Studio portrait of Richard Henry Pratt in military uniform with sword, holding a helmet.
This image appears in John N. Choate's…
Studio portrait of Richard Henry Pratt in military uniform with sword, holding a helmet.
This image appears in John N. Choate's…
Studio portrait of George Ladeaux.
Note: Previous cataloging indicated the student's name in the hand written caption is George Laden.
Portrait of a large group of male and female students with a white woman posed on the school grounds.
In the front row of standing students, the third person from the left has been identified as Edwin Smith, and James E. Johnson is believed to be in the back right corner.
Studio portrait of Reuben Jones.
Studio portrait of James Browndog. A handwritten caption written along the side of the image probably reads: James Brown Dog.
Portrait of seventeen unidentified male students and eleven unidentified female students with two white men and one white women posed outside on the school grounds.
Previous cataloging describes the caption as saying that these are students from New York and the date is 1901.
Previous cataloging identified the students as being from Alaska and provides a date of 1901 for the image. It also identifies the white man as an Indian agent.
Based on this, this group would be the one that arrived July 11, 1901 from Woody Island, Alaska. The issue of the school newspaper also mentions that a Mr. C. E. Bunnell…
Studio portrait of James E. Johnson wearing football clothing.
Photograph of a studio portrait of a large group of male and female students. At least one person, a male student, appears to have been added to the photograph after it was taken. The handwritten caption seems to say "Class 1903."
The National Anthropological Archives has two versions of this image, both photographs of a photograph…
Photograph of a photograph of five male students in track clothing, posed outside, holding a banner from the "University of Pennsylvania 9th Annual Relay Races, 1903" with the participating teams listed.
Commissioner of Indian Affairs Ezra A. Hayt's response letter to donor Lea Lugner offering to send a "Christmas box" to the students at the school. Hayt suggests that gifts would be welcome as there are 158 children at the school, but government funds can only be spent on clothing and other school essentials. Hayt encourages Lugner to write to…