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  • 9336-MA29. Burns City Band. (bass drum says “Eggleston’s Dance Orchestra, Burns, Ore”. This picture is of the Burns City band, not the dance band. They used the dance band drum set, which was another band directed by Eggleston). Alex A. Eggleston center with trumpet. other identifications (made by the director’s son) 2nd from right in front row- Dr. Llewellen Hibbard, 4th from right in front row with white shirt and tie- Lee Reed, 5th from right Roland Gowan. (Probable date is 1928 or early 1929. newest auto is 1928 Ford Model A) Burns, Harney County, Oregon
    9336-MA29.tif
  • 9336-PR12. U. S. Mail trucks owned by the Blue Mountain Stage Lines assemble in front of the Burns Garage on North Broadway in Burns, Oregon. This is the oldest continuously operating car dealership in Oregon and is still located in the same building. 1934 license plates on vehicles.
    9336-PR12.tif
  • 9336-LN09. Jimmie Louie, son of the late Chief Captain Louey, photographed shortly after the passing of his father circa 1934-1936.  He was the leader of the Burns Paiute tribe, whose reservation is near Burns in Harney county.
    9336-LN09.tif
  • 9336-P01. Burns Bakery. (now Kraft Korner) Burns, Oregon
    9336-P01.tif
  • 9336-AB12 Geese hunting by airplane, Burns, Oregon Geese hunting by airplane, Burns, Oregon
    9336-AB12.tif
  • 9336-T33-8. "Round-Up riders, Burns 1933, photo by Heck". Harney County Rodeo.
    9336-T33-8.tif
  • 9336-Owl 13 Paiute Indians, Burns, Oregon. 1937. Photo by O. W. Lubcke. Identifications: (from left) 1-Bertha Washington, 2- (standing) Emma Kennedy, 3- Annie Kennedy, 4- Mary Teeman, 5- (little boy) Leonard Bob, 6- (seated woman with baby) Bertha Hoodie or Norma, 7- (Man standing with back to camera) Perry Parker, 8- (seated) Blind Jim, 9th from left is unidentified, 10- (man with stick) Pete Teeman, 11- (standing between windows) Charlie Jim, 12- (standing near right window) Teedy Teeman. Identifications of Indians on the ground: 13- (right of man with cap) Charlie Gill, 14- (man with big hat facing camera) unidentified, 15- (next man with white hat) Jimmie Louie, 16- (next man with black hat) unidentified, 17- Marianne Louie, 18- (big woman) Nally Dave, 19- (woman behind small girl) Jenny Louie, 20- (small girl) Juanita Louie, 21- (extreme right) Minnie Paddy.
    9336-owl-13.tif
  • 9336-MA38. Broadway St. looking north from Adams, Burns, Oregon. Date around 1925-1926.  Main street in muddy condition prior to paving.
    9336-MA38.tif
  • 336-MA36. "Paiute Indians, Burns, Oregon" on the steps of Holy Family Catholic Church. Identifications: seated center left on lower step- Chief Captain Louey, old man seated center right on lower step- William Johnson. Indians with headdresses are from Pendleton.
    9336-MA36.tif
  • 9336-MA28 Paiute Indians in front of Skaggs Safeway, Burns, Oregon. Location on NE corner of Broadway and Washington Streets. (directly across street from Heck's studio) (see also AB37, which was taken at the same time) Left- Mary Louie (wife of Jimmie Louie), young girl on left- Ethel Louie, Annie Winnehook (wife of Jake Winnehook), young boy- Raymond Kennedy, adult- Annie Kennedy, baby in arms- Lester Kennedy.
    9336-MA28.tif
  • 9336-AB48 Broadway St., Burns, Oregon. looking North from Monroe. Before paving in 1929
    9336-AB48.tif
  • 9336-AB11 Geese hunting by airplane, Burns, Oregon
    9336-AB11.tif
  • 9336-AB73. First National Bank. S. W. corner of Broadway and Washington, Burns, Oregon.
    9336-AB73.tif
  • 9336-AB13 Geese hunting by airplane, Burns, Oregon
    9336-AB13.tif
  • 9336-N02. Family parlor band. Burns, Harney County, Oregon.
    9336-N02-OPS.tif
  • 9336-LR01.  Ray Wilson, Police, Burns, Oregon.
