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On November 19, 1911, Edward S. Curtis (1868–1952), the “photohistorian” of American Indians, wrote to his friend Edmond S. Meany, Professor of History at the University of Washington, about his latest triumphs. “Dear Brother Meany,” he began, “I think we can say that my lecture entertainment ‘arrived’. I wish you could have been present at the Carnegie Hall affair. The tremendous auditorium was filled to overflowing, a sea of people from the stage to the very ‘sky’ itself.” Curtis had been introduced by Henry Fairfield Osborn, Director of the American Museum of Natural History; just before they stepped into view Osborn looked through the foliage and, according to Curtis, had remarked, ‘“Do you realise that that is almost an appalling audience, and one that few men in their life-time have the privilege of facing?’” “I think,” Curtis added, “he was a little nervous on his own account and slightly so on mine, [but] rather than causing nervousness … it gave me courage and I was absolutely certain of myself after my first two words.” “Osborn's voice,” Curtis explained, “lacks the carrying power and his slight nervousness meant a rather halting introduction. This was evidently greatly to my advantage, as the minute I spoke I reached the farther-most corners and my voice caught and held the people.”
Author's note: A much shorter version of this study was delivered as a paper to the U. S. American Studies Association Biennial Conference, San Diego, in 1985 and, somewhat changed, to “‘Making Exhibitions of Ourselves’: The Limits of Objectivity in the Representation of Other Cultures,” a symposium held at the British Museum, London, in February 1986. I am grateful to John Kasson for his comments on the shorter version.
1. Biographical accounts of Curtis may be found in Graybill, Florence Curtis and Boesen, Victor, Edward Sheriff Curtis: Visions of a Vanishing Race (New York: Crowell, 1976) and DeWall, Beth Barclay, “Edward Sheriff Curtis: A New Perspective on The North American Indian”, History of Photography 6 (07 1982): 223–39.
2. Curtis, to Meany, , 11 19, 1911, Meany Papers, University Archives, Records Center, University of Washington Libraries, Seattle. I am grateful to Gary T. Lundell for his help in researching the Meany papers.
3. In his letter to Roosevelt, Curtis, said, “It was a success beyond my greatest expectations,” 11 16, 1911, Roosevelt Papers; also Curtis, to Pinchot, , 11 16, 1911, Pinchot Papers, both in the Manuscript Division, Library of Congress, Washington, D. C. There were similar letters to his editor, Hodge, Frederick Webb, 11 19, 1911, Hodge Papers, Southwest Museum, Los Angeles, and, for example, to MissBowditch, Charlotte, 11 19, 1911, Bowditch Papers, Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History.
4. Roosevelt, to Curtis, , 11 21, 1911, Roosevelt Papers.
5. For a detailed account of Catlin's venture (with which Curtis's enterprise had much in common) see Truettner, William H.'s, The Natural Man Observed: A Study of Catlin's Indian Gallery (Washington, D. C: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1979); Russell, Don's The Wild West (Fort Worth: Amon Carter Museum, 1970) is an account of popular wild west shows.
6. Contemporary sources of information about Curtis's public appearances include “Convention Aftermath,” Camera Craft 1 (09 1900): 269; “Will Lecture On His Work,” newspaper clipping from Seattle Times, 11 20, 1904 in the Washington-Biography file, Pacific Northwest Collection, University of Washington Libraries; Curtis letters to Pinchot of December 30, 1904, and January 21, 1906, Pinchot Papers, speak of his engagements at the Cosmos and Century clubs; and an advertisement for talks at the Waldorf-Astoria in 1905, Pacific Northwest Collection.
7. A letter from Curtis to Dr. George Byron Gordon of the University of Pennsylvania Museum, September 5, 1906, gives his fees as $100.00 for a slide lecture and $125.00 when motion pictures were included (Letters to the Director, Museum Archives, University Museum, Philadelphia).
8. Curtis, Edward S., The North American Indian, ed. Hodge, Frederick Webb, under the patronage of Morgan, J. P. (Cambridge, Mass, and Norwood, Conn.: University Press and Plimpton Press, 1907–1930). Also, DeWall, cited above, and Ewing, Douglas C., “The North American Indian in Forty Volumes,” Art in America 70 (07–08 1972): 84–88.
9. One example of such speeches was reprinted in Gidley, Mick, “Edward S. Curtis Speaks …,” History of Photography 2 (10 1978): 347–54.
10. Curtis, to Hodge, , 07 7, 1911, Hodge Papers.
11. For commentary on this aspect of Curtis's movie work, see Gidley, Mick, “From the Hopi Snake Dance to The Ten Commandments: Edward S. Curtis as Filmmaker,” Studies in Visual Communication 8 (Summer 1982): 70–79. See also the Waldorf-Astoria advertisement cited in note 6.
12. Roosevelt, to Curtis, , 02 7, 1905, Roosevelt Papers. Natalie Curtis became the compiler-author of The Indians' Book (1907), an influential rendition of Indian songs, myths and stories.
