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People - American Indians - Tribes - Pueblo
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Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company's advertisement
Creator: Villa, Hernando Gonzallo, 1881-1952
Date: Between 1926 and 1936
This photograph shows a Native American standing beside an adobe wall wrapped in a blanket. In the background a village is somewhat visible. This illustration is an advertisement by the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company.
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Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company's advertisement
Creator: Villa, Hernando Gonzallo, 1881-1952
Date: Between 1926 and 1936
This photograph shows two Native Americans at a Pueblo village. The illustration is advertising the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company's Indian-detour through New Mexico.
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Aztec ruins, Aztec, New Mexico
Creator: Palenske, Louis F., 1858-1943
Date: 1928-1938
This photograph of the Aztec ruins, now known as the Aztec Ruins National Monument, located near the town of Aztec, New Mexico was created by Louis Palenske, using his Korona Panoramic View Camera. This view was taken while on a photographic excursion through northern New Mexico and northern Arizona. Funded by the National Historical Publications and Records Commission through the Kansas State Historical Records Advisory Board.
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Ohkay Owingeh, New Mexico San Juan Pueblo
Creator: Palenske, Louis F., 1858-1943
Date: Around 1928
Louis Palenske photographed all of the points of historic interest along the Old Santa Fe Trail. While in New Mexico, he visited many of the Pueblos. When Palenske photographed this view in the late 1920s, it was known as San Juan Pueblo. In 2005 its name was changed to the pre-Spanish, Native American name, Ohkay Owingeh. Funded by the National Historical Publications and Records Commission through the Kansas State Historical Records Advisory Board.
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Scott County State Park
Date: Between 1940 and 1949
These images show various scenes of the Scott County State Park. Established in 1928 after the Herbert Steele family donated the land to the Kansas Forestry, Fish and Game Commission. The 1,280-acre park is home to the only know Indian pueblo in the state of Kansas, El Cuartelejo.
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Thurlow Lieurance to Edith Wharton
Creator: Lieurance, Thurlow Weed
Date: September 1913
This is a letter written by Thurlow Weed Lieurance, Taos Pueblo, New Mexico, to Edith Wharton. In the letter Thurlow Lieurance describes in detail, a hoop or ring dance (courtship ritual) performed by Anthony Lujan, a member of the Pueblo Indian tribe. The wooden rings or hoops are called I-a-h-L-a-h and made of willow wood tied together in a circle with leather. Lieurance tells the meaning of the dance and the connection to the Pueblo's beliefs. Also in the envelope, is a quit claim deed dated November 7, 1893, between J. W. Boatwright and I. W. Shields, McDuffin County, Georgia. It is not clear how either party is connected to Thurlow Lieurance.
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