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Number of results to display per page
TitleCollection Number And NamePhoto Number
1 Unidentified Native Americans [05]P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add2n1_18_0381
2 Unidentified Native Americans [02]P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add2n1_18_0378
3 Unidentified Native Americans [06]P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add2n1_18_0382
4 Unidentified Native Americans [07]P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add2n1_18_0383
5 Unidentified Native Americans [01]P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add2n1_18_0377
6 Unidentified Native Americans [03]P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add2n1_18_0379
7 Unidentified Native Americans [04]P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add2n1_18_0380
8 "How the Horse Helped Build America." During 1845-46 the western plains were filled with horses of Indians, trappers, traders and emigrant trains.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244n1_10_0120
9 "How the Horse Helped Build America," page no. 64 illustration no. 22. The horse provided transportation even in winter, when it suffered even more than its rider.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244n1_09_0107
10 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Navajo workers) Chapter 7 Illustration, before page 55: The sugar company had set up army tents for the Navaho workers.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_13_0468
11 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Navajo workers) Chapter 7 Illustration, before page 43: A long row of army tents made a neat village by the river.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_13_0469
12 "How the Horse Helped Build America." An Indian and a trapper fight it out on galloping horses.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244n1_09_0114
13 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Navajo workers) Chapter 7 Illustration, page 54: Whole families of Navahos are brought by truck to work in the beet fields.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_13_0466
14 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Navajo workers) Chapter 6 Illustration, page 52: The Navahos are good workers, and help western farmers during the beet harvest.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_13_0467
15 "Peter's Sugar Farm" (Navajo workers) Chapter 7 Illustration, before page 43: The Navaho women wore long, full skirts and tight, velvet blouses. They had a great deal of silver jewelry. The men and boys dressed like any other farm workers.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_13_0465
16 "How the Horse Helped Build America," page no. 100-101 illustration no. 36. Denver in 1859.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244n1_10_0127
17 National Roads (People) Illustration: Defeat of General Braddock, in the French and Indian War, in Virginia, in 1755P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_09_0332
18 National Roads (People) Chapter 3 Illustration: Washington leading his men in the Battle of the Monongahela in which General Edward Braddock was defeated.P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_09_0329
19 "How the Horse Helped Build America." Typed list of captionsP0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244n1_21a
20 "National Roads" (Maps) [02]P0244 Olive Woolley Burt Photograph CollectionP0244add1n1_09_0306
21 Acoma Pueblo, New Mexico, 1936P0064 Native American photograph collectionp0064n01_22_007
22 Delegation of American Indians that went to Washington D.C.P0231 Joseph Peck photograph collectionp0231n01_02_09
23 Dull Knife (Tah-Me-La-Pash) Chief of Northern Cheyennes at Battle of Little Big HornP0064 Native American photograph collectionp0064n01_22_001
24 George Washington (Shoe-e-tot, Little Boy) A Cado born in Louisiana in 1916P0064 Native American photograph collectionp0064n01_22_002
25 Geronimo (Goyathlay) A Chiricahua 1887P0064 Native American photograph collectionp0064n01_22_003
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