Photographs of Native Americans, primarily on the Columbia River Plateau, taken by Benjamin A. Gifford from the late 1890s through early 1900s. (Next to envelope labeled "Transparency Pop Kin A Wayne")
Basaltic column, nearly 400 feet high. Native Americans believed there dwelt the spirit which could foretell his fate. The image appears in the following publication, "Snap Shots on the Columbia."
A plunge of nearly 300 feet; as the legend runs, a stubborn woman was changed into the waterfall now called "Latourelle." The image appears in the following publication, "Snap Shots on the Columbia."
Photographs of Native Americans, primarily on the Columbia River Plateau, taken by Benjamin A. Gifford from the late 1890s through early 1900s. (2 views)