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TitleCollection Number And NamePhoto Number
1Summer at Lake Mary's in Brighton. Man on a horse and women in old fashioned dress.P0379 Brighton Ski Resort Photograph CollectionP0379n1_01_32
2Men and horses standing in front of the feed stable.P0379 Brighton Ski Resort Photograph CollectionP0379n1_03_010
3Large group of women and men at a lake near Brighton.P0379 Brighton Ski Resort Photograph CollectionP0379n1_03_029
4Three men and horses standing in front of a feed stable.P0379 Brighton Ski Resort Photograph CollectionP0379n1_03_035
5Group of women and men sitting on a rock.P0379 Brighton Ski Resort Photograph CollectionP0379n1_03_063
6Men sitting on large rocks eating and cooking lunch. In the background can be seen stacks of lumber, a mill and a wagon.P0379 Brighton Ski Resort Photograph CollectionP0379n1_07_011
7Men on the shore of, and standing on rocks above Lake Mary or MarthaP0379 Brighton Ski Resort Photograph CollectionP0379n1_07_017
8Men and horses standing in front of a feed stable in Brighton.P0379 Brighton Ski Resort Photograph CollectionP0379n1_07_027
9Large group of women, children and men gathered in front of a cabin.P0379 Brighton Ski Resort Photograph CollectionP0379n1_07_042
10Large group of people sitting on the rocks at Lake Mary or Blanche.P0379 Brighton Ski Resort Photograph CollectionP0379n1_07_046
11Men cooking and eating while taking a break from their work at the lumber mill seen behind them.P0379 Brighton Ski Resort Photograph CollectionP0379n1_07_137
12Early historic views of Brighton. (Larger copies can be seen earlier in the collection.)P0379 Brighton Ski Resort Photograph CollectionP0379n1_07_147
13Portraits and image of Hannes Schneider ski jumping.P0413 Alan K. Engen Photograph CollectionP0413n01_01_005
14Sondre Norheim, 1825-1895, of Norway. Invented the world's first ski binding made from thin shoots of birch roots. This binding was called the "Norheim binding."P0413 Alan K. Engen Photograph CollectionP0413n01_01_007
15Original Holmenkollen ski jumping hill in Oslo, Norway, late 1890s.P0413 Alan K. Engen Photograph CollectionP0413n01_01_008
16Mikkel and Torjus Hemmestveit. The Hemmestveit brothers were the first known ski jumpers in the U.S. They made the first leaps on skis in America in 1880. Mikkel Hemmestveit set the first American ski jumping record of 37 feet in 1887 at Ishpeming, MI. Note the clothing, skis and bindings typical of ski jumping in the late 1800s.P0413 Alan K. Engen Photograph CollectionP0413n01_01_013
17America's first ski jumpers. Top: Mikkel Hemmestveit, who made the first American distance record of 37 feet on February 8, 1887. Bottom: the Hemmestveit brothers Mikkel and Torjus.P0413 Alan K. Engen Photograph CollectionP0413n01_01_015
18Carl Tellefsen, first President of the National Ski Association.P0413 Alan K. Engen Photograph CollectionP0413n01_01_016
19Old ski found in Hjorundfjord.P0413 Alan K. Engen Photograph CollectionP0413n01_01_023
20Frank Steward, recognized master "doping" (waxing) expert in the late 1800s.P0413 Alan K. Engen Photograph CollectionP0413n01_02_005
21Carl Tellefsen, first President of the National Ski Association.P0413 Alan K. Engen Photograph CollectionP0413n01_02_009
22Baron Pierre de Coubertin, founder of the modern Olympic Games.P0413 Alan K. Engen Photograph CollectionP0413n01_02_010
23Baron Pierre de Coubertin, founder of the modern Olympic Games.P0413 Alan K. Engen Photograph CollectionP0413n01_02_023
24Family ski and snowshoeing outing, circa late 1800s.P0413 Alan K. Engen Photograph CollectionP0413n01_02_046
25Mining tourP0418 Wilburn and Jean Pickett Photograph CollectionP0418n1_27_05
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