Table of Contents Table of Contents
Previous Page  15 / 186 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 15 / 186 Next Page
Page Background

14

(AMERICAN INDIANS—

PHOTOGRAPHS.)

Group of 3 portrait

photographs by Stimson and Throssel.

Various sizes and conditions as described;

mount remnants on verso.

Vp, 1899-1911

[1,000/1,500]

Throssel, Richard; photographer. [Two Leggins,

Chief of River Crows.] 8

1

/

2

x 6

1

/

2

inches; num-

bered and dated in the negative “bto28 1911”

with the photographer’s arrowhead mark; later

print from Throssel’s original negative, per

printed description laid in; red ink stain in cap-

tion area. Billings, MT: Throssel Photocraft,

1911 * Stimson, Joseph Elam; photographer.

Notah (Shoshone). 9

1

/

2

x 7

1

/

2

inches; numbered

139, dated and captioned in the negative; two

short tears. Cheyenne, WY, 1899 * Stimson.

Wife of Henry Lee (Arapahoe). 9

1

/

2

x 7

1

/

2

inches; numbered 140, dated and captioned in

the negative. Cheyenne,WY 1900.

14

14

12

(AMERICAN INDIANS—PHOTOGRAPHS.) Rinehart, FrankA.

PlentyWounded.

Platinum print, 13 x 9

1

/

2

inches, unmounted; minimal wear, two tack holes in upper margin;

captioned, numbered 1876, and signed in the negative.

Omaha, NE, 1898

[700/1,000]

Photograph of a Lakota Sioux man. Larger than the usual Rinehart prints.

13

(AMERICAN INDIANS—PHOTOGRAPHS.)

Keokuk, or the Watchful Fox,

Sac & Fox * Young Black Dog, Osage.

Pair of albumen photographs, each about 5

1

/

4

x

4 inches, on original printed cabinet card mounts of the Department of the Interior U. S.

Geological & Geographical Survey of the Territories; each captioned in the negatives, with

moderate wear.

Np, circa 1877

[600/900]

The Keokuk image comes from a March 1847 daguerreotype by Thomas Easterly in St. Louis.Young

Black Dog’s photograph has been attributed to Charles M. Bell circa 1877.

13