bread
Subject
Subject Source: Gilcrease Dci Tags
Found in 4 Collections and/or Records:
Group of Unknown Men Eating, late 19th century - early 20th century
Item — Folder Unknown: [Barcode: 255.Unknown]
Identifier: TU2009.39.7001
Description
Group of Unknown Men eating
Dates:
late 19th century - early 20th century
Letter from White Catcher and Twenty Officers of the 2nd and 3rd Indian Regiments to Chief John Ross, December 2, 1862
Item — Folder 1166: [Barcode: 187.1166]
Identifier: 4026.1358-.1
Description
Letter from White Catcher and 20 officers of the 2nd and 3rd Indian Regiments, Brigadier General J. G. Blunts Headquarters, Cane Hill, Arkansas to Chief John Ross asking his aid in detaining reinstatement of Cherokee in their homes, with bread furnished until crops can be produced at home. (Moulton). Single folded sheet of paper with handwritten text in ink on four pages. Folder 1166
Dates:
December 2, 1862
Letter to Henry Ross, from Lewis Ross, Fort Gibson, Cherokee Nation, describing raids on Wagon Trains from or to Fort Scott, December 7, 1864
Item — Folder 29: [Barcode: 188.29]
Identifier: 4026.279-.1
Description
Folder 29
Dates:
December 7, 1864
"Zuni Baking Day", early 20th century
Item — Folder 437: [Barcode: 127.437]
Identifier: 5327.534
Description
Folder 437 Transcript (DCI) [single page document typed on lined note paper]ZUNI BAKING DAYThe Zuni maiden bakes excellent bread in her oven. We call it a Dutch oven, but the Zunis have had this type of oven [illegible - 2 words crossed out] as far back as the white man’s knowledge of them goes. Her costume is her adaptation from the whites. The peton hanging down her back is purely ornamental. The buckskin wrappings...
Dates:
early 20th century