- Sioux Moccasin2
- Apache and Sioux Scalps
- Sioux Moccasin
- Pueblo Pottery
- Moki Snake Dance
- Omaha Moccasin
- Smoke Signaling
- Rattles and Masks
- Kutchin Moccasin
- View of Pueblo
- Estufa at Cochiti, N. M.
- The Dakota Calendar
- Sign Language on the Plains
- Ruined Building at Chichen Itza
- Scaffold Burial
- Hupa Wicker Cradle
- Indian Letter on Birch Bark
- Ground Plan of Earthworks at Newark, Ohio
- Ojibwa Gravepost
- Cree Squaw and Papoose
- Skin Tents
- Cradle of Oregon Indians
- Skin Jacket
- Iroquois Moccasin
- Portrait of George Catlin
- Granary at Coahuilla
- Chief's House - Queen Charlotte's Inlet
- Noki Cradle - Frame of Fine Wicker.
- Map of the deluged Conemaugh District
The summer of 1889 will ever be memorable for its appalling disasters by flood and flame. In that period fell the heaviest blow of the nineteenth century—a blow scarcely paralleled in the histories of civilized lands. Central Pennsylvania, a centre of industry, thrift and comfort, was desolated by floods unprecedented in the records of the great waters. On both sides of the Alleghenies these ravages were felt in terrific power, but on the western slope their terrors were infinitely multiplied by the bursting of the South Fork Reservoir, letting out millions of tons of water, which, rushing madly down the rapid descent of the Conemaugh Valley, washed out all its busy villages and hurled itself in a deadly torrent on the happy borough of Johnstown. The frightful aggravations which followed the coming of this torrent have waked the deepest sympathies of this nation and of the world, and the history is demanded in permanent form, for those of the present day, and for the generation to come. - Halibut Hooks of Wood
- Tortures of the Mandan Sun Dance
- Coiled Baskets - California
- Gold Chief's House. Queen Charlotte's Island
- Group of Ball Sticks
- Indian Carrier - Alaska
- Birch-Bark Cradle from Yukon River, Alaska
- Wampum Belt
- Cliff Ruins at Mancos Canyon
- Tattooing on a Haida Man
- Hat of Northwest Coast, Top and Side View
- Shell Gorgets
- Blackfeet Cradle, Made of Lattice-work and Leather
- Stone Idol - Mexico
- Group of Weapons
- Blackfoot Moccasin
- Indian Ball-Player
- Chinook Baby in Cradle
- Indian Spears, Shield, and Quiver of Arrows
- Iroquois Long House
- Birch-Bark Canoe
- Ojibwa Women Gathering Wild Rice
- Algonkin Village of Pomeiock, on Albemarle Sound, in 1585
- Blackfoot Squaw Traveling
- A Pueblo Woman
- Blanket - Chilcat Indians, Alaska
- Page of Aztec Book
- 'Bull-Boat' or Coracle
- Apache Cradle
Apache Cradle - Flight of Philip from Mount Hope
- Landing of the Pilgrims
The pilgrim voyagers found themselves on a bleak and inhospitable coast, and much farther to the northward than they intended to go. In agreement with their wishes, an attempt was made, by the master of the ship, to proceed to the Hudson. But either finding, or affecting to believe the passage to be dangerous, he readily seized on the fears which had been excited, probably by himself, to return to the cape, with a view to make a landing there. It afterwards appeared that he had been bribed by the Dutch, who intended to keep possession of the Hudson river, to carry the adventurers quite to the northward of their place of destination. They arrived in Cape Cod harbor on the 11th of November, "and, being brought safe to land, they fell upon their knees, and blessed the God of heaven, who had brought them over the vast and furious ocean, and delivered them from many perils and miseries."