76 ANNTJAL REPORT SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, 1961 



borrowed for copying from the Quaker Collection, Haverford College 

 Library, Haverford, Pa., through the courtesy of Dr. Thomas E. 

 Drake. The portraits are all on similar mounts of the carte de visite 

 style, and most are inscribed with the subjects' names and the dateline 

 September 1865, Fort Smith, Ark. Only one of the photographs has 

 a photographer's imprint. It is a portrait of Left Hand and Powder 

 Face, Arapahoes, with Superintendent Enoch Hoag. On the reverse 

 is stamped, "W. H. Lamon, Photograph Artist, Corner Massachusetts 

 & Henry Sts., Lawrence, Kansas." Four views of Kickapoo bark- and 

 mat-covered lodges in Chief Wapamashawa's village, Indian Terri- 

 tory, were also borrowed from the Quaker collection and copied. 



Thirteen photographs, including 10 relating to Kiowa, Wichita, 

 and Apache Indians, by Irwin of Chickasha, Indian Territory, 1892- 

 ca. 1894, were lent for copying by Vernon M. Riley of Chino, Calif. 



Five photographs relating to Omaha and Ponca Indians of the 

 latter 19th century, and a group photograph of the officers of the 

 American Association for the Advancement of Science at Ann Arbor, 

 1885, including the Reverend J. Owen Dorsey and Mrs. Erminnie A. 

 Smith (both formerly associated with this Bureau) were lent for 

 copying by Mrs. Virginia Dorsey Lightfoot of Takoma Park, Md. 



Five photographs of Osage Indians, taken in 1871 by T. M. Con- 

 cannon at the Osage Agency, Indian Territory, were received as a 

 gift from Mrs, Ernest J. Martin of Drain, Oreg. 



Nine photographs relating to Indians of the Southwest who were 

 connected with projects of the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation in that 

 area in 1941-60 were donated by the Bureau of Reclamation. 



Ten copy photographs of Ute Indians of the 1870's and 1880's were 

 received in exchange from Dr. Omer C. Stewart of Boulder, Colo. 



Six recent photographs of Quapaw Indians of Oklahoma were pre- 

 sented by Mrs. Velma Nieberding of Miami, Okla. 



A collection of between 100 and 200 mounted photographs and 

 glass slides was received as a transfer from the library of the United 

 States Department of the Interior. At year's end these photographs 

 had not yet been arranged and individually listed. They relate to a 

 variety of North American Indian tribes. 



During the year prints were prepared from several hundred snap- 

 shot negatives by Matilda Coxe Stevenson that had not been previously 

 cataloged. Most of the photographs were made at Zuni Pueblo, ca. 

 1904. They include numerous views relating to dances and cere- 

 monials and a lesser number pertaining to domestic activities. In 

 spite of the fact that some of the photographs are not of high quality 

 photographically, many are surprisingly clear and informative, and 

 the collection as a whole warrants careful study. 



In addition to the Zuiii views, in the Stevenson collections there 

 are a relatively small number of photographs relating to the pueblos 



