Why Wyoming? An Investigation into Stan Leeโ€™s Relationship with the American Heritage Center

Spider-Man poses in the lobby of the American Heritage Center, 1994. American Heritage Center Collections, University of Wyoming.

The University of Wyomingโ€™s American Heritage Center is home to thousands of collections. Perhaps one of the most popular, and equally perplexing, collections is the Stan Lee Papers, the official archive of the celebrated author, editor, and Marvel Comics trailblazer.

In the early summer of 2023, Hazel Homer-Wambeam, Liam Leslie, and I were given the unique opportunity to work in this archive to curate an exhibit about Leeโ€™s life. From the moment we embarked on this research journey, we were frequently asked one question: โ€œWhy on earth are Stan Leeโ€™s papers in Wyoming?โ€ Additionally, why would an iconic comic book author and businessman, based largely in Los Angeles and New York, choose an institution in Wyoming as the repository of his papers? Luckily for you, True Believer, my fellow interns and I had the same question and decided to investigate.

Stan Lee on the set of Fantastic Four, 2005. Box 127, Stan Lee Papers, Collection No. 8302, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

Stan Lee, born Stanley Martin Leiber on December 28, 1922, in New York City, is widely recognized as a significant figure in popular culture history. Born in poverty to Romanian-Jewish parents, Lee’s entry into the comic book world began in 1939 when, with assistance from his uncle Robbie Solomon, he secured a position as an assistant at Timely Comics. This newly established division belonged to Martin Goodman’s pulp magazine and comic-book publishing venture. Joe Simon, the editor at Timely, officially hired Lee, who had familial ties through his cousin Jean, Goodman’s wife.

Although Stan Lee’s initial role at Timely involved routine tasks like sharpening pencils and replacing ink, his aspirations as a writer remained his focus. He found himself in company with the likes of innovative and influential illustrator Jack Kirby and esteemed editor-writer Joe Simon. Kirby and Simon were the creators of the highly successful superhero Captain America, which debuted on December 20, 1940, in Captain America Comics #1. Lee’s journey as a comic-book writer commenced in May of the following year with his debut text filler ‘Captain America Foils the Traitor’s Revenge’ in Captain America Comics #3. It was Kirby and Simon who provided the young office assistant, Lee, with his break, allowing him to contribute to the comic under the pen name “Stan Lee,” a name he would later adopt as his own in his professional career.

After Simon and Kirby departed Timely in late 1941 due to a disagreement with Goodman, the 30-year-old publisher appointed the then 19-year-old Stan Lee as interim editor. Despite his youth, Lee exhibited an innate talent for the industry, securing his position as the editor-in-chief of the comic-book division and serving as its art director for a significant duration until 1972. It was in this year that Lee eventually took over from Goodman as the publisher. He continued to write for Timely while serving in the U.S. Army during the Second World War, but in the late 1950s, Lee and Kirby began writing superhero comics, eventually changing Timely Comics to Marvel Comics. Entire volumes have been dedicated to Marvel Comics, exploring the dynamic between Lee and Kirby, among other aspects. However, for now, let’s just say, “The rest is history!”

Stan Lee gained worldwide fame by being the public, charismatic face of Marvel Comics. In addition to comic books, Marvel would branch out into film and television with Lee at the helm, even appearing in cameos in a significant number of Marvel projects. Stan Lee died on November 12, 2018, but his legacy is felt to this day. Stan Lee wrote and edited nearly 10,000 comic books. Marvel has produced more than 70 films and television shows and is worth an estimated $53 billion as of 2023.

By the time of his death, Stan Lee was a cultural hero to millions; however, the American Heritage Centerโ€™s relationship with him began when he was still the editor-in-chief and publisher at Marvel Comics.

To begin our investigation into why Stan Lee chose the AHC, we had to dig into the AHC’s donor files. These files, which exist for many collections, house the communications between the Center and its donors. Stan Leeโ€™s donor file is a treasure trove, which establishes a long friendship between Stan Lee and the American Heritage Center.

The first-ever entry in the โ€œStan Lee Papersโ€ is a letter from controversial former AHC director, Gene Gressley, to Stan Lee. In this initial correspondence, Gressley recalls previous conversations about Leeโ€™s desire to preserve his legacy by archiving his material. Gene Gressley (1931โ€“) is credited with procuring the vast majority of AHC collection material. His methods of collection, which included extensive correspondence and, at times, hitchhiking across the United States, brought him notoriety in the historical community.

During his trips, Gressley would meet rich and influential people who had material or money to donate. This raised the question: When and how did Gene Gressley and Stan Lee meet? Unfortunately, Stan Lee is not alive to tell us how exactly he met the eccentric historian, and currently, we have yet to locate Gene Gressley for comment, despite our best efforts. The origin of their relationship is one we had to infer through donor communications, which indicated that Gressley developed a friendship with the still up-and-coming publisher and producer in the early 1970s on one of these archival road trips. For now, what we know is that in 1982, Gene indicated in his correspondence that he had known Stan for โ€œabout 10 years,” putting Stanโ€™s first interaction with the AHC to about 1972, a claim that would be substantiated again in 1994 when Gressley wrote to Lee after his dismissal from the Center.

Letter from Gene Gressley to Stan Lee, and the first Stan Lee entry at the AHC, November 16, 1978. American Heritage Center Collections, University of Wyoming.

On December 5, 1978, Gressley and Lee met in the Manhattan offices of Marvel Comics to hash out the details of the donation contract, which would give the American Heritage Center ownership over the material, with the Lee estate having access to copies as needed. By January 1, 1979, the contract was signed, and the Stan Lee Papers were born.

Over the next two years, Stanโ€™s secretaries would contact the Center frequently to let them know that Stan and his staff were going through Stanโ€™s letters to find worthwhile material. Gressley would respond in a 1982 letter, โ€œMy archival greed knows no bounds!” letting Stan know that the AHC would take all material. Gressley, multiple times, tells Stan that what he is trying to do is create a โ€œbiography of documents,” a phrase that the Stan Lee team at the American Heritage Center has come to revisit many times in this process.

Letter from Stan Lee to Gene Gressley, 1982. American Heritage Center Collections, University of Wyoming.

Stan would joke that the AHC became his new way of โ€œcleaning out his files,” but that he enjoyed the process of archiving his materials. Stan wrote to Gene in 1982, โ€œLordy! Lordy! Wonโ€™t historians of the future owe us a towering debt of gratitude!โ€ Curating the collection became something of a fun activity within Stan Leeโ€™s offices, with Stan recalling his secretary picking up a moldy memo and asking, โ€œCan I send this to Director Gressley?โ€ He joked that maybe they were sending too much material and that the University of Wyoming might consider finding a new campus to fit it all. These moments where Stan Lee describes the joy of curating and donating his material are the most fun, as they serve as a reminder of what this collection meant to Lee and that we are dealing with the objects of his life.

In 1983โ€“84, communications with Stan Lee dropped off slightly, although there is some indication that Gene Gressley was still in communication with him socially. At one point, he even visited Leeโ€™s home to see some of his writing materials. However, official communications regarding the collection taper off. This can be credited to the creation of Marvel Productions in Los Angeles, which was also being run by Lee.

In 1984, Marvel Productions suffered a massive studio fire, suffering a $300,000 loss of material, some of which was meant to be shipped to the AHC. Gressley and Lee wrote to each other during this time. These letters read less like official communications about the collection, but more like comforting letters between friends. Gressley told him he hoped that the โ€œintrinsic and creative loss was minimal.โ€ Lee replied, โ€œPlease take continued good care of my fantasma-goric papers – those in my possession are probably all I have left.โ€

After the fire, Stan Lee and his team began donating material more often for โ€œsafe-keeping purposes.” The massive loss of Marvel archival material in this fire may have impacted our collection at the American Heritage Center; however, the world is lucky that this collection exists. Otherwise, that loss of history could have been much worse. Writing about the collection after the fire, Lee said, “It makes me feel somehow โ€“ authentic! Now that I know somebody actually seems to really notice the material that I send, and some mysterious human being somewhere is honest-to-gosh cataloging it, weโ€™ll knock ourselves out to send you more stuff than ever!โ€

Letter from Stan Lee to Gene Gressley regarding the Marvel Studio fire, March 12, 1994. American Heritage Center Collections, University of Wyoming.

Gene Gressley and Stan Lee continued to stay in touch, both officially and socially. Both men were entering new stages in their careers and congratulated one another on it. Stan Leeโ€™s Marvel Age magazines and Marvel Productions films were taking off. Gressley had been elected president of the Western History Association. They would write to each other about these accomplishments, and at one point, Lee told Gressley that he was his โ€œfavorite penpal.โ€

But things would get shaken up in 1988 when interim AHC Director Lewis M. Dabney wrote to Lee to inform him that Gene Gressley had taken another โ€œhonored positionโ€ at the University of Wyoming. We know that Gressley had been dismissed from the AHC for his interference with donors and donor materials but was maintaining his faculty position. Lee and Gressleyโ€™s friendship continued after Gressley’s firing; this was revealed in Gressleyโ€™s dismissal from the University, where it had also been revealed that he was still receiving material from Stan Lee after he departed from the American Heritage Center.

This, however, did not slow down Stan Leeโ€™s love for the AHC. Lee continued to give monetary and material donations annually to the Center and developed friendships with the new staff and directors. Letters exchanged between Stan Lee and Mike Devine show Lee frequently sent signed comic books and drawings to Devineโ€™s young son, and he updated Devine on his upcoming movie cameos. Stan Leeโ€™s relationship with the American Heritage Center was growing.

