Florence (Italy) (LCSH)

    mssSmith, Jack papers

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    Apache Mothers. Fort Apache, 1884 [Two Apache women with infants in papooses]

    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

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    Photographs of Sante Fe, New Mexico

    Visual Materials

    Consists of four photographs, two of which are cabinet cards and two of which are stereographs. Subjects include The Governor's Palace, the Church of San Miguel, and San Miguel Collection. W.H. Jackson & Co., Denver, CO is among the photographers. All photographs handwritten annotations, and one has a small illustration of a man on horseback attached.

    photPF 1500-1509

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    Photographs from Watkins' New Cabinet Series

    Visual Materials

    Consists of nine cabinet cards depicting: cactus, carnegiea gigantea in Arizona (Cabinet Series Number 4849); yucca brevifolia in Joshua Tree (Cabinet Series Number 4302); the city of Yuma, Arizona (Cabinet Series Number 4857); and the view over the city of Yuma, Arizona (Cabinet Series Number 4876), Santa Monica Landing (Cabinet Series Number 4506), Mission San Gabriel, (Cabine Series Numbers 4630 and 4631), San Luis Obispo (Cabinet Series Number 4521), and Wilmington Harbor (Cabinet Series Number 4491).

    photPF 1300-1329

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    Caption within photograph: Apache boy and maiden. Randall's caption: White Mountain Apache Squaw

    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

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    Reverend Berry Edmiston collection of photographs of Apache peoples

    Visual Materials

    A collection of 45 photographs (glass plate negatives, lantern slides, and copy prints) of Chiricahua? Apache people at an encampment in Arizona, approximately 1899. Images include Apache men, women, and children in a line outside a federal agency building in San Carlos, Arizona; a woman and man displaying baskets; Apache men standing in a line next to a U.S. Army soldier; brush huts and adobe buildings; Apache men riding horses and holding guns (probably scouts). Three images show Apache men and a boy in poses for the Devil Dance, wearing headdresses, masks, and blankets, and holding weapons. One group portrait depicts Native American and Anglo men and women posed together. There are also five copy photographs of the collector, Reverend Berry Edmiston, and his wife Ednah Lee Edmiston, seen in youth and in old age, including one image of them standing outside their Riverside, California home, approximately 1890s. Box 1 contains copy prints of all the glass plate negatives, and 17 of 30 lantern slides. Some lantern slides are duplicates of the glass plate images.

    photCL 623