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Making tortillas at Queretaro, Mexico



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  • Preparing the family meal of tortillas

    Preparing the family meal of tortillas

    Visual Materials

    A view of two Havasupai women preparing tortillas; one is grinding the flour and the other putting the tortillas on a griddle. A woman with a baby sits and watches as does a small girl. On the other side of the photo an Indian man sits on a log and watches. There are various pots and baskets in view and a railroad track runs in the back ground.

    photCL Pierce 02112

  • [Mexican] family outside adobe. One of the women is making tortillas

    [Mexican] family outside adobe. One of the women is making tortillas

    Visual Materials

    Photo of a family outside an adobe house; a boy sitting in a large pot on left, man seated near doorway, a woman making tortillas, another woman standing, and three children sitting on wood plank on right.

    photCL 449 (79)

  • Yaquis at home before a brush hut, Mexico

    Yaquis at home before a brush hut, Mexico

    Visual Materials

    A Yaqui Indian family seated in front of a brush hut. One woman is making tortillas.

    photCL Pierce 09521

  • Warner’s Ranch Indian women making baskets

    Warner’s Ranch Indian women making baskets

    Visual Materials

    A view of two indian women sitting at the corner of a building making baskets.

    photCL Pierce 01723

  • Image not available

    Photographs of rural Mexico

    Visual Materials

    A group of 13 photographs (small snapshots and photographic postcards) depicting life in rural Mexico in the 1930s and 1940s. The five small photographs (3 x 3.5 inches) are scenes from a parade in a small town on September 16, 1938, Mexican Independence Day. Children are seen carrying a Mexican flag, a decorated truck has a banner that reads "Viva Mexico," and boys and girls are dressed in traditional vaquero attire. They were taken by an unknown photographer and have identifications in Spanish on the back. The eight commercially-made photographic postcards include scenes in Guanajuato; packed burros on narrow cobblestone roads; rows of clay pots, plates and cups alongside buildings; a woman making tortillas; and vaqueros loading hay on a donkey. There are two portraits with captions reading "Tipos Mexicanos," most likely made for the tourist trade. One shows a young man and woman posed next to a large cactus, holding hands, and the other is of a barefoot man wearing a straw poncho around his shoulders.

    photCL 713

  • Image not available

    Photographs of rural Mexico

    Visual Materials

    A group of 13 photographs (small snapshots and photographic postcards) depicting life in rural Mexico in the 1930s and 1940s. The five small photographs (3 x 3.5 inches) are scenes from a parade in a small town on September 16, 1938, Mexican Independence Day. Children are seen carrying a Mexican flag, a decorated truck has a banner that reads "Viva Mexico," and boys and girls are dressed in traditional vaquero attire. They were taken by an unknown photographer and have identifications in Spanish on the back. The eight commercially-made photographic postcards include scenes in Guanajuato; packed burros on narrow cobblestone roads; rows of clay pots, plates and cups alongside buildings; a woman making tortillas; and vaqueros loading hay on a donkey. There are two portraits with captions reading "Tipos Mexicanos," most likely made for the tourist trade. One shows a young man and woman posed next to a large cactus, holding hands, and the other is of a barefoot man wearing a straw poncho around his shoulders.

    photCL 713