Stan Lee and AHC Director Mike Devine planned a visit by Lee to the University of Wyoming, where he headlined a series of educational events for the Laramie community. This visit included visits to the UW Lab School, a dinner with students at the Beta House, a reception in the American Heritage Center Loggia (which, at the time, was a new addition to the University of Wyoming campus), and a lecture in the Arts and Sciences Auditorium. And to make the visit even more fun, Stan Lee brought Spider-Man with him to promote the visit and take pictures with fans. Stan Lee frequently traveled across the country to speak at public schools and college campuses to promote literacy, storytelling, and comic books as an academic medium. Lee, who never attended college himself, likely due to his familyโ€™s economic status and the onset of World War II, eventually gained the nickname โ€œStan, the Speaker-Manโ€ for these visits.

Bill Hopkins (left) and the late Matt Sprinkle (right) of the AHC with Stan Lee in the Arts and Sciences Auditorium, April 1994. American Heritage Center Collections, University of Wyoming.
Stan Lee posing proudly with selections from the Stan Lee Papers, April 13, 1994. American Heritage Center Collections, University of Wyoming.
Stan Lee signs a Spider-Man comic for a child in the American Heritage Center Loggia, April 13, 1994. American Heritage Center Collections, University of Wyoming.

This visit to the American Heritage Center lives on in the memories of many Wyoming Stan Lee fans, some of whom reached out to our team to share stories of meeting Stan Lee and images of their signed comic books. The photographs of this visit show Lee meeting fans of all ages, enthusiastically signing their comic books, and chatting with them. These images also show him standing among his vast archive; by this point, the Stan Lee Papers were already reaching a colossal size, and it is now nearly two hundred cubic feet of material.

After the visit, Stan Lee wrote, โ€œYes, as far as Iโ€™m concerned, good olโ€™ Wyoming U. is my alma mater. I just wish I could remember where I stored my cap and gown!โ€ Laramie was much more than just the home of his archive; to Lee, the American Heritage Center was meeting the goal of his work being received as academically legitimate.

Throughout the following years, although he never visited again, Stan Lee and his team would continue their donations to the AHC. It is unclear why Stan Leeโ€™s donations ceased in 2011, although reports from the time show that he was beginning to struggle with his health alongside the beginning of the now iconic Marvel Cinematic Universe. Still, despite the end of his donations, Lee and his team remained friends with the American Heritage Center. In January 2012, he spoke about the AHC in an interview with The Wall Street Journal: โ€œYou may wonder why I picked that university but, when they asked if I would archive my material there, they said that Jack Benny had his archive there. And I was a big fan of Jack Bennyโ€™s and I figured, if heโ€™s there, I want to be there.โ€

In 2015, Lee even did a telephone interview with a young Hazel Homer-Wambeam, one of our interns, for her Wyoming History Day project about his lifeโ€”a connection she made through the Center.

Stan Lee is one of the most important literary figures of this generation, and the opportunity to study his life has been a marvelous opportunity. Leeโ€™s work tells the story of American popular culture, social justice, and literature, and as academics, we can glean a great deal of knowledge about our world from it. Exploring these documents has allowed me to develop a greater understanding of Stan Leeโ€™s life, both in the big picture and in the day-to-day, creating what Gressley called a โ€œbiography of documents.” None of this would have been possible without the American Heritage Centerโ€™s persistent efforts to not only obtain collections but also maintain positive friendships with those who donate.

Stan Leeโ€™s legacy lives on in the American Heritage Centerโ€™s Stan Lee Papers forever and is accessible to the public upon request.

To learn more about Stan Leeโ€™s life, business ventures, and social views and to see highlights from the collection, visit the AHC exhibit Stan Lee: Beyond the Book opening May 1, 2024, in the American Heritage Center Loggia. The exhibit runs through November 1, 2024.

โ€˜Nuff Said.

Post contributed by AHC Intern Rhiannon McLean.

Posted in American Heritage Center, Biography and profiles, Comic book history, Entertainment history, Interns' projects, Marvel Comics, Pop Culture, popular culture, Stan Lee, Superheroes, Uncategorized, University of Wyoming | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Unveiling the Language of Anti-Environmentalism: Insights from the James Watt and Malcolm Wallop Papers

As a recipient of the AHCโ€™s 2021 Alan K. Simpson Fellowship in Western Political History, my research project delved into the intriguing world of two influential figures, James Watt and Malcolm Wallop, to shed light on their roles in shaping the anti-environmentalist movement. By examining the papers of these two key individuals, I gained valuable insights into the rhetoric and strategies employed.

During his tenure as Secretary of the Interior from 1981 to 1983, James Watt’s language and policies reflected broader trends within the New Right movement of the 1970s and 1980s. However, Watt also played a significant role in shaping future anti-environmentalist organizations, such as the Wise Use Movement of the late 1980s and 1990s, which was known for its hyper-individualist language. My research project viewed Watt as a vanguard in promoting a conservative “environmentalism” centered around deregulation and the opening of public lands. By analyzing his individual writings and correspondence, I was able to discern both his public justifications and the private motivations behind his policies.

Photograph of President Ronald Reagan (seated) presenting a โ€œCutting the Code of Federal Regulationsโ€ plaque to Secretary of the Interior James Watt (standing), 1981. Box 8, James G. Watt papers, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

Watt’s language and rhetorical strategies were tailored to specific audiences, revealing the nuanced nature of political communication. By comparing and contrasting his discourse to political allies, opponents, and the general public, I gained a deeper understanding of how Watt framed his policies to garner support and neutralize opposition. His letters to Reagan administration officials, press releases, and speeches provided valuable insights into the intricate patterns and strategies employed by Watt to delegitimize critics and rally support. Even when his rhetorical strategies failed, studying them shed light on his mindset and the broader forces that influenced his choices.

Examining Watt’s work with Ron Arnold, a prominent figure in the later Wise Use Movement, offered further understanding of the origins of anti-environmentalist thought. Arnold, hired by the Free Congress Research and Education Foundation to write Watt’s biography, portrayed him as a paradigm shift in environmental thought, advocating for an ecology centered on human needs. This rhetoric closely aligned with the ideology of the Wise Use Movement, which celebrated industry and exploitation as natural human interactions with the environment. Delving into Watt’s association with Arnold allows for an exploration of the intellectual and political ties between Watt and the Wise Use Movement, illuminating their shared rhetoric and motivations.

The Malcolm Wallop papers, also housed at the AHC, provided a valuable complement to the Watt collection. Wallop’s involvement in environmental and public lands politics extended well beyond Watt’s tenure, offering insights into the continuity within the anti-environmentalist movement. His attempt to introduce legislation in 1995 to restrict federal ownership of Western land mirrored the policy aims of the Sagebrush Rebellion, a movement of the late 1970s.

Page of the Senate Congressional Record referencing the Sagebrush Rebellion, January 19, 1981. Box 126, Malcolm Wallop papers, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

This anachronistic policy proposal, in contrast to contemporaneous anti-environmentalist politics advocating privatization, highlighted the complexities and evolution of the movement. Further research is necessary to fully grasp the implications of Wallop’s legislation and its relationship to the broader anti-environmentalist movement.

Within the Wallop papers, there are folders that shed light on Wallop’s involvement in committees dedicated to investigating climate change during the early 1990s. Examining these materials revealed an intriguing progression in the Republican opposition to climate science. Wallop initially expressed concern about climate change, but as time went on, his focus shifted towards the economic costs of taking action and even raised rhetorical doubts about the scientific basis of climate change. The compilation of folders related to climate change provides a wealth of information, highlighting the pivotal role they played in shaping the modern anti-environmentalist movement, which aimed to impede any measures aimed at addressing climate change.

Letter from Richard L. Lawson of the National Coal Association to Senator Malcolm Wallop regarding an anti-environmentalist opinion essay Lawson wanted Wallop to publish, May 4, 1992. Box 215, Malcolm Wallop papers, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

Exploring the James Watt and Malcolm Wallop papers at the AHC has provided significant insights into the language, rhetoric, and motivations of the anti-environmentalist movement. The analysis of these documents reveals the complex strategies employed to justify policies and garner support, as well as the interconnectedness of political ideologies and environmental politics.

Post contributed by Zephaniah Fleetwood, PhD candidate, Department of History, University of California, Davis.

Posted in American history, Anti-environmentalism, Biography and profiles, Conservative politics, environmental history, Environmental policy, Political history, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Happy 140th Birthday, Dard Hunter! A Tribute to the Roycrofter Who Excelled in Hand Papermaking, Printing, and Paper History

November 29 marks the 140th birthday of Dard Hunter (1883-1966), born William Joseph Hunter. Sometimes referred to as the father of hand papermaking, Hunter is known for his extensive worldwide travel documenting the hand papermaking tradition in Asia, his publications about historical papermaking, and his active work as a printer and papermaker.

Dard Hunter. Photo from the Robert C. Williams Museum of Papermaking, Georgia Tech.

But before he turned his interest to hand papermaking, early in his career Hunter worked and lived as a Roycrofter. Located in the community of East Aurora, New York (not far from Buffalo), the Roycrofters worked within the traditions of the Arts and Crafts Movement, which had its origins in England during the 1880s, and developed as a reaction to changes brought about with the industrial age and mechanization. American writer and publisher Elbert Hubbard founded the community in 1895 and the enterprise produced furniture, textiles, ceramics, leather and metal goods, in addition to the products of the print shop, including books and several periodicals. The community eventually went bankrupt in the 1930s.

Elbert Hubbardโ€™s The Roycroft Shop, a History. 1909. Cover design by Dard Hunter including his stylized rose design. His initials are in the bottom righthand corner.

Dard Hunter worked in the East Aurora community from about 1904 to 1910 and although he started in furniture making, he also worked in iron, copper, pottery, stained glass, and book design. Many publications from the Roycroft Print Shop are among the holdings of the American Heritage Center’s Toppan Rare Books Library and were donated primarily by William Fitzhugh, a physician and rare book collector.

