Usage conditions may apply for digital images, video, and sound recordings linked within SOVA collections. While digital content may be restricted, SOVA collection descriptions and catalog records are available CC0 for re-use. For more information, visit the Smithsonian's Terms of Use page.
National Museum of the American Indian
George Bird and Elizabeth Curtis Grinnell photograph collection
Summary
- Collection ID:
- NMAI.AC.140
- Creators:
-
Tuell, Julia E.Grinnell, George Bird, 1849-1938
- Dates:
-
1902-1910
- Languages:
-
English.
- Physical Description:
-
119 Negatives (photographic)119 glass plate negativesblack and white7 x 9 in.
- Repository:
The core of this photographic collection (1902-1904) was taken during Grinnell's visits among the Northern (Montana, Rosebud County and Rosebud River, Lame Deer) and Southern (Washita County, Oklahoma) Tsitsistas/Suhtai (Cheyenne). The photographs document domestic and daily life on the reservation (especially activies involving women), religious ceremonies, camps and dwellings, and important officials. The attributions of the photographs in this collection are far from certain. While many of these images appear to have been taken by Grinnell himself, a substantial portion were also taken by his wife Elizabeth Curtis Grinnell (b. 1876) and their friend Julia E. Tuell. A very small subset of these images (3) also depicts mountains and vistas in Glacier National Park (Flathead County, Glacier County) Montana.
Arrangement note
Arrangement note
negatives: organized in 6 boxes; arranged numerically by image number
Biographical/Historical note
Biographical/Historical note
George Bird Grinnell, naturalist, conservationist and Indian rights activist, was born into a prominent family in Brooklyn, New York. He attended Yale University, receiving his B.A. in 1870 and a Ph.D. in paleontology in 1880. While at Yale, Grinnell participated in a paleontological expedition to the central Plains, Wyoming and Utah. In 1874 he served as naturalist and paleontologist in Lt. Colonel George Armstrong Custer's Black Hills expedition and, in 1875, was a member of William Ludlow's expedition surveying the Yellowstone. In 1899 Grinnell was a naturalist on Edward H. Harriman Expedition to Alaska. Grinnell's lifelong interest in the west was well established long before he left Yale. In 1876, four years before he earned his Ph.D., Grinnell became the editor-in-chief and soon-to-be owner of Forest and Stream magazine. Under his leadership, it became the country's foremost natural history magazine. Grinnell was the magazine's editor from 1876 until 1911, and he used its pages to help promote the creation of national parks. Grinnell played a pivotal role in the creation of Glacier National Park in 1910.
Grinnell's interest in the west extended to its native inhabitants. He was deeply interested in Plains Indians and, year after year, spent his summers visiting different reservations. He had befriended Frank North and his Pawnee scouts, and accompanied them on buffalo and elk hunts. Grinnell witnessed the destruction of game animals, brought about by commercial hunters, and was cognizant of its impact on Plains Indians' way of life. Grinnell, a prolific writer, authored several books and many articles on Cheyenne, Blackfoot, and Pawnee Indians, the most well-know of which was the two volume work entitled "The Cheyenne Indians: Their History and Way of Life," first published in 1923. Until his death, he remained a staunch supporter of Cheyenne rights.
Grinnell was a founding member of both the Audubon Society and Boone and Crockett Club (with Theodore Roosevelt). He chaired the Council on National Parks, Forests and Wildlife, and was president of the National Parks Association. He was a trustee of the New York Zoological Society. Grinnell was also a prominent member of many other associations, such as the American Association of the Advancement of Science and New York Academy of Science. Grinnell was 89 years old when he died in New York City.
Administration
Custodial History note
Donated by George C. Grinnell to the Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation in 1928.
Processing Information note
Processed by Mimi Games
Using the Collection
Conditions Governing Access note
Researchers must contact the NMAI Archives for an appointment to access the collection.
Conditions Governing Use note
Some items restricted: Cultural Sensitivity
More Information
Location of Other Archival Materials Note
Location of Other Archival Materials Note
See manuscript items in the Museum of the American Indian/Heye Foundation records at the NMAI Archive Center. See also the George Bird Grinnell photograph collection at the Braun Research Library, Southwest Museum, Autry National Center in Los Angeles.
Keywords
Keyword Terms | Keyword Types | ||
---|---|---|---|
Northern Cheyenne Tribe of the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation, Montana | Geographic | Search Smithsonian Collections | Search ArchiveGrid |
Rosebud County (Mont.) | Geographic | Search Smithsonian Collections | Search ArchiveGrid |
Indians of North America | Cultural Context | Search Smithsonian Collections | Search ArchiveGrid |
Cheyenne-Arapaho Tribes of Oklahoma | Geographic | Search Smithsonian Collections | Search ArchiveGrid |
Glacier National Park (Mont.) | Geographic | Search Smithsonian Collections | Search ArchiveGrid |
Lame Deer (Mont.) | Geographic | Search Smithsonian Collections | Search ArchiveGrid |
Washita County (Okla.) | Geographic | Search Smithsonian Collections | Search ArchiveGrid |
Glass plate negatives | Genre Form | Search Smithsonian Collections | Search ArchiveGrid |
National Museum of the American Indian
4220 Silver Hill Rd
Suitland, Maryland 20746-2863
nmaiarchives@si.edu