A male student in uniform stands on a stage set up in the gymasium building. In the middle of the stage is large model of a house, with two other male students kneeling at the side of it. On either side of the stage are posters with floor plans. The presentation is probably about the Model Home, built by students on the grounds of the school.…
1910-1919
A male student in uniform standing on a stage set up in the gymasium building. He is standing in front of three posters with information about the Parker Farm. This is probably part of the end-of-year annual examinations at the school, at which students would make presentations to demonstrate their progress.
A male student in uniform standing in the center of a stage set up in the gymasium building. On his right a male student in overalls stands next to a radiator on a table. On his left a male student simulates fixing a sink in a model of a bathroom.
This is probably part of the end-of-year annual examinations at the school, at…
The caption reads: TRUE INDIAN TYPES - TALL BULL, CHEYENNE
The printed note reads: TALL BULL RECENTLY MADE CARLISLE A VISIT AND WAS MUCH INTERESTED IN THE WORK OF THE INSTITUTION (Photo by Hensel)
This image appears in Red Man vol. 4, no. 5 (January 1912): 187.
Unidentified male seated whose photo was included in a letter to Marie LeSuir from San Francisco on April 9, 1912.
Studio portrait of Wallace Denny holding a tennis racquet.
If the date of this photo is correct Denny would have been employed as the Assistant Disciplinarian at the time.
An unposed photograph of students playing football.
Part of a scrapbook compiled by William Winneshiek (Winnebago), who wrote the caption "Westerners" vs. "Easterners" A Yearly Event . . . .Lettered Athletes Barred."
Portrait of William Garlow in football uniform.
Part of a scrapbook compiled by William Winneshiek (Winnebago), who wrote the caption "Garow--(C) Seneca." This page also has caption "Stars of Carlisle 1911, '12 & '13.
Photograph of male students in uniform posed in rows on the school campus.
Part of a scrapbook compiled by William Winneshiek (Winnebago), who wrote the caption "Winning Troop of Competitive Drills, 191[?]"
The headline reads: FACTORS IN TEN-MILE HANDICAP RACE
The caption reads: SHEEHAN RUTH GAULE ELPHINSTONE
Taking the lead in the last two miles, Elphinstone was the victor in the endurance event of the Cross Country Club…
The caption reads: CARLISLE INDIAN BASKETBALL TEAM.
Standing, left to right - Thorpe, centre; J. Wheelock and Goes Back, guards. Sitting - Powell and Roberts, guards; Wounded Eye, substitute.
This image was published in the Philadelphia Public Ledger on January 7, 1912.
The caption reads: INDIAN TREE EXPERT HERE
This image appears in the Atlanta Constitution on January 9, 1912. While attending the school Longfeather used the name Murphy Tarby.
The caption reads: MRS. HENRY ROBERTS
The printed note reads: She was Miss Rose De Nomie, a nurse in the Carlisle Indian School Hospital. When Roberts, star end on the Indians' football team, was injured in a game she nursed him back to health and strength, and was wooed and won by him.
…The captions read: ROSE DENOMIE HENRY ROBERTS
View of Henry E. Roberts and his wife, Rosie DeNomie.
This image was published in the Chicago Record-Herald on January 21, 1912.
View of Raymond Stewart's property in Rosebud, South Dakota around 1912.
The reverse side includes a short note from Stewart to administrators at the Carlisle Indian School.
The caption reads: 1920 INDIANS TAXED AND NOT TAXED - CITIZENS (?) AND NON-CITIZENS (?)
The printed notes read: TOTAL NOT TAXED, 31,767 - 11.8 PER CENT. TOTAL TAXED, 233,000 - 88.2 PER CENT.
INDIANS TAXED- All taxed, ---uncolored, 75 to 100 per cent, [green] ; 25 to 75 per cent, […
The caption reads: HOWARD GANSWORTH
The printed note reads: A full-blood Tuscarora Indian, a Carlisle graduate, who later worked his way through Princeton. He is now secretary of the Princeton Club and a prominent business man of Buffalo, N. Y.
This image appears in Red Man vol. 4, no. 7…
The caption reads: INDIANS DEVELOPING INTO GOOD FARMERS
The printed note reads: On every reservation the Indians are enthusiastically taking to farming, and under the direction of trained men sent out by the Government are improving their allotments, 1. Anson Yellow Cloud and teams at Winnebago. 2. Cutting…
This caption reads: INDIANS DEVELOPING INTO GOOD FARMERS
The printed note reads: THESE SCENES FROM THE CROW RESERVATION SHOW PROGRESS 1. Indians harrow and ride horseback. 2. Sits Down Spotted, a Crow Indian, plowing his farm 3. Albert Anderson's home, Crow Indian, Carlisle returned student…
The caption reads: INDIANS DEVELOPING INTO GOOD FARMERS
The printed note reads: INDIAN LABOR, PROPERLY TRAINED, IS TRANSFORMING THE RESERVATIONS 1. Harvesting alfalfa, Ft. Mojave, Ariz. 2. Growing corn, Ft. Mojave, Ariz. 3. Indians harvesting beans at Upper Lake, Cal.
This…
The caption reads: AGRICULTURAL PROGRESS AMONG INDIANS
The printed note reads: The Indian Fair, properly conducted, is a great stimulus to the Indians in agriculture. These interesting photos were taken at the Agricultural Fair held among the Navajo Indians at San Juan, New Mexico.
The image…
The caption reads: AGRICULTURAL PROGRESS AMONG INDIANS
The printed note reads: The Indians of Southern California are making rapid strides towards self-support and citizenship. The pictures above represent progress in farming among the Mission Indians at Pala, California. (1) Pedro Apapa in his…
The caption reads: AGRICULTURAL PROGRESS AMONG INDIANS
The printed note reads: The Apache Indians of Arizona are counted as good workers by those who know them. (1) and (3) shows Apaches working on the road to the Roosevelt Dam. (2) shows an Apache teamster known as Fat Hen. The Indians of the…
The caption reads: AGRICULTURAL PROGRESS AMONG INDIANS
The printed note reads: Good work is being done in the education of Indians on the reservation by the well-located and efficiently-administered day schools. The pictures above were taken of Day School No. 29 on the Pine Ridge Reservation, South Dakota.…
The caption reads: AGRICULTURAL PROGRESS AMONG INDIANS
The printed note reads: 1. Exhibition at their Fair of products raised by Indians on the Fort Berthold Reservation. (2) Home of R. W. Dixey, an Indian, on the Fort Hall Reservation. (3) Pendleton Strike Axe, full-blood Osage, with 600…