The Roycroft Print Shopย  continued to use Hunterโ€™s designs after he left the Roycroft campus. This is an issue of The Fra: A Journal of Affirmation, 1915.

The Roycroft Print Shop created decorative books and made them available to the American public, implementing a comprehensive production and marketing strategy that allowed publication of a single title in various grades of paper, binding, and design that was suited to the means and desires of the consumer.ย From finely crafted, illuminated limited editions to mass-produced books, the American people were exposed to affordable Roycroft book decoration and craftsmanship.ย Hunterโ€™s graphic design work for the Roycroft Print Shop was therefore also made available to many categories of consumers.

One of Hunterโ€™s early Roycroft designs was for Washington Irvingโ€™s Rip Van Winkle (1905), and one of his last designs included advertising postcards for the Roycroft Inn. He designed title pages, plus coordinated elements such as borders, roses, and initial letters used in various combinations within a publication. His designs could be specific to the subject of a particular book or be more generalized designs used for books or other periodicalsย produced by the Roycroft Print Shop.

Washington Irving, Rip Van Winkle, 1905. Title page designed by Dard Hunter. This was Hunterโ€™s second book design at the Roycroft Print Shop.
Washington Irving, Rip Van Winkle, 1905. Initial blocks were designed by Dard Hunter.
One of six postcards by Dard Hunter to promote the Roycroft Inn and the Roycroftย  Campus. His studio was in the top floor of the tower. This was one of his last works while at the Roycroft Campus.

His โ€œDHโ€ initials are seen on many of his designs, and his stylized rose design (in orange) became affiliated with Roycroft publications.ย Hunterโ€™s use of line drawings, stylized botanicals, rectangular borders, and the colors black and orange, sometimes with green, are typical of many of his works.

Elbert Hubbard, White Hyacinths, 1907. Title page with ornamentation designed by Dard Hunter. This design features his stylized botanicals, and typical use ofย  black, orange, and green.
The stylized initials “DH” denote designs by Dard Hunter. Detail from Elbert Hubbard, White Hyacinths, 1907.

Publications of the Roycroft Print Shop, including many samples of Dard Hunterโ€™s graphic arts designs,ย can be studied at the Toppan Rare Books Library. Please contact etoppan@uwyo.edu to set up a viewing appointment on weekdays 9am-4pm.

Post contributed by Ginny Kilander, Supervisor of the American Heritage Center Reference Services Dept. Ginny is also an artist whose interests include papermaking, marbling, and the books arts.

Posted in Arts and Crafts Movement, Book arts, Dard Hunter, Design, Roycrofters, Toppan Rare Books Library, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Richard Tregaskis: Capturing Warโ€™s Grit and Humanity Through Journalism

For the American public at home in 1942, the war raging thousands of miles across oceans could seem remote and opaque. Richard Tregaskisโ€™ Guadalcanal Diary brought the stories of the American forces engaged in brutal fighting to the homefront in a popular and vivid format.

Richard Tregaskis (November 28, 1916 โ€“ August 15, 1973) was an American journalist, war correspondent, and author. As a war correspondent, he covered the Pacific and European theaters of World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War from the front lines. Tregaskis was embedded with combat troops, even being severely wounded himself in Italy during the Second World War. The American Heritage Center houses the Richard Tregaskis papers, which is a collection of his publications, manuscripts, correspondence, photographs and more.

Tregaskis is most well-known for his WWII reporting and specifically for his book Guadalcanal Diary (1943). The book covers the first several weeks of the Guadalcanal Campaign – the first allied ground offensive of the Pacific during the war. Tregaskis was attached to the Marine troops for the first several weeks of the battle, from the landing on the beach to the Battle of Alligator Creek[1], through to the Battle of Edsonโ€™s Ridge.

“Marines on the March.” This photograph is from file unit World War II – Guadalcanal and Guam at the National Archives. Photo identifier is 74250435.

Tregaskisโ€™ on-the-ground, matter-of-fact style which drew heavily upon conversations with Marine troopsโ€”from the generals in charge of the operations down to the โ€œgruntsโ€โ€”made it a bestseller at a time when the American public was hungry for news of the war and of the soldiers overseas. Published before the war (and even before the Guadalcanal Campaign) was over, the book was so popular it was even made into a movie the year it was released.

First edition of Guadalcanal Diary and a Swedish edition. Box 2, Richard Tregaskis papers, Collection No. 6346, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

Tregaskis took copious and careful notes during his reporting trips, which allowed him to reconstruct his experiences into news wires and books later on, for example, โ€œBut the general remained calm. He sat on the ground beside the operations tent โ€˜Well,โ€™ he said cheerfully, โ€˜itโ€™s only a few more hours till dawn. Then weโ€™ll see where we stand.โ€™ Occasionally, he passed along a short, cogent suggestion to Col. Thomas. He was amused at my efforts to take notes in the dark.โ€[2]

Box of Richard Tregaskisโ€™ notebooks, including some of his World War II notes. Box 64, Richard Tregaskis papers, Collection No. 6346, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

In these notes, he recorded the names and hometowns of every soldier that he talked to during his reporting. This may be one reason why the book was so popular, as readers could more readily identify with the names and hometowns of the service members as opposed to the more sterile and censored newspaper reports typical of the early war period. An example from an after-action interview typifies this approach:

โ€œI found Lieut. Fink (Chris Fink of Gray Bull [sic], Wyo.), the naval dive-bomber who had hit the enemy cruiser, a new vessel of the Jintsu class. He was a slow-speaking Westerner, and said, as the other pilots had said, that he had not had a chance to watch his bomb hit. But his radioman, Milo L. Kimerblin (of Spokane, Wash.), told the story: โ€˜The bomb hit right on the bridge and a sheet of flame and smoke went right up to the clouds. I could see the stack and bridge lift out of the ship and go kerplunk in the ocean. She was still burning when we left. You could see the smoke and flames for about forty miles.โ€™โ€

Tregaskis, Guadalcanal Diary, 163.
One of Tregaskisโ€™ WWII notebooks from Italy, with names and hometowns of soldiers. Box 64, Richard Tregaskis papers, Collection No. 6346, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

In 2023, 80 years after the battle, with the detailed ranks, names, and hometowns that Tregaskis supplied, and with modern resources readily available such as WWII casualty rolls, genealogical websites, and military citations databases, it is often possible to find out what happened to many of the men that Tregaskis interviewed after the publication of the book. Chris Fink survived the war and later served in the Korean War, retired from the Navy and died in 1999. Radioman Milo L. Kimberlin also survived the war, dying in 1985.[3]

Richard Tregaskisโ€™ papers at the AHC contain such things as his notebooks from his war reporting, manuscripts for articles and books, his published books, personal and professional correspondence, and more. Of course, some of these relate to Guadalcanal Diary:

Mock citation awarded to Richard Tregaskis, Box 97, Richard Tregaskis papers, Collection No. 6346, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.
Tregaskis, Guadalcanal Diary, 169-169.

To learn more about Richard Tregaskisโ€™ life and career and to view his papers, visit the American Heritage Center at the University of Wyoming. For a visual look at Tregaskisโ€™s war photography and other wartime imagery, explore our Virmuze exhibit โ€œSouvenirs of War,โ€ which features photographs from his Vietnam assignments.

Post contributed by Marcus Holscher, Toppan Rare Books Library, American Heritage Center.


[1] Also covered by Robert Leckie in Helmet for My Pillow (1957) and subsequently HBOโ€™s The Pacific (2010).

[2] Richard Tregaskis, Guadalcanal Diary (New York: Random House, 1943), 228.

[3] โ€œCapt. Christ Fink,โ€ Coronado Eagle and Journal, October 20, 1999. Fold3, US Department of Veterans Affairs BIRLS Death File, 1850-2010, database and images. Accessed November 17, 2023.

Posted in American history, Authors and literature, Guadalcanal Campaign, Journalism, military history, Uncategorized, War correspondents, World War II | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Laboratory-War Zone: Natural Knowledge and Frontier Violence in the American West

The “Skull of [a] Medicine Man” sits among 728 photographs in William Henry Jackson’s Descriptive Catalogue of the United States Geological Survey of the Territories produced between 1869 and 1873. This seemingly unremarkable catalog listing obscures a disturbing reality – the skull belonged to a deceased Tonkawa person. Jackson’s photographs of indigenous remains were not anomalies. His catalogue includes images of Apsรกalooke burials, a “Sioux Burial”, and “No. 831. Indian Burial.โ€[1] Below the heading of photographs made from observing Sauk and Meskwaki towns in Kansas, entry number 692 simply lists โ€œDead Indian.โ€

These images illuminate the entanglements of science, collecting, and colonial violence in the late 19th century. As geologists scoped mineral riches, photographers like Jackson pictured a โ€œdisappearingโ€ people, furthering belief that Native Americans would inevitably โ€œvanish.โ€ However, Jackson’s photographs, while lamenting vanishing cultures, also played an active role in undermining indigenous sovereignty in that period.

From 1871 to 1878, Jackson traveled the Mountain West as part of the Hayden Surveyโ€“โ€“one of the four โ€œGreat Surveysโ€โ€“โ€“and was a photographer of the Photography Corps of the Geological and Geographical Survey. Ferdinand Vandeveer Hayden, a surgeon and geologist, led the survey through Wyoming and Colorado.