    9336-LR01.tif
  • 9336-T33-10. Steven Smart. Bareback.  Burns 1933. Harney County Fair, Oregon
    9336-T33-10.tif
  • 9336-AB95. Hunters returning to Burns, Harney County, Oregon. The Mahleur Wildlife Refuge is nearby and these birds likely were taken near there. 1930s
    9336-AB95.tif
  • 9336-AB34 Wild West Show men and women posing at tent. Burns, Oregon. Circa. 1905
    9336-AB34.tif
  • 9336-W70. "Edward Hines Western Pine Co. Burns, Oregon. No. 70. Photo by Heck. 4/20/1930" (two negative panorama)
    9336-W70.tif
  • 9336-MA32. Indian group on the steps of Holy Family Catholic Church, Burns, Oregon. Identifications: extreme left Takama (mother of Gladys Macey), man 2nd from left with hat glancing left- Clyde Johnson, man 3rd from left on step with no hat- husband of Grace White, woman left of Father Huel with white scarf over hair- Grace White, behind her with cap- Teddy Dick, center- Father Huel, seated center on lower step with hat- Chief Captain Louey, old man seated on second step to right- William Johnson, middle aged man behind him- Jim Tooie, alter boy unidentified, partially obscured young man to the right of the right altar boy- Betchel Capp (son of Johnny and Ada Capp), extreme right standing man with hat- Johnny Capp, woman- Ada Capp. Indians with headdresses are from Pendleton.
    9336-MA32.tif
  • 9336-LN05. Elizabeth Badroads (Cayuse and Walla Walla) and Francis Shillal (Cayuse, Walla Walla and Umatilla) wedding photo. The couple were married at the Holy Family Catholic Church in Burns, Oregon, on September 8, 1929. In the newspaper article written about their marriage, the couple said they were 19 years old, however Elizabeth was actually 16. Both had received their education at St. Andrews mission, a Catholic Indian school on the Umatilla river. Their wedding happened on the week of the annual Harney County fair and rodeo. Umatilla Indians had for many years joined the local Paiute Indians in the parade, events and dances. <br />
The bride was referred to as Princess Elizabeth Badroads by the newspaper reporter,  as she was a princess in the Pendleton Round-up Indian beauty pageant that year. Her father was Jim Badroads, one of the organizers of the event, and her sister Rosie later won the contest. Jim Badroads (1865-1933) was Chief of the Cayuse Indians on the Umatilla reservation, having succeeded Chief Captain Sumpkin in 1927.<br />
Elizabeth explained that the name Badroads (kapshish ishkit) was given to her grandfather by the Indians because his home was in a canyon and the only road leading to it was rough and difficult to get through.<br />
Once married, she became Elizabeth B. Shillal, using the middle initial B to prevent confusion with a cousin living on the Umatilla reservation, Elizabeth Pool Shillal.<br />
Francis Shillal was the son of Thomas Shillal (1883-1932).  His father raised horses on the family farm near Stanfield. <br />
Like most Indian weddings at the time, there was not an official wedding license for their marriage, even though it was performed in a church by a Catholic priest. Indian culture considered marriage to be a public recognition of a new family, and while relatives and friends may participate in feasts and bring gifts, there usually was not a specific ceremony as such.
    9336-LN05.tif
  • 9336-AB88. Hunters returning to Burns, Harney County, Oregon. The Mahleur Wildlife Refuge is nearby and these birds likely were taken near there. 1930s
    9336-AB88.tif
  • Studio portrait of Mrs. Bill Hodgson. Burns, Oregon
    9336-Hodgson-MrsBill#2.tif
  • 9336-owl12. New Paiute Indian Camp, 1937
    9336-owl12.tif
  • 9336-LR02 "Charles Kuhl. Rainbow Trout caught in Blitzen River. May 1, 1948" studio portrait of two men holding fish, one is smoking a cigar.
    9336-LR02.tif
  • 9336-owl11. New Paiute Indian Camp, 1937
    9336-owl11.tif
  • 9336-MA115. Moonshine Still in front of Harney County courthouse. 3 men, one with a sheriff badge.
    9336-MA115.tif
  • 9336-AB63. “Max-I-Mum” coffee, store display
    9336-AB63.tif
  • Ackroyd 03653-4  "standard Oil Co. Burns Brothers station exteriors. June 10, 1952" (621 SE Union Ave. between Washington and Alder.
    Ackroyd-03653-4.tif
  • 9336-W67. (Hines mill buildings B1, P1, P3, and smokestack. mill pond in foreground. Hines Mill, Hines, Ore.) "No. 67. Photo by Heck. Burns, Ore"  1929
    9336-W67.tif
  • 9336-PR105. Display of arrowheads in frame, arranged in a western motif. rifles and stones are displayed. This is probably in the Arrowhead Hotel in Burns.
    9336-PR105.tif
  • 9336-AB96.  C. E. S. Wood (left) and Bill Hanley (right) pose at the dedication of the monument to John Devine located north of Burns at the head of Devine Canyon. July 22, 1928.  A full account is in Brimlow’s book, pg. 226.
