Eleven male students posed on the field in football uniforms. They are all looking down and so their faces are not visible.
They are identified as the 1909 Varsity Line-Up.
Eleven male students posed on the field in football uniforms. They are all looking down and so their faces are not visible.
They are identified as the 1909 Varsity Line-Up.
The handwritten note on the reverse side reads: Francis Shakonaby
View of Francis Shakonaby while standing on the grounds of the Carlisle Indian School around 1909. The woman next to Shakonaby has not been identified.
The handwritten note on the reverse side reads: Fred Sickles
The reverse side contains a note from Joseph Sheehan.
The 1909 Frederick, Maryland Y.M.C.A football team in uniform.
The printed caption reads: GIRLS AT DUMB BELL WORK AT INDIAN SCHOOL, Carlisle, Pa.
The handwritten note on the reverse side reads: Here is the Place we dance. I tell you it goes dandy. Sincerly, Jacob Paul Carlisle, Pa.
Note sent to Elizabeth Young in Roxbury, New Jersey from Jacob Paul in 1909.…
View of the front of the Girls' Quarters, showing the trees, benches, and paths of the central campus.
Everett Strong was a photographer employed by the school starting in May 1908; he had left before December 1909.
Studio portrait of a large group of seated and standing male and female students, identified as the graduating class of 1909. They are identified in a label attached below the photo.
The Cumberland County Historical Society has two copies of this photo: FB04-05 and FB04-12.
View of the Guard House.
Everett Strong was a photographer employed by the school starting in May 1908; he had left before December 1909.
A display of Native American-style objects, hanging on display. They may be objects made by the students, being offered for sale.
View of the harness shop, with a large empty table in foreground and students working at benches around the perimeter.
The Cumberland County Historical Society has three copies of this image; two are prints (PA-CH3-142 and 14B-11-05) and one is a glass plate negative (00314A#15). It was previously…
View of the new Hospital Building with a woman seated on the front porch.
Everett Strong was a photographer employed by the school starting in May 1908; he had left before December 1909.
View from a sidewalk on campus through leafy trees to the porches of a quarters or residence.
Everett Strong was a photographer employed by the school starting in May 1908; he had left before December 1909.
The handwritten note on the reverse side reads: Julia Elmore
The caption on this postcard reads: Indian School Band and Girls Quarters, Carlisle, PA.
The postcard was addressed to Mr. Chester Wleuau[?], Steelton, Pa.
The message reads: "Am staying near here for a few days. How's Steelton? Dutch"
Martin D. Archiquette, band instructor, and a group of students at the Indian School of Fort Simcoe, Washington.
Two white male doctors, one white female nurse and a female student nurse attending a patient in a room in the school hospital.
View of James Downs with his daughter, around 1909. He sent this photo when he responded to a school survey.
Part of a scrapbook compiled by William Winneshiek (Winnebago), who wrote the caption: Carlisle Graduate 1910, World War Veteran, Football Coach Uni. of Ariz.
Lyons . . . (R.H.B.) (Chippewa) Captain Football Team 1909
The title reads: THE UNITED STATES INDIAN BAND THE ONLY PROFESSIONAL INDIAN BAND IN THE WORLD
The caption reads: JAMES RILEY WHEELOCK (ONEIDA) DIRECTOR
The letterhead reads: Wheelock AND HIS CONCERT BAND
PERMANENT OFFICE - PHILADELPHIA, PA.
The caption reads: JAMES RILEY WHEELOCK; DIRECTOR.
The handwritten note on the reverse side reads: J. H. Lonestar. Shell Lake, Wis.
View of John H. Lonestar with his wife, Rebecca Hart Lonestar, and his two children around 1909.
The headline reads: John Wa-Lat-Zi, Great Carlisle Fullback and Trackman Again Reduced to Semi-Savage State by "Firewater"
John Wallatsie in his rodeo outfit.
The image of John Wallatsie appears in The Journal.
View of Josiah Redwolf around 1909.
View of Letort Spring and the Spring House on the Parker Farm. The Parker Farm was owned by the school and located north-east of the campus.
Everett Strong was a photographer employed by the school starting in May 1908; he had left before December 1909.
The handwritten note on the reverse side reads: Dr C.A. McNutt St Joseph Missouri.
Photograph of Louise Provost McNutt and Dr. C.A. McNutt that McNutt sent to Superintendent Moses Friedman on December 12, 1909.