Pima Indians
Found in 6 Collections and/or Records:
A Pima home, 1907. From The North American Indian, vol. 2, page 6., 1907
Black-and-white copy prints of images by photographer Edward S. Curtis showing Cheyenne tribal ceremonies, societies, and dances, and the traditional housing types of Indians of the southwestern U.S. Included are photographs of the Cheyenne sun dance, warrior societies, and the individuals Woista and Shot-In-The-Hand. Unpublished finding aid available.
Black and white lithograph of “Juan Antonio – Pima Head Chief” (1848). Seated, ¾ length portrait. From Emory-Reconnaissance, Ft. Leavenworth to San Diego. , 1848
Black-and-white and color engravings of Indians of the Southwest, namely Pueblo, Hopi, and Navajo. Included are scenes of village life, native dwellings, individual Indians, and dances. Though less numerous, depictions of hunting and ceremonies of the Lakota, Blackfeet, Chippewa, and Mandan Indians are also included in the collection.
Black and white lithograph “Pimos and Coco Maricopas Indians”. (1848) Shows Emory’s men bartering for melons with the Pimos and Maricopas. Artist unknown. From Emory-Reconnaissance, Ft. Leavenworth to San Diego. (Photographic prints & negatives included). , 1848
Black-and-white and color engravings of Indians of the Southwest, namely Pueblo, Hopi, and Navajo. Included are scenes of village life, native dwellings, individual Indians, and dances. Though less numerous, depictions of hunting and ceremonies of the Lakota, Blackfeet, Chippewa, and Mandan Indians are also included in the collection.
Black and white lithograph “The Interpreter of the Pimos, by birth a Coco Maricopas.” (1848). A head and shoulder portrait of the interpreter showing a ring through his nose. Artist unknown. From Emory-Reconnaissance, Ft. Leavenworth to San Diego. , 1848
Black-and-white and color engravings of Indians of the Southwest, namely Pueblo, Hopi, and Navajo. Included are scenes of village life, native dwellings, individual Indians, and dances. Though less numerous, depictions of hunting and ceremonies of the Lakota, Blackfeet, Chippewa, and Mandan Indians are also included in the collection.
Colored lithograph of two bare-breasted “Pima Women” carrying water and salt in large containers on their heads (1857). By Arthur Schott from Emory-U.S. & Mexican Boundary Survey. , 1857
Black-and-white and color engravings of Indians of the Southwest, namely Pueblo, Hopi, and Navajo. Included are scenes of village life, native dwellings, individual Indians, and dances. Though less numerous, depictions of hunting and ceremonies of the Lakota, Blackfeet, Chippewa, and Mandan Indians are also included in the collection.
Edward Everett Dale Collection
FULL FINDING AID (PDF)
Historian. Correspondence, student term papers, theses and dissertations, and personal research materials regarding the history of Oklahoma and Indian Territories, the state of Oklahoma, Indians of North America and the American Southwest; teaching materials used by Dale at Harvard and the University of Oklahoma; administrative and other files of the Works Progress Administration's Indian-Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma; U.S. Government documents issued by various cabinet-level departments and agencies, including Agriculture and Interior; and a portion of the University of Oklahoma Persidential papers of James Shannon Buchanan and Stratton D. Brooks. Edward Everett Dale Photograph Collection also in repository.