108 ANNUAL REPORT SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, 1964 



in the 1880's and 1890's and showing Indian students at Hampton 

 Institute, as well as views made on a number of western reservations, 

 was borrowed from the Huntington Memorial Library of Hampton 

 Institute, Hampton, Va. Approximately 400 copy negatives were 

 made from this loan collection and are now in the Bureau's active files. 



Over 150 photographs of Osage Indians, including many full-length 

 portraits of individuals in native costume taken in the 1880's and 

 1890's in the studios of G. W. Parsons and J. M. Fowler of Paw- 

 huska, Okla., were received on loan from the Osage Tribal Museum, 

 Pawhuska, Okla. in May and are currently being copied. 



Approximately 100 glass plate negatives exposed by Dr. Robert 

 Charles Gebhardt in the period 1900-1907, showing Indians on the 

 streets of Black River Ralls, Wis., and their homes and burial 

 grounds near the cranberry marshes outside the town, were acquired 

 from the photographer's son, Paul Gebhardt of Towson, Md. 



Thirty photographs of Florida Seminole Indians, and Seminole 

 camps, boats, and agricultural scenes, made in 1910-11 by Lorenzo 

 I). Creel, special agent, were copied from Creel's manuscript report 

 in the National Archives. 



Thirteen studio and outdoor photographs of Winnebago Indians 

 taken in the period from the 1870's to about 1900 by H. H. Bemiett, 

 pioneer photographer of Kilbourn, Wis., now Wisconsin Dells, were 

 acquired from the Bennett Studio in Wisconsin Dells. This studio 

 and its files of glass negatives of persons, places, and events in the 

 Wisconsin Dells area in the period 1865 to 1907 is now maintained by 

 the photographer's daughters. Miss Miriam Bennett and Mrs. Ruth 

 Bennett Dyer. 



Three original prints from negatives made about 1899 in the vicinity 

 of Chadron, Nebr., by Ed Edson were received from Dr. R. W. Breck- 

 inridge, through the Lincoln, Nebr., office of the River Basin Surveys. 

 They are portraits of Red Cloud and Little Wound, Oglala Dakotas, 

 and a view of a Sioux camp near Chadron, Nebr. 



Individual portraits of five Sioux Indians, taken in 1899 by Robert 

 Gish Parker of Chicago, were donated by a nephew of the photog- 

 rapher, Mr. Leslie B. Taylor of Miami, Fla. The photographs in- 

 clude a portrait of the famous show Indian, Iron Tail. 



Four negatives made by Dr. Francis Harper on the Poosepatuck 

 Reservation, Mastic, Long Island, in 1909 were donated by Dr. Harper 

 and filed with related negatives previously donated by him. 



A group of 10 photographic reproductions on postcards were 

 donated by Philip Sampson of Arlington, Va. They included a full- 

 length portrait as well as front and profile bust portraits of the Kaw 

 (Kansa) chief Washunga, taken about 1880. 



Eugene Heflin of Reedsport, Oreg., submitted an account of his 