Men of the Hayden Survey eating at camp. Taken from back “photo by W.H. Jackson showing (among others), W.R. Taggart, Assistant geologist with the Hayden Survey of 1872. Snake River Division. Identifications are in longhand by Jackson.” Taken from front border “Survey of the territories, 1872, West – Carrington, Jayox, Taggart, Jackson, Holwes, Beveridge.” Box 84, Fritiof Fryxell papers, Collection No. 1638, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

While Jackson took pictures, Hayden scouted the landscape for coal and lignite fields, iron mines, and lead, galena, and zinc ore beds. Mining and geology proceeded together in the west, as the surveys overlapped with the Montana Gold Rush and the Black Hills Gold Rush in South Dakota and Wyoming. Hayden foresaw fossil capitalโ€™s rise in Colorado, a territory possessing โ€œan abundance of cheap fuel in its mines of coalโ€, and in Wyoming, where โ€œcoal is the most importantโ€ natural resource.[2] Today, Jacksonโ€™s photographs are collected at academic repositories including the American Heritage Center and public history sites like Scotts Bluff National Monument in Nebraska. The National Parks Service recognizes Jacksonโ€™s work as part of a larger postbellum American effort of โ€œventuring westward in search of a national identity.โ€[3]

Photographing Death in the American West

Why did Jackson assemble photographs of human remains alongside landscape pictures of rock formations, mountain peaks, and canyons? Jacksonโ€™s photography includes other subjects that visualize the material infrastructure of settler colonialism and Manifest Destiny: boarding schools, Bureau of Indian Affairs agencies, โ€œVarious Indian Agentsโ€, missionary churches, railway stations, and fortifications constructed by the United States Military and garrisoned with infantry to prosecute warfighting against American Indian nations and manage the American reservation system. Indeed, it is valuable to recall that the BIA acted under the War Department until its reorganization in 1947, and today operates under the auspices of the Department of the Interior.

Photography allowed American scientists and collectors to shift their museum-based gaze to the field. This aided efforts to undermine Native American sovereignty and identity through the collection and display of human remains and burial artifacts.[4] Artists, particularly painters, supported the efforts of military-scientific expeditions since the antebellum era. Men like Joseph Drayton and Henry Cheever Pratt produced artworks of โ€œIndian Costumeโ€ and vistas of natural sublime landscapes emptied of human settlement that aestheticized conquest.[5] Thomas Moran, a painter associated with the Hudson River School, also joined the Hayden Survey. Jacksonโ€™s photography contributed to the deep belief held by settlers that Indians would soon โ€œvanishโ€ and pass into extinction.[6] Despite this imperial gaze, Native sitters did use photography for their own purposes as well by posing as diplomatic delegations for photographers like Jackson as a means of explicitly enacting their own sovereignty.[7]

Ferdinand. V. Hayden and an unidentified American Indian. Back is marked: โ€œPhotograph from the Smithsonian Institution, Hayden Survey No. 11, not by H. W. Jackson, Camp Scene.โ€ Photo File: Hayden Party, Folder 1, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

Like their colleagues in other federal agenciesโ€“โ€“such as the Army Corps of Topographical Engineers and the Signal Service Bureauโ€“โ€“the US Geological and Geographical Survey of the Territories (USGGST) extended the visual reach of the US Government in the Mountain West in the late nineteenth century.[8] While conducting research at the AHC, I focused on the Hayden Survey, a scientific expedition for the USGGST, that ranged across the Colorado and Wyoming Territories on seasonal excursions from 1868 to 1877. Documents from the Howell, Fryxell, and Foster collections illuminate the daily workings of the survey in rich detail.

Visuality and Racial Theory

What interested me about the survey initially was the textual depiction of American Indians by the scientific corps, particularly in relation to the sensory or emotional dimensions of their narratives. George Allen, a botanist with the survey, for instance, felt that the Shoshone, Northern Paiute, and Bannock people he encountered in the eastern portion of Utah Territory were โ€œwild, filthy looking creaturesโ€ who begged for scraps of food from their party.

Allen likewise described Indians living near Virginia City, Montana, as โ€œhideous, dirty, painted creatures.โ€ Allenโ€™s descriptions, and others, match what the moral philosopher Martha C. Nussbaum terms projective disgust, a concept that refers to the โ€œprojection of disgust properties (such as bad smell, foulness, animality) onto groups of people.โ€ Allen and others used projective disgust to position the bodies and senses of American Indians as fundamentally opposed to and essentially alien from those of White descendants of settlers. This form of racism based on the senses has roots in Western European intellectual history’s emphasis on vision and the visual. Terms like “ocularity” and “ocularcentrism” refer to the privileged position that sight and observation held in fields like philosophy. In Classical Greece, Plato and others prized sight as the most epistemically valuable sense, and in The Republic Plato contends that โ€œthe soul is like the eyeโ€ as a source of knowledge.

Donncha Kavanagh goes so far as to argue that Western philosophy rests on a spectatorial epistemology, whose precepts can be recalled in common phrases such as โ€œthe mindโ€™s eyeโ€ and the Enlightenment.

Allen wrote at length on the โ€œEye of the Indianโ€ in his journal from 1871. Allen sensed a โ€œdeep, dark, deceitful and determined expression, which added to the intense blackness of the pupil,โ€ which he conjectured, โ€œis surely suggestive of treachery and blood.โ€[12] He reflected on the โ€œstoic fixednessโ€ of the โ€œIndianโ€™s eyeโ€, and claimed it represented โ€œthe most watchful, cautious, plotting observation.โ€ Allenโ€™s thoughts are worth consideration in full:

An ophidian eye that cannot apparently be moved from its purpose, and yet, if closely watched there will now and then be detected a lurking twinkle bespeaking a consciousness of having satisfactorily formed some diabolical plot to be executed in the future. That concealed twinkle that occasionally flashes up, like the dim and distant lightning flash upon the evening cloud seems but the precursor of the swift winged arrow, the bloody tomahawk or the scalping knife. This dark and treacherous expression of the Indianโ€™s eye is greatly intensified by the blood-red paint so plentifully bestreaked upon their foreheads and high cheek bones which constitutes the frame of its setting.

Allenโ€™s articulation of the threatening American Indian eye resonates with other depictions of unsettling, alien Indigenous anatomy from this period. An essay in The Medical Brief from 1892, for instance, contended that โ€œSavages have good eyes and good ears, and good nosesโ€, and that โ€œa modern Anglo-Saxonโ€ could, if brought from civilization to wilderness, โ€œleave the savage far behind in his sense of smell, and the other senses.โ€[13] Ophthalmologists influenced by the eugenicist Francis Galton fretted over the powerful โ€œsavageโ€ eye in this period, and worried that British and Americans might become literally short-sighted over time due to excessive reading.[14]

Allenโ€™s story of the deceptive American Indian eye clashed with competing scientific theories of emotions. James Haines McCullough, an ethnologist and physician, theorized in 1829 that Native peopleโ€™s allegedly unchanging faces were evidence of their mental inferiority.[15] What he perceived to be the permanently impassive American Indian face, he alleged, signified that their โ€œfeatures assume a fixed, grave, and even stern expression, according to the peculiar temper of the mind.โ€ McCullough likewise used his emotional theories to defend slavery and attack African American minds as โ€œequally ignorant and barbarous.โ€[16] Perhaps what lay in common for Peale and McCullough was their shared strategy in transforming American Indian people into scientific evidence for their own research agendas and political ambitions.

Charles S. Baker and Eli Johnston owned a studio in Evanston, Wyoming, called Baker & Johnston Photographic Studio. The pair are best known for a series of 93 photographs, “List of Indian Pictures,” taken in the 1880s of the Shoshone, Arapahoe, and Apache Native Americans. The public had a morbid fascination with Indigenous peoples in the 19th century, and photographic views of them were in high demand. Baker & Johnston Photographs, Collection #7420, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

Nineteenth-century ophthalmologists became fascinated with American Indian eyesight due to its alleged โ€œsuperior visual acuity.โ€ One writer hypothesized this was due to โ€œconcentrating their attention on objectsโ€ pertaining to their survival with greater focus than โ€œcivilized people.โ€[17]

Ophthalmologists held that eye diseases appeared with much greater frequency among the โ€œwhite civilized manโ€ than โ€œthe lower animals and savages.โ€[18] One researcher speculated that the โ€œdelight of children and savagesโ€ for the color red could be attributed to โ€œnumberless centuries of blood-covenants and blood-shed.โ€[19]

Ethnographers further racialized American Indians as sensory others by attributing to them the ability to hear and understand speech at remarkable distances.[20] And, since the work of the German cosmographer Alexander von Humboldt, ethnologists considered American Indians to possess an acute sense of smell due to their โ€œsavageโ€ state.[21] Ideas about the senses, phenomena, and perception crystallized in this period around racialized axesโ€“โ€“one has only to recall Lorenz Okenโ€™s well-known racial typology of the European โ€œEye-Manโ€ placed above the โ€œRed, Americanโ€ โ€œNose-Manโ€โ€“โ€“that divided the globe and its inhabitants by sensorial organs.[22] Through his claims to possessing the superior eye, Oken also claimed to possess the gaze itself, the tool of what Kavanagh referred to as the Westโ€™s way of understanding things by watching them, a skill embedded in the White body and extended through technology.

Seeing the photographs of the Tonkawa personโ€™s remains and others of human remains reminds us of the role that race played in developing the scientific gaze of Louis Agassiz, founder of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University and a remote collaborator of the USGGST. Agassiz employed another photographer, Walter Hunnewell, during the Thayer Expedition to Brazil from 1865 to 1866. Hunnewell shot dozens of Indigenous and Black people in Manaus, Amazonas, during the expedition to make โ€œa mass of new and interesting information on the many varieties of the colored racesโ€ of the North Region.[23]

Fifteen years prior, Agassiz commissioned the photographer Joseph T. Zealy to photograph enslaved peopleโ€“โ€“ including Renty Taylor and his daughter Delia, Jack of Guinea and his daughter Drana, and two other men detained on nearby plantations, Fassena and Jemโ€“โ€“residing on the Edgehill Plantation of the Taylor family in Columbia, South Carolina.[24] Agassiz and his friends, the Scientific Lazzaroniโ€“โ€“which included key Smithsonian Institution personnel such as Joseph Henry and Cornelus Conway Feltonโ€“โ€“seized the gaze as a means of differentiating races and reinscribing Okenโ€™s human taxonomy through photography.