    9336-AB96.tif
  • 9336-W60. (logging operations in the woods, probably near Seneca.) "No. 60. Photo by Heck. Burns, Ore"
    9336-W60.tif
  • 9336-MA34.  “The Three Sheriffs. Harney county, Grant county, Lake county Photo by Heck”. 3 sheriffs  of Harney, Grant & Lake counties at the Harney County Fair in the early 1930s. Charles Wilson Frazier was elected Harney County sheriff in 1929 and served four consecutive four year terms. Burns, Oregon.
    9336-MA34.tif
  • 9336-W65. (train with many loaded cars full of logs. train engine #26 of Oregon & Northwestern RR.) "No. 65."
    9336-W65.tif
  • ackroyd-00083-256."Timberline. January 3, 1947" "Board of directors of Timberline lodge are here gathered in front of lodge after recent inspection of new improvements. From left, William Temple, lodge manager, and Board Members Fred Waymire, E. V. Burns, A. A. Comrie, president; R. L. Orem and Franz B. Drinker."
    ackroyd-00083-256.tif
  • ackroyd-00083-255. Timberline. January 3, 1947. From left Timberline Board Members Fred Waymire, E. V. Burns, A. A. Comrie, president; R. L. Orem and Franz B. Drinker.
    ackroyd-00083-255.tif
  • Portrait of Mr. & Mrs. Bill Hodgson. Burns, Oregon
    9336-Hodgson-W&wife.tif
  • 9336-AB44 nine sheep men in front of corral, one with Lugar pistol. early nitrate negative, ca. 1915?.
    9336-AB44.tif
  • 9336-W63. Oregon & Northwestern logging train owned by the Edward Hines Lumber Company, Hines, Oregon. The engine is Baldwin #26, purchased new by Hines in 1929. Photo dates from 1930 - 1934. Photo by R. W. Heck. Soure: 8x10" negative. "No. 63."
    9336-W63-1.tif
  • 9336-K03.  man with chaps and rifle, about 1900
    9336-K03.tif
  • 9336-AB94 man at campfire reading "The Sunday Oregonian" newspaper article headed "Memoirs of an Oregon Horse Thief". This is the July 23, 1933 Sunday Oregonian pg. 5, Flint Sprag is reading his own memoirs, then being published in the Oregonian.
    9336-AB94.tif
  • 9336-(#2)  Frank Morgan (1905-1985)<br />
Frank Morgan was a rancher in Harney County, and was Bill Brown’s last buckaroo boss in 1932-1933. <br />
This photo was published  on pg. 106 of Gray, Edward “William Bill Brown ...”. His biography is on pg. 91-92. <br />
An oral history of Frank Morgan is in the Harney County Public Library oral project #70.<br />
This photo session produced three different negatives of Frank Morgan, two in cowboy attire and 1 in street clothes, and were taken about the mid 1920’s. 5x7” Nitrate film.<br />
(biography posted by High Desert Museum:) Born in 1905 on the family ranch at Post, Crook County, central Oregon, Frank Morgan spent a lifetime buckarooing for ranches across the High Desert. It is clear he wanted the photographer to focus on his silver inlaid spade bit, rawhide reins and California style spurs. In this proud pose it identifies him as a buckaroo, a horseman with traditions beginning in California over a century earlier. Still remembered today by ranch families and aging buckaroos across the High Desert, a lifetime on horseback ended at the age of 80, when Frank was bucked off of a horse while roping at a branding.
    9336-FrankMorgan2.tif
  • Y-510424-01. Tillamook Burn. photo was taken near the east fork of the Trask river on flank of conflagration. April 24, 1951
    Y-510424-01.tif
  • Y-750225B-02.   "Emanuel Hospital. Burn Center. February 25, 1975", "physical therapy"
    Y-750225B-02.tif
  • Y-750128B-13. "Emanuel Hospital. Burn Center. January 28, 1975"
    Y-750128B-13.tif
  • Y-750128B-15. "Emanuel Hospital. Burn Center. January 28, 1975"
    Y-750128B-15.tif
  • Y-750128A-02. "Emanuel Hospital. Burn Center. January 28, 1975"
    Y-750128A-02.tif
  • ackroyd_00870-6. "Guilds Lake aerials. For Union Pacific. August 6, 1948." The vacant land in the center is the subject of this photo, it is the land on the south side of NW Yeon Ave. at the intersection of NW 26th Ave., which is address numbered in the 3200s. The intersection in the center is NW Yeon & NW 26th Ave. In the foreground is the Calbag junkyard, where two men are burning a slash pile of junk (appears to be electric wire). The largest building in the center is Industrial Air Products owned by Gilbert Schnitzer 3200 NW Yeon. To its right is Dulien Steel 3190 NW Yeon
    ackroyd-00870-6.tif
  • 9336-hanley. Ceremony marking the completion of the first Deschutes River Railroad in Bend, Oregon, October 5, 1911. William “Bill” Hanley of Burns gives a speech before laying the cornerstone of Bend’s Union Depot. He was chosen for the honor because of his long efforts attracting railroads to central Oregon. After his speech, railroad owner James J. Hill drove home the golden spike.
