- P202_series01_box01_0012
- Item
- 1890 - 1925
Part of Herman T. Bohlman Photograph Collection, ca. 1890-1925
William L. Finley setting up a tent in a camp, possibly along the Lewis River?
Bohlman, Herman
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Part of Herman T. Bohlman Photograph Collection, ca. 1890-1925
William L. Finley setting up a tent in a camp, possibly along the Lewis River?
Bohlman, Herman
Part of Herman T. Bohlman Photograph Collection, ca. 1890-1925
Mounted lantern slide of Herman T. Bohlman and William L. Finley sitting in front of their tent along a river. Possibly the Lewis River?
Bohlman, Herman
Finley and Bohlman with fish catch
Part of Herman T. Bohlman Photograph Collection, ca. 1890-1925
Mounted lantern slide of William L. Finley and Herman T. Bohlman with several fish laid out on a bed of ferns beside their fishing poles. Possibly taken on the Lewis River. Original negative: P202_series01_box01_0007.
Bohlman, Herman
Part of Herman T. Bohlman Photograph Collection, ca. 1890-1925
Mounted lantern slide of William L. Finley (left) and an unidentified man sitting in wooden camp chairs. Possibly taken on the Lewis River trip.
Bohlman, Herman
Part of Herman T. Bohlman Photograph Collection, ca. 1890-1925
Mounted lantern slide of William L. Finley wading out to a boat loaded with equipment in a river. Possibly on the Lewis River. Original negative: P202_series01_box01_0009.
Bohlman, Herman
Part of Herman T. Bohlman Photograph Collection, ca. 1890-1925
Mounted lantern slide of William L. Finley fishing off the bank of a river. Possibly on the Lewis River? Original negative: P202_series01_box01_0004.
Bohlman, Herman
Part of Herman T. Bohlman Photograph Collection, ca. 1890-1925
Mounted lantern slide of Herman T. Bohlman crouching with binoculars while two unidentified women sit reading in chairs in Camp Tawasentha on July 4th. Original negative: P202_series01_box04_0009.
Bohlman, Herman
Part of Al Monner news negatives
An aerial view of a river in Woodland, Washington, possibly taken at the confluence of the Lewis and Columbia rivers. A beach and boats can be seen (negative 2 of 10).
Monner, Al (Alfred Anthony), 1909-1998
Part of Jason Lee papers
Typed letter written by Reverend Jason Lee to the Corresponding Secretary of the Missionary Society of the Methodist E. Church. Written on the banks of the Willamette River in Oregon on February 6, 1835 and published in the Christian Advocate and Journal on October 30, 1835. Letter is titled, "Flat Head Indians." In this letter, Lee sums up the last leg of his journey on the Oregon Trail, from the Rocky Mountains to Oregon. Subjects include Soda Spring, the Lewis River, Captain Nathaniel Wyeth, and Lee's observations of Native tribes including the Nez Perce, Flathead, Snake, Cayuse, and Wallawalla peoples. He then summarizes his arrival in Vancouver, Washington, his interactions with John McLoughlin, and his subsequent move to the Willamette River, where he built a house. He writes of his observations of the local native tribes, including the Kalapuyan peoples. [Lee originally intended to do missionary work among the Flathead Indian tribe, but the area where he eventually settled in the Willamette Valley, near present-day Salem, was home to bands of the Kalapuyan people. Lee used language common to justifying the nineteenth century missionary movement, including using disparaging and inaccurate terms and/or descriptions of Native peoples.]
Lee, Jason, 1803-1845