Bock, Harry V., 1865-1949 Brendel, Allwilda Belle Griffith Dillon, Vince Gillingham, David Gray Eagle Pawnee Indian Baptist Church
Published / Created:
1911
Call Number:
WA MSS S-2546
Container / Volume:
Box 1 | Folder 3
Image Count:
2
Abstract:
Journal kept in a composition book by clerks of the Pawnee Indian Baptist Church, Pawnee, Oklahoma, and related photographs depicting Pawnee Indian members of the church and other Native Americans, 1907-1920., Photographs in the collection consist primarily of images of members of the church. These images include a group portrait of the congregation at the church, and a group portrait of Maggie Knife Chief and family at the Pawnee Indian Agency School, 1911; group portraits of Pawnee Indians at a meeting of the Oklahoma Indian Baptist Association in Anadarko, Oklahoma, 1912; group portraits of Pawnee Indians at the railroad station at Darrow, Oklahoma, July 1914, with men identified in a portrait as White Horse, Robert Peters, Hole in the Ground, and Lester Pratt, and a receipt for two roundtrip tickets purchased on the St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad from Darrow to Pawnee; and images of a baptism of a man identified as the oldest Oto Indian, 1915., and Portraits of identified Pawnee Indians in the collection include David Gillingham and Hattie Smith Burns, identified as the wife of Benny Burns. Portraits related to Charles Knife Chief include images of him, his children, and of him with John Moses. A portrait of two Pawnee Indian women depicts Nettie Moses and Jenny Long Wolf, who attended the Chilocco Indian Boarding School in Chilocco, Oklahoma. An undated group portrait probably took place at a religious conference meeting and includes Harry Bock.
Description:
Manuscript inscription on the recto and verso of photographic prints. and Reverend Joseph Greenberry Brendel (1862-1926) founded the Pawnee Indian Baptist Church on September 20, 1908 and served as its minister until April 20, 1911, when Harry Bock (1865-1949) took charge of the church. Bock worked many years with western showman Gordon W. Lillie, also known as Pawnee Bill, until becoming a Baptist missionary.
Subject (Geographic):
Anadarko (Okla.)--Pictorial works, Darrow (Okla.)--Pictorial works, Oklahoma--Pictorial works, and Pawnee (Okla.)--Pictorial works
Subject (Name):
Knife Chief, Charles and Knife Chief, Maggie
Subject (Topic):
Baptists--Missions--Oklahoma, Baptists--Oklahoma, Indians of North America--Oklahoma--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Portraits, Missionaries--Oklahoma, and Pawnee Indians--Pictorial works
Bock, Harry V., 1865-1949 Brendel, Allwilda Belle Griffith Dillon, Vince Gillingham, David Gray Eagle Pawnee Indian Baptist Church
Published / Created:
1911 January 22
Call Number:
WA MSS S-2546
Container / Volume:
Box 1 | Folder 3
Image Count:
2
Abstract:
Journal kept in a composition book by clerks of the Pawnee Indian Baptist Church, Pawnee, Oklahoma, and related photographs depicting Pawnee Indian members of the church and other Native Americans, 1907-1920., Photographs in the collection consist primarily of images of members of the church. These images include a group portrait of the congregation at the church, and a group portrait of Maggie Knife Chief and family at the Pawnee Indian Agency School, 1911; group portraits of Pawnee Indians at a meeting of the Oklahoma Indian Baptist Association in Anadarko, Oklahoma, 1912; group portraits of Pawnee Indians at the railroad station at Darrow, Oklahoma, July 1914, with men identified in a portrait as White Horse, Robert Peters, Hole in the Ground, and Lester Pratt, and a receipt for two roundtrip tickets purchased on the St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad from Darrow to Pawnee; and images of a baptism of a man identified as the oldest Oto Indian, 1915., and Portraits of identified Pawnee Indians in the collection include David Gillingham and Hattie Smith Burns, identified as the wife of Benny Burns. Portraits related to Charles Knife Chief include images of him, his children, and of him with John Moses. A portrait of two Pawnee Indian women depicts Nettie Moses and Jenny Long Wolf, who attended the Chilocco Indian Boarding School in Chilocco, Oklahoma. An undated group portrait probably took place at a religious conference meeting and includes Harry Bock.
Description:
Manuscript inscription on the recto and verso of photographic prints. and Reverend Joseph Greenberry Brendel (1862-1926) founded the Pawnee Indian Baptist Church on September 20, 1908 and served as its minister until April 20, 1911, when Harry Bock (1865-1949) took charge of the church. Bock worked many years with western showman Gordon W. Lillie, also known as Pawnee Bill, until becoming a Baptist missionary.
