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California Historical Society Collection, 1860-1960
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Title Insurance and Trust and C.C. Pierce Photography Collection 1860-1960
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Puye cave dwellings (or Santa Clara ruins?), New Mexico, ca.1900
(USC DC Image)
Puye cave dwellings (or Santa Clara ruins?), New Mexico, ca.1900
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Description
Photograph of the Puye cave dwellings (or Santa Clara ruins?), New Mexico, ca.1900. Various sized holes where cave dwellers used to dwell are visible around the base of the cliff. Rocks and large boulders are strewn all over the hill leading up to the caves.; "The Tewa are a group of Pueblo Indians related by language. Today they live in six villages near the Rio Grande, all north of Santa Fe, namely, Nambe, Pojoaque, Tesuque, San Ildefonso, Santa Clara, and San Juan. According to legend the Tewa entered this world by ascending from Sipofene, a mythical place beneath a lake. In some Tewa villages it is said that the people climbed up a Douglas fir rising out of the lake, and that the first one up was Poseyemum the Tewa culture hero, a supernatural being sometimes called the son of the sun, who taught the art of living to the people. Ancient beliefs and traditions are still among the Tewa. Their pueblos are divided into two parts, so-called moitiesm the summer and the winter people." -- Brandy Stahley, July 1998.; "Puye cave dwelling Indians: The first thing you see is the cliff face dotted with little black holes that use to be the homes of ancient Indians. The Indians that lived in these cliffs were long gone by the time Europeans landed. It isn't known exactly why they left; but life in these cliffs was far from easy. Food and living materials needed to be carried up the cliff faces. The holes in the cliff face vary in size and shape. The black ceilings tell of fires long since extinguished. Here is one of the few remaining structures on the side of the cliff. It was repaired in the recent past to fill up some of the holes. The fact this was built right on the edge of a steep drop shows the ingenuity of these natives. The cliff face was only half the actual inhabitation. On top the mesa was the remains of probably 50-100 buildings. It was thought that the Indians moved from the cliff face, to the mesa top. The community structures and storage buildings all seemed to be located on top. One of the most impressive structures was the large covered pit that was the community meeting room." -- unknown author.
Asset Metadata
Title
Puye cave dwellings (or Santa Clara ruins?), New Mexico, ca.1900
Subject
Cliff Dwellers
(file heading),
Cliff-dwellers
(subject),
Cliff-dwellers
(lcsh),
cliffs
(lcsh),
Dwellings
(lcsh),
Indians of North America
(lcsh),
tribal areas
(adlf)
Tags
OAI-PMH Harvest
Place
New Mexico
(states),
USA
(countries)
Temporal Subject
1900
Type
images
Format
2 photographs : glass photonegative, photoprint, b&w ; 21 x 26 cm.
(aacr2),
glass plate negatives
(format),
photographic prints
(aat),
photographs
(aat)
Source
California Historical Society
(contributing entity),
California Historical Society Collection, 1860-1960
(collection),
Title Insurance and Trust, and C.C. Pierce Photography Collection, 1860-1960
(subcollection)
Date Created
1900
Creator
Pierce, C.C. (Charles C.), 1861-1946
(photographer)
Publisher
University of Southern California. Libraries
(digital)
Repository Email
specol@lib.usc.edu
Repository Name
USC Libraries Special Collections
Repository Location
Doheny Memorial Library, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0189
Rights
Public Domain. Please credit both “University of Southern California. Libraries” and “California Historical Society” as the source. Digitally reproduced by the USC Digital Library.
Copyright
Public Domain. Please credit both “University of Southern California. Libraries” and “California Historical Society” as the source. Digitally reproduced by the USC Digital Library.
Access Conditions
Send requests to address or e-mail given
Permanent Link (DOI)
https://doi.org/10.25549/chs-m17442
Identifier
5682 (
accession number
), CHS-5682 (
call number
), CHS-5682 (
filename
), chs-m265 (
legacy collection record id
), chs-c65-17437 (
legacy record id
), chs-m17442 (
legacy record id
), USC-1-1-1-13506 (
legacy record id
), 1-165- (
microfiche number
), USC (
project
)
IIIF ID
[Document.IIIFV3ID]
DM Record ID
17437
Unique identifier
UC142533
Legacy Identifier
CHS-5682.tiff
Type
Image
Internet Media Type
image/tiff
Resolution
17.0 in × 13.5 in at 300dpi
43.1 cm × 34.5 cm at 300dpi
Inherited Values
Title
Title Insurance and Trust and C.C. Pierce Photography Collection 1860-1960
Description
The nearly 15,000 unique photographs of this collection contain the work of C.C. Pierce which cover the Los Angeles region city, street and architectural views, California Missions, Southwestern Native Americans, and turn-of-century Nevada, Arizona, and California. Pierce, active from 1886 to 1940, was one of the leading photographers of his day and amassed a collection of 15,000 images, including his own and those bought and copied from his contemporaries, George Wharton James and Charles Puck. The James collection contains over 2,000 images of portraits, customs, ceremonies, arts, and games of various groups of Southwestern Native Americans.
Date Created
1860/1960
Linked assets
Title Insurance and Trust and C.C. Pierce Photography Collection 1860-1960
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