Studio portrait of Benedict Jozhe.
Apache


Studio portrait of Charles Dickens (seated at left) and Mark Hopkins (standing at right). Dickens is holding a decorative beaded cane.

The caption reads: DR. MONTEZUMA, APACHE INDIAN – RESIDENT PHYSICIAN AT SCHOOL '95-'97. TRAINED NURSES AT HOSPITAL.
This image appears in John N. Choate's Souvenir of the Carlisle Indian School (Carlisle, PA: J. N. Choate, 1902).

Caption: GROUP OF APACHES.
Of all the Indians Carlisle has undertaken, no tribe presented a more hopeless outlook than the Apaches from Arizona, who have long held a most unenviable reputation as the outlaws and the Ishmaelites of the Indians. Carlisle's experience with the Apaches is that they are as…

Studio portrait of Lambert Istone.

Studio portrait of Viola Zieh.

Studio portrait of James Kawaykla.

Studio portrait of Mark Hopkins.

Studio portrait of fifteen male students and nineteen female students, the graduating class of 1899. According to the label on this photo they are:
Back row: Christian Eastman, Annie Gesis, Joseph Gouge (here J. Jennings Gouge), George Hazlett, Sarah Williams, Chauncey Archiquette, Eliza Smith (here E. Lillian Smith), George…
![Lulu Nabahujo [?], c.1899 Lulu Nabahujo [?], c.1899](/sites/default/files/styles/views_taxonomy/public/image-photo/CCHS_PA-CH3_072d.jpg?itok=bQIN3yo2)
Studio portrait of Lulu Nabahujo [?] probably wearing school uniform.
Note: The caption for this photo is Lulu Nawgodena. However, since there is no record of a student with that name we believe it is Lulu Nabahujo.

Studio portrait of Jason Betzinez.

Studio portrait of Hattie Acklin.

Studio portrait of Richard Kesetta wearing uniform.
Note: Caption on image reads: Richard Kissitti / Age 4 years / Tribe Apache / Baby of the Indian School, Carlisle, pa.

Studio portrait of Richard Kesetta wearing uniform.
Caption on image: Richard Kissitti / Tribe Apache / Carlisle's Baby

The headline reads: SON OF APACHE CHIEF STUDIES PAINTING.
The caption reads: VINCENT V. NATALISH, INDIAN BOY PAINTER.

The headline reads: LEADING INDIANS OF U. S. TO CONFER ON RACE ADVANCEMENT
The caption reads: From left to right, in the upper picture, are Mayor George S. Marshall, Dr. Carlos Montezuma of Chicago, Henry Standing Bear of Dakota, Dr. Charles A. Eastman of Amherst, Mass., Charles E. Dagenett of Denver and Prof. F…

The handwritten note reads: Nov. 25, 1911. first snow.
The reverse side includes a short note from Tennyson Berry to an unidentified recipient.
View of Tennyson Berry's, or Ah-ko-beh-setine, house.

The caption reads: LONGFEATHER DOCTORS SICK TREES OF THE CITY
This image appears in the Atlanta Georgian on December 22, 1911.

The caption reads: INDIAN TREE EXPERT HERE
This image appears in the Atlanta Constitution on January 9, 1912.

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 West are in great…

Studio portrait of Richard R. Kesetta wearing non-native clothing.

Lon Randolph Speeche playing outside with his sister Andrae Speeche. Children of Alonzo Speeche.

Superintendent Richard Henry Pratt writes to Doctor Cornelius Rea Agnew with an update on the school and the rising number of students. He also writes about his desire to find benefactors interested in creating a new Indian industrial school to accommodate more students. This letter is part of a series of related correspondence which can be…

Superintendent Richard Henry Pratt writes to Doctor Cornelius Rea Agnew regarding attempts to get a Mr. Moody to visit Carlisle. Pratt also mentions that 75 or more Florida Apache prisoner children are expected to arrive at the school soon, and that the school was recently inspected by a Mrs. Clarke of Virginia. This letter is part of a…

These materials include a cover letter and Descriptive Statement of Pupils regarding 37 Chiricahua Apache prisoners-of-war transferred to the Carlisle Indian School from Fort Marion in St. Augustine, Florida, where a larger group of Geronimo's band remained imprisoned. The 37 individuals transferred to Carlisle represented a portion of all…