Studio portrait of Almarine McKellop.
Creek
Studio portrait of Nancy McIntosh.
Studio portrait of Nancy McIntosh.
The handwritten note on the reverse side reads: Nancy McIntosh
This photograph originally appeared in an album that E. A. Seabrook, a teacher at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School, received from his students on December 25, 1886.
Studio portrait of Nancy McIntosh.
The handwritten note reads: Ralph Brown age 17 years
Ralph Brown was Eliza Bell Brown's husband.
Studio portrait of Samuel Six Killer wearing school uniform.
Studio portrait of Samuel Six Killer, George Scott, and George Vallier. Two are wearing school uniforms.
Studio portrait of Samuel Six Killer wearing school uniform.
Note: This image also contains caption information for other photographs.
Studio portrait of Samuel Six Killer.
The handwritten note reads: Oliver Brown and his pony
The reverse side includes a short note from Oliver Brown to his mother Eliza Bell Brown.
The handwritten note on the reverse side reads: The home of Lucy Beaver Ex. Student. Paden, Okla.
The reverse side reads: Oliver Brown aged 21 - years
Oliver Brown was Eliza Bell Brown's son.
Studio portrait of Cat Barnoskie wearing a military uniform.
The handwritten note on the reverse side reads: Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Childers and children Clarence, Eloise, and Ruby. Broken Arrow Oklahoma, October 8, 1915.
View of D. B. and Mildred (Millie) McIntosh Childers with their three children.
These materials include a cover letter and a Descriptive Statement of Pupils regarding 25 children transferred to the Carlisle Indian School from the Tullahassee Mission in Muscogee Indian Territory.
These materials include correspondence regarding a request for information on pupils from the "Five Civilized Tribes" (Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek, and Seminole Nations) enrolled at the Carlisle Indian School.
These materials contain financial documents and correspondence concerning the tuition deposits for Ada P. Barnett and Clifford Ross Barnett.
This program was distributed for a performance by the students as part of the Commencement Exercises for 1917. The play, "The Continental Congress," is taken from McBrien's "America First," and the school borrowed the costumes for the performance. It surrounds the formation of the first Continental Congress and the Declaration of Independence…