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Overview of the Collection | |
Creator: | Snow, Milton |
Title: | Milton Snow Photographs |
Inclusive Dates: | 1938-1940 |
Quantity: | 10 Photographs (0.1 Linear Feet) |
Abstract: | This portfolio, titled Kéyah tse Khoi' = Land of Cañons (1941), contains 10 photographs showing Navajo Indians, many engaged in traditional handicrafts, and the landscape of the Navajo Nation in Arizona and New Mexico. It is the 5th of 50 copies and features photography by Milton Snow, portfolio by Hazel Dreis, and lettering by Archie Begay. The photographs are described as "Eastman Azo paper developed in amidol." |
Identification: | CP SPC 168 |
Language: | Material in English |
Repository: | Arizona State University Library. Greater Arizona Collection P.O. Box 871006 Tempe, AZ 85287-1006 Phone: (480) 965-4932 E-Mail: archives@asu.edu Questions? Ask An Archivist! |
Milton Samuel "Jack" Snow was born to Joseph W. and Maud M. Snow in Ensley, Alabama on April 9, 1905. His family moved to Riverside County, California in 1907 and Snow graduated from Riverside Polytechnic High School in 1926. He went on to attend Riverside Junior College, where he studied geology, English, zoology, and photography in addition to working for the Avery Edwin Field photography studio after school and during the summers. In 1929, Snow left school to become the Los Angeles Museum's photographer and archaeological field man. Although he suffered from fairly pronounced cerebral palsy, he worked to overcome his physical shortcomings and established himself as a competent archaeological field photographer, participating in numerous expeditions in California, Arizona, and Utah. The work he completed during this period was important in helping to establish the Betatakin and Kiet Seel Anasazi cliff dwellings as part of the Navajo National Monument.
In 1934, Snow was hired to photograph the excavation and subsequent reconstruction of the Wupatki National Monument. At the end of the project he became the staff photographer at the Museum of Northern Arizona, beginning what would become a lifelong relationship with the institution. In September of 1935, Snow left the MNA to take a Works Progress Administration (WPA) funded job with the Department of Agriculture's Soil Conservation Service (SCS) on the Navajo Nation. In this position, Snow was responsible for recording conditions before and after conservation measures and for helping to illustrate the social and economic conditions of the local people.
In May of 1937, Snow was hired to create a photographic department for the Navajo Service. He constructed a darkroom in the basement of the Navajo Service Employees' Club in Window Rock, Arizona and converted a Navajo Service panel truck into a mobile darkroom. During his twenty-year career, Snow created a comprehensive photographic record of U.S.-Navajo relations. He retired from the Service in about 1957 and died in New Mexico in 1986.
This portfolio, titled Kéyah tse Khoi' = Land of Cañons (1941), contains 10 photographs showing Navajo Indians, many engaged in traditional handicrafts, and the landscape of the Navajo Nation in Arizona and New Mexico. It is the 5th of 50 copies and features photography by Milton Snow, portfolio by Hazel Dreis, and lettering by Archie Begay. The photographs are described as "Eastman Azo paper developed in amidol."
To view this collection, make an appointment at least five business days prior to your visit by contacting Ask an Archivist or calling (480) 965-4932. Appointments in the Wurzburger Reading Room at Hayden Library (rm. 138) on the Tempe campus are available Monday through Friday. Check the ASU Library Hours page for current availability.
Arizona State University does not own the copyright to this collection. We recognize that it is incumbent upon the researcher to procure permission to publish information from this collection from the owner of the copyright.
[Identification of item], Milton Snow Photographs, CP SPC 168, Arizona State University Library.
Archives and Special Collections acquired these photographs in 1993 (accession #1993-00906).
1 | Two Grey Hills Trading Post. Navajo Reservation, Arizona, 1940 | ||||||||||
A women in traditional clothing is entering the trading post followed by two men. | |||||||||||
2 | Sheep Ranch. Navajo Reservation, Arizona, 1940 | ||||||||||
Two women in traditional dress tend sheep in front of a hogan. | |||||||||||
3 | Weaving a Blanket. Navajo Reservation, Arizona, 1938 | ||||||||||
Woman in traditional dress works at a loom while a young girl holding a ball of yarn looks on. | |||||||||||
4 | Silversmith. Navajo Reservation, Arizona, 1938 | ||||||||||
Navajo men in traditional dress working on silver jewelry. A silver bracelet in visible in the foreground. | |||||||||||
5 | Navajo Women and Children in a Buckboard Wagon. Navajo Reservation, Arizona, 1938 |
6 | Navajo Child With Doll. Navajo Reservation, Arizona, 1938 |
7 | Canyon de Chelly. Navajo Reservation, Arizona, 1939 | ||||||||||
View from the rim showing steep canyon wells and wide vistas. | |||||||||||
8 | Farming. Navajo Reservation, Arizona, 1940 | ||||||||||
Navajo crop at the base of a steep cliff, possibly Canyon de Chelly. Traditional hogan is in the foreground. | |||||||||||
9 | Navajo Woman. Navajo Reservation, Arizona, 1938 | ||||||||||
Woman in traditional dress sitting in wagon. | |||||||||||
10 | Navajo Man, Navajo Reservation, Arizona, 1938 | ||||||||||
Traditional Navajo men wearing a squash blossom necklace and hat. | |||||||||||