Subject (Geographic):
Anadarko (Okla.)--Pictorial works, Darrow (Okla.)--Pictorial works, Oklahoma--Pictorial works, and Pawnee (Okla.)--Pictorial works
Subject (Name):
Bock, Harry V., 1865-1949, Brendel, Allwilda Belle Griffith, Brendel, Joseph Greenberry, Burns, Hattie Smith, Dillon, Vince, Gillingham, David, Gray Eagle, Hole in the Ground, Knife Chief, Charles, Knife Chief, Maggie, Long Wolf, Jenny, and Moses, John
Subject (Topic):
Baptists--Missions--Oklahoma, Baptists--Oklahoma, Indians of North America--Oklahoma--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Portraits, Missionaries--Oklahoma, and Pawnee Indians--Pictorial works
Bock, Harry V., 1865-1949 Brendel, Allwilda Belle Griffith Dillon, Vince Gillingham, David Gray Eagle Pawnee Indian Baptist Church
Call Number:
WA MSS S-2546
Container / Volume:
Box 1 | Folder 11
Image Count:
2
Abstract:
Journal kept in a composition book by clerks of the Pawnee Indian Baptist Church, Pawnee, Oklahoma, and related photographs depicting Pawnee Indian members of the church and other Native Americans, 1907-1920., Photographs in the collection consist primarily of images of members of the church. These images include a group portrait of the congregation at the church, and a group portrait of Maggie Knife Chief and family at the Pawnee Indian Agency School, 1911; group portraits of Pawnee Indians at a meeting of the Oklahoma Indian Baptist Association in Anadarko, Oklahoma, 1912; group portraits of Pawnee Indians at the railroad station at Darrow, Oklahoma, July 1914, with men identified in a portrait as White Horse, Robert Peters, Hole in the Ground, and Lester Pratt, and a receipt for two roundtrip tickets purchased on the St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad from Darrow to Pawnee; and images of a baptism of a man identified as the oldest Oto Indian, 1915., and Portraits of identified Pawnee Indians in the collection include David Gillingham and Hattie Smith Burns, identified as the wife of Benny Burns. Portraits related to Charles Knife Chief include images of him, his children, and of him with John Moses. A portrait of two Pawnee Indian women depicts Nettie Moses and Jenny Long Wolf, who attended the Chilocco Indian Boarding School in Chilocco, Oklahoma. An undated group portrait probably took place at a religious conference meeting and includes Harry Bock.
Description:
Manuscript inscription on the recto and verso of photographic prints. and Reverend Joseph Greenberry Brendel (1862-1926) founded the Pawnee Indian Baptist Church on September 20, 1908 and served as its minister until April 20, 1911, when Harry Bock (1865-1949) took charge of the church. Bock worked many years with western showman Gordon W. Lillie, also known as Pawnee Bill, until becoming a Baptist missionary.
Subject (Geographic):
Anadarko (Okla.)--Pictorial works, Darrow (Okla.)--Pictorial works, Oklahoma--Pictorial works, and Pawnee (Okla.)--Pictorial works
Subject (Name):
Bock, Harry V., 1865-1949, Brendel, Joseph Greenberry, Knife Chief, Charles, and Moses, John
Subject (Topic):
Baptists--Missions--Oklahoma, Baptists--Oklahoma, Indians of North America--Oklahoma--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Pictorial works, Indians of North America--Portraits, Missionaries--Oklahoma, and Pawnee Indians--Pictorial works
Mimeographed manuscript Christmas "circular" letter written from the Immanuel Mission on the Kiowa, Comanche and Apache Indian Reservation, with an appended original manuscript note to "Aunt Row." The circular letter describes the receipt of presents sent by friends for the Kiowa mission members, the cutting and decorating of the Christmas tree, and the dissemination of the gifts at a mission Christmas celebration. In her note to Aunt Row, Reeside thanks her for a gift and discusses her recent holiday activities at Elk Creek and her plans to vacation in Mexico and California. The note is signed Am-day-co.
Description:
Baptist missionary who as a young woman went to the Elk Creek Baptist Mission near present-day Hobart, Oklahoma, on the Kiowa, Comanche and Apache Indian Reservation in 1892.
Subject (Name):
Elk Creek Mission, Immanuel Mission, and Reeside, Maryetta J
Subject (Topic):
Baptists--Missions--Oklahoma, Indian reservations--Oklahoma, Indians of North America--Oklahoma, Kiowa Indians--Missions, Kiowa Indians--Oklahoma, Missionaries--Oklahoma, Missions--Oklahoma, and Women--West (U.S.)