A typed label on the reverse of the image identifies it as an "'open air' summer trolley" on Pratt Avenue. The Leupp Art Studio is visible in the background.
Leupp Art Studio
A display of items, such as baskets, and other items in a room decorated with Native-American motifs in the Leupp Art Studio. These items may have been made by students at the school and offered for sale.
The Cumberland County Historical Society has two copies of this image; a print (14B-16-02…
A display of Native American-style rugs, baskets and objects in the Leupp Art Studio. They may be objects made by the students, being offered for sale.
A display of Native American-style objects, hanging on display. They may be objects made by the students, being offered for sale.
Male students posed working the school's photo studio, with four female students posed as if to have their picture taken.
View taken looking down Pratt Avenue from the Central Campus, with the Dining Hall at left, the Laundry Building at right, and the Leupp Art Studio in the distance in the center.
Everett Strong was a photographer employed by the school starting in May 1908; he had left before December 1909. …
Fourteen male student athletes posed in the photo studio with their white male coach, Pop Warner. They are the track team of 1909, posed with a trophy from the State Championship.
Jim Thorpe is the fourth male student from the left in the back row.
Leupp Art Studio at the Carlisle Indian School with blankets outside, along with four people and a sign reading "No Admittance on Sunday"
The Leupp Indian Art Studio.
View of the northwestern side of the school campus, taken from the far side of the bridge over the Letort Creek, showing Pratt Avenue with entrance gates, the Leupp Art Studio, staff houses, and the back of the Dining Hall.
The captions read: BUILDINGS, THE DINING HALL, THE LEUPP STUDIO, GIRLS' QUARTERS, ADMINISTRATION BUILDING, THE GUARD HOUSE, LARGE BOYS' QUARTERS
The image appears in Red Man vol. 4, no. 3 (November 1911): 122.…
The caption on the front of the postcard reads: Leupp Art Studio and Main Entrance, Indian School, CARLISLE, Pa.
It was sent to Mrs. Catharine Freeland, Newport, Perry Co., Pa.
The message reads "Dear Aunt Kate, I will send you a card I arived safe, Sarah and Saide met me at the train! Sarah has got right good agane…
The building originally constructed as the Leupp Indian Art Studio had been repurposed as the Alumni Hall by the time this photo was taken, sometime around 1915. The words "Alumni Hall" appear above the door on the left side of the photo.
The caption of this postcard reads: Studio, U. S. Indian School, Carlisle, Pa. DESIGNED AND BUILT BY STUDENTS.
The back of the postcard is blank.
The caption on the front of the postcard reads: Studio, U. S. Indian School, Carlisle, Pa. DESIGNED AND BUILT BY STUDENTS.
The only words on the back are standardized directions for where to write a message and where to write the address.
The caption on the front of the postcard reads: Leupp Art Studio, designed and built by Indians at Carlisle School, CARLISLE, Pa.
The only words on the back are standardized directions for where to place the stamp and lines for writing the address.
William A. Mercer requests to use the bequest of Harriet W. Taber to build a photographic gallery or art building at the entrance of the Carlisle Indian School.
William A. Mercer elaborates on his plan for building a photographic gallery at the entrance to the Carlisle Indian School using the bequest of Harriet W. Taber. Mercer states that he has already begun construction using athletic funds.
Supervisor in Charge of the Carlisle Indian School Oscar H. Lipps requests permission from Commissioner of Indian Affairs Cato Sells to renovate the currently unused Leupp Art Studio and convert it to the official headquarters of the Carlisle Alumni Association. Sells grants Lipps the authority.
Lipps believes that there are over five…