    9336-hanley.tif
  • Y-480817-12. PTCo. Burning trolley cars August 17, 1948
    Y-480817-12.tif
  • 1006-B039B-21 "Conspiracy. March. Hoffman. Burn. February 21, 1970" (Abbie Hoffman was convicted of conspiracy on February 18)
    1006-B048-21.tif
  • 1006-B039B-20 "Conspiracy. March. Hoffman. Burn. February 21, 1970" (Abbie Hoffman was convicted of conspiracy on February 18)
    1006-B048-20.tif
  • 1006-B039B-17 "Conspiracy. March. Hoffman. Burn. February 21, 1970" (Abbie Hoffman was convicted of conspiracy on February 18)
    1006-B039B-17.tif
  • 1006-B039A-21. "Conspiracy. March. Hoffman. Burn. February 21, 1970" (Abbie Hoffman was convicted of conspiracy on February 18)
    1006-B039A-21.tif
  • 1006-B039A-18. "Conspiracy. March. Hoffman. Burn. February 21, 1970" (Abbie Hoffman was convicted of conspiracy on February 18)
    1006-B039A-18.tif
  • 1006-B039-21. "Conspiracy. March. Hoffman. Burn. February 21, 1970" (Abbie Hoffman was convicted of conspiracy on February 18)
    1006-B039-21.tif
  • 1006-B039A-22. "Conspiracy. March. Hoffman. Burn. February 21, 1970" (Abbie Hoffman was convicted of conspiracy on February 18)
    1006-B039A-22.tif
  • 1006-B039A-18. "Conspiracy. March. Hoffman. Burn. February 21, 1970" (Abbie Hoffman was convicted of conspiracy on February 18)
    1006-B039A-20.tif
  • 9136-01. Lotus Isle Amusement Park. The park had a short, tragic run from 1930-1932. In this photo a car is being given away as part of the Jello Week promotion. Later in the year this photo was taken (1931) the Peacock Ballroom would burn to the ground.
    9136-01-fz.tif
  • human bones found on Vanport site. April 23, 1949 caption published 4/23/49 pg. 12 "SEARCH. Possibility of discovery of another Vanport victim was seen Friday with finding of bones, thought to be those of a human, and false teeth. Sheriffs’ deputies under Captain Merle Tillman and others search burned trash pile in Vanport where a 21-year old farm worker made the discovery while completing task of burning rubbish."
    Y-490423B-2.tif
  • 0001-B42 Cannon Beach, Oregon. Logged and burnt, Haystack Heights about 1936
    0001-B42.tif
  • Ackroyd 05295-07. "West Shore Manor.  June 22. 1954. Swimming pool at right. Several hundred yards beyond the surf is a reef of large rocks inhabited by thousands of sea birds and a herd of seals." (West Shore Manor on Otter Rock, about five miles south of Depoe Bay, burned down November 6, 1963)
    ackroyd-05295-07.tif
  • Ackroyd 00455-1. "Mountain View Inn, Government Camp. March 1946" This burned down in 1955.
    ackroyd-00455-1.tif
  • Y-490614-1. Fire at Duniway School. June 14, 1949. Smokey Thompson. Photographer's title: "Smoke Gets In Your Eyes"
    Y-490614-1.tif
  • 0904-D45 The East Side Mill & Lumber Company before 1925, when six of the support columns of the Sellwood bridge were built through this complex. Train tracks are now the Springwater corridor bike path. "The East Side Lumber Company was established in 1902, on the site of the smaller Sorensen and Young Planing Mill, in operation since the 1890s. During the first decade of the 20th century, the mill thrived in this growing, lumber-hungry city, expanding to include door- and box-making subsidiaries. In the 1920s, the complex employed 300-500 men, many of whom lived in Sellwood. Timber was hauled in by interurban railroad, or floated in on the river. Hard times in the 1930s led to the East Side Lumber Company’s downfall. By the end of the decade, the main mill had shut down. In 1940, a huge fire burned many of the buildings. One part of the complex, the Oregon Door Company, stayed in business until the 1950s. The first Sellwood Bridge was designed to cross at the site of the East Side Lumber complex. In fact, the Oregon Door Company was right in its path. Multnomah County couldn’t afford to purchase and demolish the building, so engineers built six of the bridge columns through it. This unusual building stood until 2011.
    0904-D45.tif
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