Photograph of Renty Taylor, an enslaved man from the Congo who taught himself to read and write. He was forced to pose nude by Harvard biologist Louis Agassiz in March 1850, as part of a racist project to prove the inferiority of Africans. Photo from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renty_Taylor.

Ethnographic photography visually portrayed the lethal authority of the US Government to condemn sovereign nations to removal, privation, and death, as Jackson hoped to catch the โ€œfast passing away or conforming to the habits of civilizationโ€ of American Indians.[25] And daguerreotypes of enslaved people likewise buttressed pseudo-scientific claims that facial features indicated African American mental inferiority and racial difference.[26] Jacksonโ€™s โ€œIndian Photographsโ€ circulated widely to scientific centers and museums like the Smithsonian and the MCZ at Cambridge as the Geological and Geographical Survey of the Territories took stock of the Mountain West between 1867 and 1879.[27]

The Hayden Survey, like the other surveys of this period, happened simultaneously in a multi-territorial war zone and what one soldier termed โ€œthe greatest laboratory that nature furnishes on the surface of the globe.โ€[28] Some of the conflicts that overlapped with the four Surveys of the Territories includes Black Hawkโ€™s War in the Utah Territory between 1865 and 1872, Red Cloudโ€™s War in the Powder River Country of northeastern Wyoming from 1866 to 1868, the Yellowstone Expedition of 1872, and the Ute War of 1879. War trophies gathered by soldiers on the battlefield and in the aftermath of massacring unarmed noncombatants, particularly the Sand Creek Massacre of 1864, found their way into scientific collections as well. Human remains like a Cheyenne finger necklace, framed ears, and scalps, as Cora Bender shows, ended up in the cabinets of the Smithsonian alongside gemstones, stratigraphy illustrations, and taxidermied animals.[29]

Like Jackson, Hayden dehumanized American Indians as threats to the future of the United States and akin to animals. โ€œA Sharpโ€™s rifle is a handy thing to haveโ€, he advised would-be settlers, โ€œnot because there is anything or anybody, to fear, but elk, antelope, and Utes are to be met with, and are excellentโ€“โ€“when dead.โ€[30]

The Hayden Survey amid Chinese Exclusion

Simultaneous to the period of the postbellum Indian wars, the story of the Hayden Survey further overlaps with the history of the Chinese and East Asian diaspora in America. Given that Hayden found it important to reproduce in full in his book The Great Westโ€“โ€“and its publication two years prior to the passage of the Chinese Exclusion Act in 1882โ€“โ€“it is worthwhile to read Charles G. Yaleโ€™s essay โ€œThe Chinese Questionโ€ as it pertains to Haydenโ€™s worldview. Since at least the passage of the Foreign Minerโ€™s Tax of 1850, Euroamerican settlers sought to exclude East Asians and Mexicans from the profits of Western mineral booms. Hundreds of thousands of emigrants from the provinces of Guangdong, Fujian, and Guangxi arrived in the American West in the late nineteenth century.[31] Women and men seeking prosperity intended to join the rush to unearth Gum Shan,  ้‡‘ๅฑฑ, or Gold Mountain, a term initially used to signify California but later encompassed the mineral rushes of the Intermountain West.

During the California Gold Rush, John Ross Browne reported to the Treasury Department in 1868 that the โ€œChinese are looked upon with much jealousy by the white race.โ€[32] In 1872, Rossiter Raymond, a Commissioner of Mining Statistics, wrote that โ€œChinese labor is employed for certain purposesโ€, in particular placer mining, and other kinds of low-wage work.[33] Raymond praised Chinese workers in the West as industrious, faithful, and intelligent. Yale agreed with the sentiment that Chinese workers were โ€œindustriousโ€ in general yet argued that โ€œTheir habits of life are totally at variance with ours.โ€[34] First, he claimed, they โ€œcrowd their dwellings like ratsโ€ and live in โ€œany hovelโ€ available. Second, Yale argued Chinese laborers were less physically strong and able than White miners. And, he concluded, Chinese workers required a โ€œherderโ€ to keep them organized throughout the day.

Rather than outright support Chinese Exclusion, Yale hoped that โ€œif they confined themselvesโ€ to the โ€œunhealthy work which white men refuseโ€ a kind of peaceable coexistence might be possible. For Yale, โ€œunhealthy workโ€ ranged from farm work to working in mercury mines, building irrigation ditches, reclaiming tule-lands and โ€œother drudgery.โ€ While Hayden himself did not directly address the so-called โ€œChinese questionโ€, other authors appended to The Great West fueled the rhetoric of Yellow Peril and characterized Chinese migrants as โ€œnuisancesโ€ and a โ€œmass of ignorant, immoral, and degraded heathensโ€ interloping on the future wealth of settlers.[35]

This political cartoon appeared in newspapers after a massacre by white coal miners of Chinese miners in Rock Springs on Sept. 2, 1885. White miners believe their Chinese counterparts were depressing wages, although there were white supremacy issues as well. This poster published in Evanston, Wyo. ridicules Wyoming Territorial Governor Francis E Warren for calling in federal troops to protect the Chinese, and for supposedly trying to pack a jury and thus convict white miners of murder. Photo File: Warren, Francis E., American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

Conclusion and Further Questions

Moving forward with this research, I am interested in the ways in which scientists like Hayden, Allen, and Jackson mobilized the senses and emotions to cast American Indians, African Americans, and East Asians as physiologically and culturally alien to the American West. I want to dwell on two overlapping and entangled spaces crucial to Manifest Destiny: the war zone and the laboratory. Cameron Strang has argued that natural knowledge and war are best understood as inter-linked projects in American history.[36] Cycles of frontier violence, expropriation, exploitation, data collection, and knowledge production trace the connected histories of the laboratory-war zone as a space in the American West.

So, I want to know what happens if historians follow the lead of Gustavus Cheyney Doane, who saw the Mountain West torn apart by the American Indian Wars of the late nineteenth century as โ€œthe greatest laboratory that nature furnishes on the surface of the globeโ€? To what extent can we understand science and war in this period as inextricably coupled institutions? And, finally, what if we approach sensorial descriptions, as put forth by the phenomenological historian Andrew Kettler, as โ€œembodied perceptions of Otheringโ€ that are necessary for understanding race-making in the history of science and military history?[37]

– Post contributed by Chris M. Blakley, PhD, Visiting Assistant Professor, Core Program, Occidental College and 2023 AHC Travel Grant Recipient.

Explore the Hayden Surveyโ€™s Legacy

The collections and documents discussed in this post reveal the complex realities behind 19th-century scientific expeditions in the American West. To see how Ferdinand Haydenโ€™s survey work contributed to one of its most celebrated outcomesโ€”the establishment of Americaโ€™s first national parkโ€”visit the American Heritage Centerโ€™s online exhibit โ€œHayden and the Birth of Yellowstone.โ€


Citations:

[1] William Henry Jackson, Descriptive Catalogue of the Photographs of the United States Geological Survey of the Territories, for the Years 1869 to 1873, (United States: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1874), 73, 77, 81, 83. On Jackson see Rachel M.Sailor, “Collecting Indian Portraits: Governor Kirkwood, William Henry Jackson, and the Nineteenth-Century Photographic Album,” Great Plains Quarterly 34, no. 3 (2014): 257-273.[2] Ferdinand Vandeveer Hayden, The Great West: Its Attractions and Resources. Containing a Popular Description of the Marvellous Scenery, Physical Geography, Fossils, and Glaciers of this Wonderful Region; and the Recent Explorations in the Yellowstone Park (United States: C.R. Brodix, 1880), 122, 205.

[3] “Viewing the William Henry Jackson Collection,” National Park Service, Last modified March 2, 2022. https://www.nps.gov/thingstodo/the-william-henry-jackson-collection.htm. On skull collecting and the military see Elise Juzda, “Skulls, science, and the spoils of war: craniological studies at the United States Army Medical Museum, 1868โ€“1900.” Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 40, no. 3 (2009): 156-167.

[4] Robert E. Bieder, “The representations of Indian bodies in nineteenth-century American anthropology,” American Indian Quarterly 20, no. 2 (1996): 165-179; Sofie I. Senecal, and John Pickles, “Supranational to the Grave? On the Geopolitics of Corpse Repatriation in the EU,” Geopolitics 28, no. 3 (2023): 1186-1209.

[5] On Drayton see Charles Wiles, Narrative of the United States Exploring Expedition: During the Years 1838, 1839, 1840, 1841, 1842, (United States: C. Sherman, 1844), 425-426.

[6] Miles A. Powell, Vanishing America: Species Extinction, Racial Peril, and the Origins of Conservation, (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2016).

[7] Wendy Red Star, and Shannon Vittoria, “Apsรกalooke Bacheeรญtuuk in Washington, DC: A Case Study in Re-Reading Nineteenth-Century Delegation Photography,” Panorama: Journal of the Association of Historians of American Art 6 (2020).

[8] On the Signal Service Bureau see Raines, Rebecca Robbins. “Storms and Swarms: The Role of the US Army Signal Corps’ Weather Observers during the Rocky Mountain Locust Plague of the 1870s.” Great Plains Quarterly 43, no. 1 (2023): 65-91; and on the Army Corps of Topographical Engineers see Sean Fraga, “Native Americans, Military Science, and Ambivalence on the Pacific Railroad Surveys, 1853โ€“1855,” Princeton University Library Chronicle 75, no. 3 (2014): 317-349.

[9] Yellowstone and the Great West: Journals, Letters, and Images from the 1871 Hayden Expedition, edited by Marlene Merrill, (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1999), 72.