13. Some of the field recordings for The North American Indian survive in the holdings of the Archives of Traditional Music at the University of Indiana, Bloomington; see Lee, Dorothy Sara, Native North American Music and Oral Data: A Catalogue of Sound Recordings 1893–1976 (Bloomington and London: Indiana University Press, 1979), pp. 55–58. I am grateful to Ronald K. Engard for sending me tapes copied from these recordings.
14. Biographical accounts of Gilbert appear in Longyear, Katherine M. E.'s unpublished thesis, “Henry F. Gilbert, His Life and Works,” Eastman School of Music, Rochester, 1968, and in her entry on Gilbert, in Sadie, Stanley, ed., The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (London: Macmillan, 1980), vol. 8, pp. 372–73.
15. The North American Indian, vol. 6, 1911, pp. 165–66.
16. Curtis's chief ethnologist, William E. Myers, was certainly conscious of the popularity and worth of the Pirate Song; in a letter to Gilbert he wrote: “Mrs. Myers joins me in best wishes to Mrs Gilbert and yourself. Last fall in a little New Mexico town we happened into a general store and heard [David] Bispham singing the ‘Pirate Song’ and thereafter we made it a daily practice to have business there so long as we were in the town. It's a fine thing” (Myers, to Gilbert, , 05 14, 1912, Gilbert Papers, Music Library, Yale University, New Haven). Subsequent quotations from letters to Gilbert are taken from these papers.
17. Curtis, to Gilbert, , 07 26, 1911; also further letters of July 26 and August 7 and 12, 1911.
18. Curtis, to Gilbert, , 08 7, 1911.
19. Gilbert, , “A Chapter of Reminiscence,” Part II, The New Music Review 20 (1921): p. 91.
20. Myers, to Gilbert, , 09 22 and October 7, 1910, and May 14, July 11, August 26 and November 26, 1912; Curtis, to Gilbert, , 02 17, 1914.
21. Gilbert, , “A Chapter of Reminiscence,” p. 91.
22. Curtis, to Gilbert, , 07 26, 1911; also, Curtis, to Gilbert, , 08 25 and September 7, 1911.
23. Rice, to Gilbert, , 08 24, 1911; also Rice, to Gilbert, , 08 31 and September 14, 1911, and Curtis, to Gilbert, , 08 18 and October 2, 1911.
24. See the second half of Curtis's exuberant letter to Meany of November 19, 1911, in which he described the “seventeen kinds of hell” through which he had traveled to success at Carnegie Hall; also, Curtis, to Hodge, , 01 6, 1912.
25. Gilbert, , “A Chapter of Reminiscence,” 91.
26. Curtis, to Gilbert, , 02 5, 1912, December 30, 1911; Schwinke, to Gilbert, , 03 2, 1912.
27. Curtis, to Gilbert, , 02 5, 1912, and Curtis, to Hodge, , 01 6, 1912. The note “Mr. Edward S. Curtis's ‘Picture-Opera,’” Bulletin of the Archaeological Institute of America 3 (06 1912): 188, constitutes an endorsement of the musicale.
28. E. S. Curtis and His Indian Picture-Opera “A Vanishing Race” Achieve Triumph, a simulated newspaper brochure produced to advertise the 1912–1913 tour, is in the collection of the present author. Unless otherwise indicated, all of the quotations and much of the information on the content and reception of the musicale is taken from it; subsequent citations, for quotations only, are to the original newspaper source as given in the brochure (though not all of these have been checked).
29. Price, , The Bellman (Minneapolis), 01 27, 1912.
30. Curtis, to Gilbert, , 06 4, 1913; also letters by Hammond, F. T. to Gilbert, , 07 16, August 8, October 15 and 22, November 7 and 13 (with enclosures), 1913. By 1915, the U. S. Columbia Record Catalog did list Gilbert, 's Dream of the Ancient Red Man; it was noted as incidental music to Curtis, 's “The Vanishing Race” illustrated lecture and consisted of “Signal Fire to the Mountain God” and “Song of the Wolf” played by [?] Prince's Orchestra (Columbia record number A 5457).
31. Curtis, to Gordon, , 01 16, 1912, Letters to the Director.
32. Curtis, to Wissler, , 12 4, 1911, File 110, Anthropology Department Archives, American Museum of Natural History, New York. I am grateful to Belinda Kaye for granting me access to this file.
33. Curtis, to Hodge, , 01 6 and 14 (together with enclosure to Francis W. Kelsey), and March 28, 1912. Details of financial provision appear in “Memorandum of Agreement” dated 12 16, 1911, between Curtis and the University Museum, Philadelphia (Letters to the Director).
34. New York Evening World, 11 16, 1911.Banks, Charles E., “Primitive Glory of Indian Shown,” undocumented newspaper clipping in Washington-Biography file, Pacific Northwest Collection.
35. Washington Star, Wednesday, 01 31, 1912; New York Evening Post, Thursday, 11 16, 1911; “Peeps Into Inner Life of the Indian,” Baltimore Star, 01 13, 1912; Times-Dispatch, 02 1, 1912.
