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Walapai - Chief Shurum's blind wife wearing his insignia of office



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  • How to make a fire - Walapai

    How to make a fire - Walapai

    Visual Materials

    George Wharton James, seated, with writing pad, listening to Hualapai Indians demonstrating and explaining how to make a fire. A non-Indian man is seen in the background inside what may be a trading post or store.

    photCL Pierce 02481

  • How to make a fire - Walapai

    How to make a fire - Walapai

    Visual Materials

    George Wharton James, seated, with writing pad, listening to Hualapai Indians demonstrating and explaining how to make a fire.

    photCL Pierce 02487

  • Wife and child of Selawik chief

    Wife and child of Selawik chief

    Visual Materials

    Image of an Indian woman and child.

    photCL 131 (247)

  • Image not available

    Apache Indians and baskets; Tohono O'Odham (Papago) school girls; Hualapai (Walapai) Indians; basket-weavers

    Visual Materials

    A collection of photographs and postcards focusing on Navajo and Hopi Indians and various Indian schools and schoolchildren throughout Arizona, mostly in ca. 1927. There are views of Peach Springs Trading Post, the Cameron Suspension Bridge trading post, missions at Chinle and Lukachukai (Arizona), Navajo family groups, Navajo schools at Tuba City and Oraibi (Arizona), and Navajo school crafts fairs and exhibits. Acoma, Apache, Tohono O'Odham (Papago), and Hualapai Indians are also represented. The photographs were taken from 1890 to 1927, but the bulk of the collection was created during the 1920s. Includes some photographs by George Wharton James, E.E. Hall, and Burton Frasher (Frasher Fotos). These images of Indians were taken as both posed and candid field photographs, in particular of young Navajo schoolchildren during class time and outside of school. Other subjects pictured are L.H. McSparron, owner of Thunderbird Ranch and acting custodian of Canyon de Chelly; Father Leopold Ostermann, the founder of the mission at Chinle; possibly John Lorenzo Hubbell Jr., of the Hubbell trading family; an Indian all-boys track-and-field team at an unidentified school; Indian schoolchildren; and nature views throughout Arizona. The photographs have been arranged by Indian tribe, starting with the tribe with the most photographs and/or postcards. Navajo Indians appear first in the arrangement, followed by Hopi, Apache, and other Southwestern tribes with fewer photographs. Within each tribe, photographs and postcards have been further organized by individual tribe members, activities, crafts, associated communities, and schools. Images of Caucasian people involved in Indian trade, trading posts, and unidentified Indian schools and students are placed at the end of this collection. Russell also collected postcards with images of Southwest Indians, with some cards having correspondence from Russell, addressed to Beatrice Madelleine, Mrs. George R. Simmons, and Madeleine Touchaux (Russell's wife), describing how travel conditions were as well as opinions on the Indians that were encountered.

    photCL 399

  • Hackberry missionary and Wallapai [sic] family

    Hackberry missionary and Wallapai [sic] family

    Visual Materials

    Group portrait of Caucasian missionary with Hualapai family, possibly a mother and her two children, with cradle-board at right. The missionary is holding a group of keys and wearing heavy leather gloves.

    photCL Pierce 02449

  • Juana, wife of Captain Francisco Torres, Cahuilla Indians of the Colorado desert

    Juana, wife of Captain Francisco Torres, Cahuilla Indians of the Colorado desert

    Visual Materials

    A viewof a seated Indian woman dressed in ragged clothes; her shirt held together with safety pins.

    photCL Pierce 01777