[10] Barbara Malvestiti, “An interview with Martha Craven Nussbaum. Emotions: Why Love Matters for Justice (Second Part).” Phenomenology and Mind 8 (2015): 258-264.

[11] Donncha Kavanagh, “Ocularcentrism and its others: A framework for metatheoretical analysis.” Organization Studies 25, no. 3 (2004): 445-464; Anthony Synnott, “The eye and I: a sociology of sight.” International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society 5 (1992): 617-636.

[12] Yellowstone and the Great West, 59.

[13] The Medical Brief: A Monthly Journal of Scientific Medicine and Surgery, (United States:1892), 1006

[14] Robert Brudenell Carter, Eyesight in Civilization. (United Kingdom: Macmillan, 1884).

[15] Bieder, “The representations of Indian bodies in nineteenth-century American anthropology,”

[16] James Haines McCulloh, Researches, Philosophical and Antiquarian, Concerning the Aboriginal History of America, (United States: Fielding Lucas, Jr., 1829), 15.

[17] The Ophthalmic Record, vol. 7(Chicago: 1898), 589.

[18] Good Health: A Journal of Hygiene, (Battle Creek: Good Health Publishing Company, 1893), 182; American Journal of Ophthalmology, (United States: Ophthalmic Publishing Company, 1894), 312

[19] American Journal of Ophthalmology (United States: Ophthalmic Publishing Company, 1886), 250.

[20] The Anthropological Review, (United Kingdom: Trรผbner and Company, 1866), 400.

[21] The American Phrenological Journal and Repository of Science, Literature and General Intelligence, (United States: Fowlers and Wells, 1854), 106.

[22] On Oken see Erica Fretwell, Sensory Experiments: Psychophysics, Race, and the Aesthetics of Feeling, (Durham: Duke University Press, 2020).

[23] Louis Agassiz, and Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz, A Journey in Brazil, (United States: Ticknor and Fields, 1868), 296.

[24] Brian Wallis, “Black Bodies, White Science: Louis Agassiz’s Slave Daguerreotypes,” American Art 9, no. 2 (1995): 39-61; Molly Rogers, and David W. Blight, Delia’s Tears: Race, Science, and Photography in Nineteenth-Century America, (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2010).

[25]Jackson, Descriptive Catalogue, 3-4; Achille Mbembe, Necropolitics, (Durham: Duke University Press, 2019).

[26] Molly Rogers, and David W. Blight, Delia’s Tears: Race, Science, and Photography in Nineteenth-Century America, (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2010).

[27] Fryxell Papers, Box 42 and Box 50, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

[28] Gustavus Cheyney Doane, Letter from the Secretary of War, Communicating the Report of Lieutenant Gustavus C. Doane Upon the So-called Yellowstone Expedition of 1870, (United States: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1871), 38.

[29]Cora  Bender, “โ€˜Transgressive Objectsโ€™ in America: Mimesis and Violence in the Collection of Trophies during the Nineteenth Century Indian Wars.” Civil Wars 11, no. 4 (2009): 502-513.

[30] Hayden, The Great West, 147.

[31] Liping Zhu, โ€œNo Need to Rush: The Chinese, Placer Mining, and the Western Environment,โ€ Montana: The Magazine of Western History 49, no. 3 (1999): 42โ€“57.

[32] John Ross Browne, Report of J. Ross Browne on the Mineral Resources of the States and Territories West of the Rocky Mountains, (United States: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1868) 268.

[33] Statistics of Mines and Mining in the States and Territories West of the Rocky Mountains, (United States: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1872.), 4.

[34] Hayden, The Great West, 388.

[35] Hayden, The Great West, 396.

[36] Cameron B. Strang, โ€œPerpetual War and Natural Knowledge in the United States, 1775โ€“1860,โ€ Journal of the Early Republic 38, no. 3 (2018): 387โ€“413.

[37] Andrew Kettler, “Race, nose, truth: Dystopian odours of the Other in American antebellum consciousness.” Patterns of Prejudice 55, no. 1 (2021): 1-24.

Posted in 19th century, American history, American Indian history, Anthropology, Colonialism, Photography, Racism, Uncategorized, Western history | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Beauty and Strength of the Crow: Richard Throsselโ€™s Photographic Collection

What if you could see the world through the eyes of an American Indian photographer? How would their perspective differ from outsiders who often portrayed them in stereotypical or exotic ways? Richard Throssel was a Cree photographer who had a unique connection to the Crow nation and captured the life and culture of the Crow people with respect and intimacy. As we celebrate National American Indian Heritage Month this November, letโ€™s take a closer look at his remarkable work and legacy.

Richard Throssel was born in 1882 to an English immigrant father and a half-Cree mother. Raised in Washington state in a small hops farming community called Roy, located just south of Puget Sound, Throssel’s journey as a photographer began in an unexpected way.

Richard Throssel (1882-1933). Image No. ah02394_1899, Richard Throssel papers, Collection No. 2394, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

In 1902, at the age of 20, Throssel moved to the Crow Reservation in southeastern Montana, near the Wyoming border. His decision to move was driven by practicality rather than artistic aspirations. Suffering from rheumatism, Throssel’s doctor advised him to seek a drier climate. Fortunately, his older brother, Harry, had recently taken a job on the Crow Reservation in the Indian Services office. Harry offered Richard a home and a job in the same office, providing the opportunity for a fresh start.

Shortly after his arrival at the Crow Reservation, Throssel purchased his first camera and began teaching himself the fundamentals of photography. He walked into a world filled with art and creativity, as the Crow people were renowned for their superb craftsmanship and artistic expression. Their distinctive and technically excellent beadwork adorned clothing, personal accessories, horse gear, and military articles. The Crow presented themselves impressively, with a strong sense of national identity, even showcasing their artistic talents in the construction of elegant and graceful tipis.

Woman with beaded bag in front of painted tipi. Image No. ah02394_0934, Richard Throssel papers, Collection No. 2394, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.
“Night Tipi Scene.” Image No. ah02394_0505, Richard Throssel papers, Collection No. 2394, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

The Crow people have a remarkable history. Their beautiful and abundant homeland allowed them to thrive, and their territory once extended across much of present-day Montana and Wyoming. However, as white settlement encroached upon their land, protecting their homeland against invaders became a constant struggle. The Crow became renowned for their military skills and courage, adapting their traditional warfare tactics to defend their land and survival.

“Male Dancers.” Image No. ah02394_0645, Richard Throssel papers, Collection No. 2394, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

Unlike many other tribal nations, the Crow recognized early on that their survival meant cooperation with the most powerful nation pressuring them: the United States. They foresaw the extermination of the buffalo and the inevitable arrival of cattle grazing on Crow lands. Consequently, they aligned themselves with the U.S. government, becoming scouts in battles against their tribal enemies, the Sioux and Cheyenne.

“Custer Scouts.” Image No. ah02394_1081, Richard Throssel papers, Collection No. 2394, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.
“Curly – Custer’s Only Survivor – Crow.” Image No. ah02394_0907, Richard Throssel papers, Collection No. 2394, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.
“Hairy Moccasin.” Image No. ah02394_0880, Richard Throssel papers, Collection No. 2394, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming. Hairy Moccasin was a Crow scout for General Custer and the 7th Cavalry. Just before the Battle of Little Bighorn, he and several other scouts were sent away and thus did not participate in the fighting.

This was the world Throssel entered as a young man with dreams of being an artist and photographer. Settling down on the reservation, he married, had two children, and was eventually adopted into the Crow Tribe in 1906. His adoption likely stemmed from practical considerations, as American Indians were each allotted pieces of land on the reservation and having more tribe members increased the likelihood of retaining land ownership.

Throssel’s journey as a photographer took a significant turn when he encountered Edward Sheriff Curtis, a prominent photographer documenting American Indians for his 20-volume work, The North American Indian. Observing Curtis at work and witnessing the results was a revelation for Throssel, who still considered himself an amateur photographer.

“A Song in the Scalp Dance.” Image No. ah02394_0638, Richard Throssel papers, Collection No. 2394, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

Curtis befriended Throssel, and through their relationship, Throssel acquired new photographic enhancement and composition techniques. By 1907, just two years after their initial meeting, the influence of Curtis became evident in Throssel’s work. His photography took on a more romanticized look at Crow life, infused with a deep appreciation for the cultural richness and spiritual significance of the Crow people. Throssel’s images captured the nuances and beauty of Crow life, exhibiting a level of intimacy and personal connection rarely seen in photographs of American Indians.

“Crow Woman and Man Inside Tipi.” Image No. ah02394_0930, Richard Throssel papers, Collection No. 2394, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.
“Little Iron Horse.” Image No. ah02394_0671, Richard Throssel papers, Collection No. 2394, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

Throssel’s photographs became a virtual census of the Crow people at the turn of the century. His lens preserved the past, connecting older generations to the future as he documented elderly war chiefs like Medicine Crow and the emerging leaders such as Barney Old Coyote, Sr., who would later advocate for the preservation of the Crow Reservation.

“Medicine Crow.” Image No. ah02394_0892, Richard Throssel papers, Collection No. 2394, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

In 1909, Throssel contributed to Edward Curtis’s work by providing an image and description of the Northern Cheyenne Massaum ceremony, one of the rarest and most sacred ceremonies of the Crow. Throssel’s images of this ceremony marked the first visual record, as the government had banned it at the time. He was privileged to document such a significant cultural event.

In 1911, Throssel and his family left the Crow Reservation, and he opened his own photographic studio in Billings, Montana. This marked the first time he marketed his work under his own name. His business relied on his personal collection of nearly 1,000 images captured during his time on the reservation. He marketed his Curtis-style images under the title “The Western Classics.”

