Copperfield, David

Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 records
David Copperfield (Shah-ke-pah-hoe) Student File
Date of Entry:

Student file of David Copperfield, a member of the Osage Nation, who entered the school on November 1, 1890, and departed on September 30, 1895.  The file contains a student information card, a returned student survey, a former student response postcard, and a report after leaving indicating that Copperfield was a farmer in Hominy,…

Repository:
National Archives and Records Administration
David Copperfield (Shah-ke-pah-hoe) Student Information Card
Date of Entry:

Student information card of David Copperfield (Shah-ke-pah-hoe), a member of the Osage Nation, who entered the school on November 1, 1890 and departed on September 30, 1895. The file indicates Copperfield was living in Hominy, Oklahoma in 1913.

Nation:
Repository:
National Archives and Records Administration
Thirteen male Osage students [version 1], 1891

Studio photo of thirteen male students. They are identified in the caption of the Cumberland County Historical Society copy of this image as being "Osage group, 1891."

A researcher at the Cumberland County Historical Society identified the students in their copy of this image as, top row, left to right: Claude Smith, Frank Penn, Amos…

Nation:
Format:
Glass Plate Negative
Repository:
National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution
Thirteen male Osage students [version 2], 1891

Studio photo of thirteen male students, identified in the caption as being "Osage group, 1891. 

A researcher at the Cumberland County Historical Society identified as the students as:

Top row, left to right: Claude Smith, Frank Penn, Amos Osage, Daniel McDougan. 

Middle row, left to right: Elias Stanton, Harry…

Nation:
Format:
Photographic Print, B&W
Repository:
Cumberland County Historical Society
David Copperfield and Samuel Barker, c.1894

Studio portrait of David Copperfield (seated at left) and Samuel Barker (standing at right).

Nation:
Format:
Photographic Print, B&W
Repository:
Cumberland County Historical Society