Photograph looking down on the Palouse Falls in eastern Washington. The falls have a height of approximately 196 ft. Basalt cliffs line the canyon surrounding the falls.
Eastern Washington College of Education -- Student Activities; Students; Arts & crafts
Photograph of students participating in the Eastern Washington State College (currently Eastern Washington University) High School Summer Creative Arts Program.
Eastern Washington State College -- Student Activities; Students; Music education
Photograph of students participating in the Eastern Washington State College (currently Eastern Washington University) music and dance portion of the High School Summer Creative Arts Program.
Eastern Washington State College -- Student Activities; Students; Music education
Photograph of students participating in the Eastern Washington State College (currently Eastern Washington University) music and dance portion of the High School Summer Creative Arts Program.
Photograph of the First National Bank of Cheney in Cheney, Washington. The bank is situated on the corner of First St. and Normal Avenue, (now College Avenue) . It was built by Daniel F. Percival in 1889 after a fire destroyed the previous building...
Cheney State Normal School (Cheney, Wash.); Football players
The Papooses were Cheney Normal's light weight football squad which played neighboring high schools: Front Row, L to R: Arnold Ochs, Anderson, Al Strom, George Werner, Carl Gauksheim, Gordon Rutherford, Richard Wasmund; Standing: Student Coach Carl...
Expeditions & surveys; Railroad surveys; Teton River (Minn.); Valleys
The Teton Valley, "a vast plain, descending towards the east, the soil of inferior quality, and the dry vegetation indicated the change in the climate observed in going over the high, dry plains towards the Missouri." "The valley...
Expeditions & surveys; Railroad surveys; White Bear Lake (Minn.)
White Bear Lake, "a beautiful sheet of water, bordered with timber, about fourteen miles long and two wide, with high swelling banks running back a mile or so, and rising to the height of about one hundred and fifty feet." Plate V.