Throssel’s advertisement for his series, “Western Classics.” Image No. ah02394_1548, Richard Throssel papers, Collection No. 2394, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

Throssel’s journey extended beyond photography. He delved into politics, serving as a member of the Montana State Legislature in 1924 and 1926. He also pursued marksmanship, becoming Montana’s secretary to the National Rifle Association and an award-winning marksman in rifle matches. Tragically, at the age of 51, Throssel passed away in 1933 from a heart attack shortly after arriving at the National Guard Camp.

Despite his short life and relatively brief time on the Crow Reservation, Richard Throssel left an enduring legacy. Through his photography, he compiled a vast visual record of the Crow and Northern Cheyenne, capturing a crucial period in their history as they adjusted to reservation life. His images bridged the generations, preserving the past and inspiring future tribal leaders to embrace their heritage. Richard Throssel’s remarkable work continues to serve as a testament to the cultural richness and resilience of the Crow.

If you are interested in learning more about Richard Throssel and his photography, you can visit the AHC exhibit on Virmuze. This exhibit features some of his most striking images, as well as information about his life and career.

Post contributed by AHC Simpson Archivist Leslie Waggener.

#alwaysarchiving

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The Macabre Magic of Richard Mathesonโ€™s Stories -Part Two

In this blog series, we are celebrating the life and work of Richard Matheson, a master of horror, science fiction, and fantasy. His stories and novels have inspired countless films, TV shows, and writers, from The Twilight Zone to Steven Spielberg, from Stephen King to George A. Romero. He wrote about vampires, shrinking men, haunted houses, time travelers, and more. We are also exploring his connections to three of the collections at the American Heritage Center. In the first part of this series, we focused on his early life and his works in the 1950s. In this second part, we will look at his works in the 1960s.

Throughout the 1960s, Matheson wrote for several television series, including fourteen episodes of the TV series The Twilight Zone (1959-1964). Those encompassed some of the most memorable ones, such as โ€œNightmare at 20,000 Feet,โ€ โ€œSteel,โ€ and โ€œThe Invaders.โ€ His short story โ€œLittle Girl Lost,โ€ which he also adapted into a Twilight Zone script was based on a real-life incident involving his young daughter, who fell off her bed while asleep and rolled against a wall. Despite hearing her daughter’s cries for help, Matheson’s wife was initially unable to locate their daughter.

Youโ€™ll also find Mathesonโ€™s work in the anthology series Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Thriller, Lawman, The Girl from U.N.C.L.E., and Star Trek. He wrote the script for the Star Trek episode โ€œThe Enemy Within,โ€ which features a transporter malfunction that splits Captain Kirk into two versions of himself: one good and one evil.

He also wrote the script for the first episode, โ€œForgotten Front,โ€ of the war series Combat! (1962-1967), which followed the grim lives of a squad of American soldiers fighting the Germans in France during World War II. The series offered a unique perspective on war, focusing on the moral dilemmas faced by soldiers rather than action-packed scenes. โ€œForgotten Frontโ€ was directed by Robert Altman and credits Mathesonโ€™s pseudonym โ€œLogan Swansonโ€ as the writer. Mathesonโ€™s own WWII war service would have aided him in writing this episode. A copy of Mathesonโ€™s script for the episode is included in the papers of writer Jerry Sohl, which are housed at the AHC. 

Among Mathesonโ€™s film works in the 1960s were his collaborations with director Roger Corman.  In 1960, Corman directed, for American International Pictures, House of Usher, an adaptation of Edgar Allan Poeโ€™s story The Fall of the House of Usher that was scripted by Matheson and starred Vincent Price.

The House of Usher (1960). Box 119, Forrest J. Ackerman papers, Collection No. 2358, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

Following the success of this film, Corman directed several more films based on Poeโ€™s writings, and Matheson wrote three of them โ€“ The Pit and the Pendulum (1961), Tales of Terror (1962), and The Raven (1963). Mathesonโ€™s adaptations of Poeโ€™s work are considered classics.

The Pit and the Pendulum (1961). Box 121, Forrest J. Ackerman papers, Collection No. 2358, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.
Leona Gage plays Morella in a segment of the same name in Roger Corman‘s 1962 film Tales of Terror.
Fortunato Luchresi  (Vincent Price), the head of Montresor Herringbone (Peter Lorre), and Annabel Herringbone (Joyce Jameson) in the segment โ€œThe Black Catโ€ in Tales of Terror. Box 108, Forrest J. Ackerman papers, Collection No. 2358, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

Matheson also wrote the horror comedy โ€œThe Comedy of Terrorsโ€ (1963), which was directed by Jacques Tourneur for American International Pictures. The film depicts dishonest undertaker Waldo Trumbull (Vincent Price) and his sidekick Felix Gillie (Peter Lorre) who create their own customers when they cannot find willing ones.

Vincent Price on the set of The Comedy of Terrors. Box 105, Forrest J. Ackerman papers, Collection No. 2358, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

The movie was not a big success at the box office with The New York Times calling it โ€œA MUSTY, rusty bag of tricks rigged as a horror farce.โ€ Nevertheless, Matheson countered that he was proud of the picture. He stated, โ€œIt didn’t lose any money. They [AIP] told me that the title itself cost them a lot. It’s such a contradiction in terms, though. Terror sells and comedy makes them go away, so it’s like they’re walking in two directions at once. But I thought it was very clever to do a take off of Shakespeare’s, Comedy of Errors…. I think they were probably sorry they didn’t use a Poe title, because Poe had a certain marketability. I guess they couldn’t figure out how to market it. But it was the last one because I was getting tired of writing about people being buried alive, so I decided to make a joke about it.โ€

Richard Matheson was a master of suspense, imagination, and emotion, who explored the dark and mysterious aspects of human nature. He left behind a legacy of unforgettable works that will continue to entertain and challenge readers and viewers for years to come.

Post contributed by Processing Archivist and AHC film expert Roger Simon.

#alwaysarchiving

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The Macabre Magic of Richard Mathesonโ€™s Stories – Part One

Richard Matheson was a master of horror, science fiction, and fantasy. His stories and novels have inspired countless films, TV shows, and writers, from The Twilight Zone to Steven Spielberg, from Stephen King to George A. Romero. He wrote about vampires, shrinking men, haunted houses, time travelers, and more. In this two-part blog series, we will explore his career and his connections to three of the collections at the American Heritage Center. In this first part, we will focus on his early life and his works in the 1950s.

Matheson with his son Richard Christian Matheson on the cover of the June 1986 issue of Rod Serling’s The Twilight Zone Magazine. Photo from blog โ€œThe Twilight Zone Vortex.โ€

Born in 1926 to Norwegian immigrants in Allendale, New Jersey, Matheson was raised in Brooklyn by his mother after his parents divorced. As a youngster he first set his sights on a musical career, a love of fantasy books lit up his imagination and energized his creativity; he was only eight when a story he wrote appeared in a local newspaper, the Brooklyn Eagle. He graduated from Brooklyn Technical High School in 1943 and then served in World War II as an infantry soldier. In 1949, he earned his bachelorโ€™s degree in journalism from the University of Missouri and moved to California. His writing career spanned over six decades, during which he wrote novels, short stories, film scripts, and adaptations.

Matheson once said: โ€œI think weโ€™re yearning for something beyond the every day. And I will tell you that I donโ€™t believe in the โ€˜supernatural,โ€™ I believe in the โ€˜supernormal.โ€™

Horror-thriller author Stephen King wrote in a tribute to Matheson, โ€œHe fired my imagination by placing his horrors not in European castles and Lovecraftian universes, but in American scenes I knew and could relate to. โ€˜I want to do that,โ€™ I thought. โ€˜I must do that.โ€™ Matheson showed the way.โ€ 

As a young child, Matheson had been transfixed by seeing Dracula (1931) at a local cinema and by his teens had the idea for the vampire story I Am Legend. In 1954, he published I Am Legend, a novel about a pandemic that has wiped out most of the human population and turned the remaining infected into vampires. Described as being โ€œinfluential in the modern development of zombie and vampire literature in popularizing the concept of a worldwide apocalypse due to disease.โ€

Bela Lugosi as Count Dracula in the 1931 film stealthily approaches the beside of Lucy Weston (played by Frances Dade). This film had a great influence on the young Richard Matheson.

I Am Legend has been adapted to film three times โ€“ as The Last Man on Earth (1964) starring Vincent Price and co-written by Matheson under the pseudonym โ€œLogan Swanson;โ€ as The Omega Man (1971) starring Charlton Heston; and as I Am Legend (2007) starring Will Smith. It was also the inspiration for the groundbreaking horror film Night of the Living Dead (1968). The AHC has the papers of Forrest J. Ackerman, the editor of the magazine Famous Monsters of Filmland, which include posters and stills for both The Last Man on Earth and The Omega Man.

The Last Man on Earth (1964). Box 140, Forrest J. Ackerman papers, Collection No. 2358, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.
The Omega Man (1971). Box 123, Forrest J. Ackerman papers, Collection No. 2358, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

In the late 1950s, Matheson began a working relationship with film producer Albert Zugsmith, whose papers are at the AHC. The first of their collaborations was the science-fiction film The Incredible Shrinking Man (1957) about a man named Scott Carey who gradually shrinks to microscopic size after being exposed to a radioactive mist and an insecticide. He faces many dangers and challenges as he tries to survive in an ever-changing environment.

The Incredible Shrinking Man (1957). Box 117, Forrest J. Ackerman papers, Collection No. 2358, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

The film was adapted by Matheson from his 1956 novel The Shrinking Man. The author explained, “I had gotten the idea several years earlier while attending a movie in a Redondo Beach theater. In this particular scene, Ray Milland, leaving Jane Wymanโ€™s apartment in a huff, accidentally put on Aldo Rayโ€™s hat, which sank down around his ears. Something in me asked, ‘What would happen if a man put on a hat which he knew was his and the same thing happened?’ Thus, the notion came.” A poster and multiple stills from the film are in the Ackerman papers, and drafts of Mathesonโ€™s screenplay are in the Zugsmith papers.

