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C. H. Barstow papers, 1870-1891
C. H. Barstow papers, 1870-1891
C. H. Barstow papers, 1870-1891
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C. H. Barstow papers, 1870-1891
Title
C. H. Barstow papers, 1870-1891
Creator
Barstow, C. H. (Charles H.), -1908
Date
1870-1891
Place
Montana--Crow Agency
,
Montana--Rosebud
Language
English
Subjects
United States
,
Crow Indians
,
Frontier and pioneer life
,
Little Bighorn, Battle of the, Mont., 1876
,
Pioneers
Summary
Mainly correspondence, 1870-1891. There are18 letters written by C.H. Barstow at the Crow Agency in the Montana Territory to his sister Eliza, his brother Rogers L. Barstow, and his cousin Sarah, in Massachusetts. Of the other 14 letters, there are several from Barstow's wife Lizzie to his sister and brother, and a few other miscellaneous letters among family members and friends. Also, three small clippings and a November 10, 1887 issue of The Montana Stock Gazette reporting a skirmish at the agency between the Crow Indian followers of Crow-Bannock Indian, Sword Bearer, and the U.S. Army. Subjects covered in Barstow's letters include the observance of the tenth anniversary of the Battle of Little Bighorn and a visit by battle participant Frederick William Benteen; Barstow's heavy workload; arson attempts at the agency's Rosebud location prior to its 1884 move to the Little Big Horn Valley; Indian Service politics and officials; agency appointments and Barstow's own job problems; his marriage and Lizzie's illness and the care of their daughter after Lizzie's death; and legal transfers of Barstow Kansas farm property.
Biographical/Historical Note
United States Indian Service employee.
Extent
0.4 linear feet (1 box and 1 oversize folder)
Format
Sources
,
Manuscripts
,
Correspondence
User-Contributed Transcription
would have proved fatal for Dr. Russell had had no experience at all in that line. Freeman is also quite well again, but at one time he was quite lame from a sprained knee, and other bruises received by being thrown from his horse. His horsy? is perfectly gentle, but he was riding along in a gallop and she stepped in an abandoned prairie dog hole and fell, throwing Freeman and rolling on his knee before he could get on his feet. Mother is feeling as well as this weather will let any one feel, so you see the?
Transcription Status
Needs review
Transcription Note
This document was transcribed by volunteers as part of the Newberry Transcribe crowdsourcing initiative.
Link to Catalog
View record
Call Number
VAULT Ayer MS 3014
BibID
991290268805867
Rights Status
No Copyright - United States
Contributing Institution
Newberry Library
Newberry Open Access Policy
The Newberry makes its collections available for any lawful purpose, commercial or non-commercial, without licensing or permission fees to the library, subject to
these terms and conditions.
IIIF Resource Type
Canvas
Size
1479px × 2414px 10.25 MB
Filename
991290268805867_Ayer_MS_3014_fol_019_00006.tif
Unique Identifier
NL11E6J8
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