Julia Ethel Toops Tuell was the wife of a schoolmaster on reservation schools where she taught home economics, served as a field nurse, and raised four children. She began taking photographs in 1906 on the Northern Cheyenne reservation at Lame Deer, Montana, and continued when she lived with the Sioux Indians on the Rosebud Reservation east of the Black Hills in South Dakota. Although a sideline, she made numerous photographs of Native American life for more than two decades. Tuell used an eight-by-ten-inch glass-plate camera, an unusual choice given its bulk, heavy weight, and cumbersomeness. Smaller cameras had been around since the 1870s, and Eastman had introduced snapshot cameras that used roll-film in the 1880s. She may have preferred...
This book presents the photographs of Annette Ross Hume (1858-1933), a pioneer of Oklahoma and one o...
In November 1876, Colonel Ranald Mackenzie led a successful attack on a Northern Cheyenne village in...
In 1995 Alan Boye, an English professor at Lyndon State College in Vermont, began a thousand-mile jo...
Julia Ethel Toops Tuell was the wife of a schoolmaster on reservation schools where she taught home ...
This publication-based on the award-winning reinterpretation and reinstallation in 2000 of the Plain...
Sara Wiles’s photographs offer a glimpse of life on the Wind River Indian Reservation. Her portrayal...
Review of: "Twenty-five Years among the Indians and Buffalo: A Frontier Memoir", by William D. Stree...
In the larger context of Plains Indian history, the Northern Cheyenne seem to drop from public consc...
The Minneapolis Institute of Art opened an exhibit in the fall of 1992 titled Visions of the People:...
In the larger context of Plains Indian history, the Northern Cheyenne seem to drop from public consc...
Review of: Visions of the People: A Pictorial History of Plains Indian Life. Maurer, Evan M., ed
When my copy of A Northern Cheyenne Album arrived, I was immediately taken back to a day more than t...
In 1874 and 1875, whites, lured by the discovery of gold in the Black Hills, poured into the norther...
In 1922 a white physician working on the Northern Cheyenne Reservation began taking photographs of t...
Growing out of work for a major exhibition at the Canadian Museum of Civilization, where Morgan Bail...
This book presents the photographs of Annette Ross Hume (1858-1933), a pioneer of Oklahoma and one o...
In November 1876, Colonel Ranald Mackenzie led a successful attack on a Northern Cheyenne village in...
In 1995 Alan Boye, an English professor at Lyndon State College in Vermont, began a thousand-mile jo...
Julia Ethel Toops Tuell was the wife of a schoolmaster on reservation schools where she taught home ...
This publication-based on the award-winning reinterpretation and reinstallation in 2000 of the Plain...
Sara Wiles’s photographs offer a glimpse of life on the Wind River Indian Reservation. Her portrayal...
Review of: "Twenty-five Years among the Indians and Buffalo: A Frontier Memoir", by William D. Stree...
In the larger context of Plains Indian history, the Northern Cheyenne seem to drop from public consc...
The Minneapolis Institute of Art opened an exhibit in the fall of 1992 titled Visions of the People:...
In the larger context of Plains Indian history, the Northern Cheyenne seem to drop from public consc...
Review of: Visions of the People: A Pictorial History of Plains Indian Life. Maurer, Evan M., ed
When my copy of A Northern Cheyenne Album arrived, I was immediately taken back to a day more than t...
In 1874 and 1875, whites, lured by the discovery of gold in the Black Hills, poured into the norther...
In 1922 a white physician working on the Northern Cheyenne Reservation began taking photographs of t...
Growing out of work for a major exhibition at the Canadian Museum of Civilization, where Morgan Bail...
This book presents the photographs of Annette Ross Hume (1858-1933), a pioneer of Oklahoma and one o...
In November 1876, Colonel Ranald Mackenzie led a successful attack on a Northern Cheyenne village in...
In 1995 Alan Boye, an English professor at Lyndon State College in Vermont, began a thousand-mile jo...