Matheson is also credited with co-writing the 1959 crime film The Beat Generation, which Zugsmith produced. The film offers a sensationalized portrayal of the rebellious counterculture of the โ€œBeat Generation.โ€ The movie also had the alternative title, This Rebel Age.

He also wrote two unproduced scripts for Zugsmith โ€“ โ€œThe Fantastic Shrinking Girl,โ€ a follow-up to The Incredible Shrinking Man, and โ€œA Voyage to Lilliput,โ€ based on Jonathan Swiftโ€™s Gulliverโ€™s Travels. The Zugsmith papers include script drafts for these projects.

Richard Matheson was a prolific and influential writer who left a lasting mark on the genres of horror, science fiction, and fantasy in the 1950s. His stories have been adapted into films that have entertained and terrified generations of audiences. His legacy is also preserved in the collections at the American Heritage Center, where you can find more information about his life and work.

Stay tuned for part two of this blog series, where we will cover Mathesonโ€™s works in the 1960s.

Happy Halloween!

Post contributed by Processing Archivist and AHC film expert Roger Simon.

#alwaysarchiving

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John B. Kendrick and the Teapot Dome Scandal: A Historical Perspective

100 years ago, on October 25, 1923, the U.S. Senate Committee on Public Lands published its first report on the Teapot Dome scandal. The scandal stands as one of the most notorious episodes of political corruption in American history. Centered around the illicit leasing of federal oil reserves, the scandal exposed a web of bribery, cronyism, and abuse of power that reached the highest echelons of government.

The Mammoth Oil Company, headed by Harry F. Sinclair, was at the center of the scandal, defending its actions and facing public scrutiny. One prominent figure in the events was Wyomingโ€™s U.S. Senator John B. Kendrick.

Senator John B. Kendrick. Box 193, John B. Kendrick papers, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

A successful rancher turned politician, Kendrick played a crucial role in shedding light on the corruption surrounding the scandal. As a member of the Senate Committee on Public Lands, Kendrick recognized the significance of the suspicious leases.

On April 14, 1922, the Wall Street Journal broke the story, announcing that the Teapot Dome reserve had indeed been leased.

Shale well on Teapot Dome producing 25,000 barrels per day, circa 1922. Box 2, W.L. Connelly papers, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

This revelation led to a surge of public pressure for further information. Senator Kendrick found himself inundated with telegrams from Wyoming oil operators and associations demanding answers. B. B. Brooks, president of the Rocky Mountain Oil and Gas Producers Association and former Wyoming governor, sent a telegram arguing against private negotiations without competitive bidding. Other protests from the business community and the oil industry called for greater transparency in the leasing process.

The next day, Senator Kendrick and Wyoming U.S. Representative Frank W. Mondell took action within Congress. Kendrick requested the Senate consider a resolution calling upon Secretaries Fall and Denby to clarify whether negotiations were underway for the leasing of Teapot Dome and if competitive bidding was being followed. The concerns expressed by the oil interests prompted further scrutiny of Secretary Fallโ€™s methods.

Not everyone was eager for an investigation. The petroleum industry, already facing multiple investigations, expressed reluctance and presented various arguments against further inquiries. Some viewed investigations as burdensome, hampering business operations and producing futile results. They argued that big business had always been fair, honest, and satisfied with reasonable profits, rendering investigations unnecessary.

The path to investigating the Teapot Dome scandal was fraught with delays and diversions. Various factors contributed to the slow initiation of the investigation. The fatiguing summer weather in Washington and the pressure of other Senate business, often referred to as โ€œpolitical fence mending,โ€ hindered the efforts of Senator Reed Smoot, who had yet to call a meeting of his committee. Additionally, Senator Kendrick and Senator Robert LaFollette, the chief instigators, had to campaign for re-election as the congressional elections loomed on the horizon.

The Teapot Dome scandal gradually came to public attention through investigative efforts and critical testimonies. Kendrickโ€™s role in the events surrounding the scandal was not limited to the committee hearings but also involved his close association with B. B. Brooks and Leslie Miller, an oil operator and later state governor. Brooks and Miller, concerned about the suspicious leases and potential corruption, alerted Kendrick to the situation. As the congressional investigations unfolded, Kendrick played an active role in interrogating witnesses and examining evidence to expose the depths of the corruption. Working alongside Senator Thomas J. Walsh, the lead investigator, Kendrick collaborated to maintain focus and drive the inquiry forward. While he was not without criticism and faced political pressures, Kendrickโ€™s commitment to the process remained steadfast.

The Teapot Dome scandal elicited a range of attitudes within the business community and shaped public sentiment. Small oil operators in Wyoming, who felt betrayed by the governmentโ€™s actions, expressed their outrage at the favoritism shown to large corporations. Kendrick, with his close ties to the Wyoming community, understood their concerns and actively worked to address them. The scandal also heightened public disillusionment with political corruption and served as a catalyst for reform.

Editorial cartoon featuring the Teapot Dome scandal from the Denver Post, June 9, 1922. Box 6, W.L. Connelly papers, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

As public sentiment shifted, demands for transparency and integrity in governance grew louder. Kendrickโ€™s role in shedding light on the corruption and advocating for accountability contributed to this change in public sentiment.

If you are interested in learning more about John B. Kendrick and his role in the Teapot Dome scandal, you can explore his papers at the American Heritage Center.

Post contributed by AHC Simpson Archivist Leslie Waggener.

#alwaysarchiving

Posted in American history, Corruption and scandals, Government accountability, Historical scandals, Petroleum history, Political controversy, Political history, Uncategorized, Western history, Wyoming history | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Man Behind the Music: Carl Stalling and His Contributions to Disney Studio

In commemorating the 100th anniversary of Disney Brothers Studio, now known as the Walt Disney Company, itโ€™s a good time to reflect on the remarkable individuals who have left an indelible mark on its history.

Disney is a studio that has given us a number of much-loved characters as well as enduring stories that have captured the hearts of audiences around the globe. However, Disney has also faced scrutiny over the years, from concerns about cultural representation to debates on artistic originality. Amidst these discussions, one cannot overlook the exceptional contributions of individuals who played a pivotal role in shaping the animation industry. One such person is Carl Stalling, a creative talent who composed music for many Disney and Warner Bros. cartoons.

Storyboard sketch for a Disney film featuring Mickey Mouse. Box 1, Carl Stalling papers, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

In 1923, the brothers Walt and Roy Disney founded Disney Brothers Studio with a mission to create entertaining and imaginative cartoons. Walt, with his endless creativity and passion for storytelling, became the driving force behind the studio, pushing the boundaries of animation and overseeing the artistic direction. Meanwhile, Roy, with his keen business acumen and financial expertise, managed the operational aspects, ensuring the studio’s stability and growth. Together, they formed a remarkable partnership that laid the foundation for the enduring Disney legacy. Notably, their early collaboration with Margaret J. Winkler, a prominent figure in the animation distribution business, played a crucial role in the studio’s success.

Enter Carl Stalling, a gifted composer and arranger, whose contributions to Disney Studio left a lasting mark on the world of animation. Stalling’s exceptional musical talent and innovative approach to scoring animated films elevated the viewer’s experience and become synonymous with Disneyโ€™s magic.

Stalling was born on November 10, 1891, in Lexington, Missouri. With an innate musical talent, he began his career as an organ accompanist for silent films at the Isis Movie Theatre in Kansas City, Missouri. His virtuosity captivated audiences in the early 1920s. Walt Disney got his start at the Isis as well by drawing commercial slides for the theatre. Stallingโ€™s ability to combine well-known music by other composers with his own improvised compositions impressed Disney.

Walt Disney and Stalling kept in touch and when the Disney brothers opened a studio in California, Stalling was hired soon after. The musical impresario composed several early cartoon scores for Disney, including Plane Crazy and The Gallopinโ€™ Gaucho in 1928, which were the first two Mickey Mouse animated short films in production.

Collaborating closely with Walt Disney, Stalling forged a creative partnership that would influence the direction of animated storytelling.

Carl Stalling playing the piano while Disney animators sing along to โ€œMinnieโ€™s Yoo Hoo.โ€ Standing behind the piano, Walt Disney is second from the left. Carl Stalling photo files, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

During his tenure at Disney, Stalling lent his musical prowess to numerous projects, crafting unforgettable scores for a wide range of films. His compositions brought depth and emotion to the early Mickey Mouse shorts and the “Silly Symphonies” series.

In the early 1930s, Carl Stalling made the decision to leave Disney Studio and join the ranks of Warner Bros. Cartoons, where he continued to make significant contributions to the world of animation. At Warner Bros., Stalling’s musical genius found an ideal canvas to shine.

Title music for the Warner Bros. cartoon Bugs Bunny โ€œWhatโ€™s Up, Docโ€, written by Carl Stalling. Box 2, Carl Stalling papers, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming.

He revolutionized the integration of music in animated cartoons, employing a wide range of musical styles, from classical compositions to popular tunes and original scores.

While Stalling’s time at Disney was relatively brief compared to his later career at Warner Bros., his contributions to the studio’s early successes cannot be overstated. His musical arrangements set the stage for the enchanting world of Disney animation and established a legacy that continues to resonate with audiences to this day.

The papers of Carl Stalling can be found at the American Heritage Center, providing invaluable insights into the creative process of this exceptional music man.

Post contributed by AHC Simpson Archivist Leslie Waggener.

#alwaysarchiving

Posted in Animation history, Biography and profiles, Composers, Entertainment history, Film Music, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments