Object Details
Names
Anderson, George T.
Webber, J. C.
Scope and Contents
Left to right, George T. Anderson (kwackipahki kamen) and J. C. Webber (wi t a p ano xwe).
sova.naa.photolot.176_ref8817
Local Numbers
OPPS NEG.56930
Local Note
Black and white copy negative
Culture
Delaware -- Registered
See more items in
Bureau of American Ethnology negatives
Bureau of American Ethnology negatives / Additional Materials / ANONYMOUS
Biographical / Historical
In 1867 the Delaware moved from Kansas to the Cherokee Reservation, Indian Territory. Those involved in the move became known as the Delaware (registered) or the Delaware (Cherokee). The others became known as the Delaware (absentee). "Registered" and "absentee" are not aboriginal terms.
See Negative 56929. Anderson was a full-blood Delaware; Webber's mother was part Munsee and part Delaware, but his father was an enrolled Cherokee of part Negro ancestry. Ollie Anderson claims that all of Webber's Delaware clothing in this picture was lent by her husband, G. T. Anderson.
Extent
1 Photograph (8x10 in)
Date
Nov 1932
Archival Repository
National Anthropological Archives
Type
Archival materials
Photographs
Existence and Location of Copies
Digital surrogate produced from reference copy print
Genre/Form
Photographs
NAA.PhotoLot.176_ref8817
Large EAD
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/nw39027e7f7-a12e-42be-b70c-14a93431d2e1
NAA.PhotoLot.176
NAA
Record ID
ebl-1628267668517-1628267670563-7