36. “Picture-Opera is Given at Belasco,” Washington Herald, Wednesday, 01 31, 1912; “Belasco Audience Sees Indian Life in Picture-Opera,” Washington Times, Wednesday, 01 31, 1912.
37. New York Evening Telegram, Monday, 11 27, 1911; Price, as cited in note 29 above.
38. Curtis, to Gilbert, , 04 25, and Myers, to Gilbert, , 05 14, 1912.
39. Myers, to Gilbert, , 11 26, 1912, and January 4, 1913; Curtis to Gilbert, February 17 and 26, 1914. Unfortunately, no notes on the music by Gilbert appeared in the published volume, though most of the transcriptions were his.
40. Gilbert, , “Program Notes [Indian Sketches],” Boston Symphony Orchestra Programs 1920–21, ed. Hale, P. (Boston, 1921), p. 1074.
41. Gilbert, , Indian Scenes (New York: H. W. Gray, 1912). In this publication each piece is preceded by the appropriate Curtis picture–though two, “In the Kutenai Country” and “On the Jocko,” were mistakenly substituted for one another, a matter about which Curtis vented his irritation in a letter to Gilbert, of 04 25, 1912. For Curtis's blessings on this venture, see also his letters to Gilbert, , 12 23 and 30, 1911, and February 12, 1912.
42. Curtis, to Gilbert, , 10 3 and 28, 1912.
43. Curtis, to Gilbert, , 11 22, 1912.
44. See Gilbert, , “Program Notes,” pp. 1072–7.
45. Farwell's review was reprinted in the simulated newspaper cited in note 28. Myers, who certainly knew Indian music, called Gilbert, 's compositions “Indianesque music” in a letter to Gilbert, , 01 4, 1913. I am grateful to David Cawthra of Exeter University for playing Indian Scenes so that I could compare them with the field recordings.
46. The name Wa-Wan was itself taken from the name of an Omaha Indian ceremony. An untitled essay of Farwell's that put the case for Indian music most trenchantly was printed as an introduction to a group of compositions published by the press in September 1903; a reprint may be found in Farwell, Brice, ed., A Guide to the Music of Arthur Farwell and the Microform Collection of His Work (Briarcliff Manor, N. Y.: Brice Farwell, 1972), pp. 78–81. For a sensitive reading of this phase of American musical development, albeit with few examples of Gilbert's own role in it, see Chase, Gilbert, America's Music, rev. 2nd ed. (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1966), especially the chapter titled “The Americanists.” One parallel career is that of Charles Wakefield Cadman, who in 1910 brought “Princess” Tsianine Redfeather, an Omaha with a trained soprano voice, to New York to sing “Indian melodies” in the context of his lecture recital advocating the importance of aboriginal sources, and who composed a piece called To A Vanishing Race (1925); see The New Grove, vol. 3, p. 593. I am grateful to Barry Turner for bringing Cadman to my attention.
47. Austin, , The American Rhythm: Studies and Reexpressions of American Indian Songs (New York: Cooper Square, 1970) is a reprint of the enlarged edition of 1930. Pages 41–43 of this book record some instances of the rise of appreciation for Indian cultural expression in early twentieth-century America, a subject treated at length in the first third of Castro, Michael's Interpreting the Indian: Twentieth Century Poets and the Native American (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1983).
48. Curtis, to Austin, , n.d. [early 03 1911], Mary Hunter Austin Papers, Huntington Library, San Marino.
49. If the title of a brief contemporary review that I have been unable to check is significant, it may have pressed this point: Llewellyn, Louise, “Indian Tunes and National Music,” Musical America 16 (02 3, 1912): 2.
50. Curtis, to Gilbert, , 04 11, 1913.
51. See Gidley, , “From the Hopi Snake Dance to The Ten Commandments,” cited in note 11. It is also noteworthy that it was precisely during this period that the movies were coming to be conceived of as an appropriate medium for historical reconstruction on an epic scale, as in Griffith, D. W.'s The Birth of a Nation (1914). For Curtis's more ambitious film work, see Holm, Bill and Quimby, George I., Edward S. Curtis in the Land of War Canoes: A Pioneer Cinematographer of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle and London: University of Washington Press, 1980).
52. Unfortunately, most of the slides that survive appear to be in inaccessible private collections; I am grateful to Thomas V. Lange, formerly of the Morgan Library, New York, for showing me the collection of uncatalogued slides in that library.
53. Curtis to Meany, as cited in note 2.
54. New York Evening Sun, Thursday, 11 16, 1911.
55. For development of the ramifications of the vanishing race idea, see Dippie, Brian W., The Vanishing American: White Attitudes and U. S. Indian Policy (Middletown: Wesleyan University Press, 1982). A somewhat distorted view of the idea's expression in Curtis's work is to be found in Lyman, Christopher M., The Vanishing Race and Other Illusions: Photographs of Indians by Edward S. Curtis (Washington, D. C: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1982).
56. Reproduced from a brochure in the Pacific Northwest Collection.
57. This script and the other documents that follow here are in the collection of Karl Kernberger. I am grateful to Mr. Kernberger for granting me access to them. The scripts have been drastically cut.
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