This photograph may have been taken on a copper mining exploration in Mexico. Guilford Graham Hartley can be seen holding his jacket in the photograph.
Contributed By:
Archives and Special Collections, Kathryn A. Martin Library, University of Minnesota Duluth
This photograph may have been taken on a copper mining exploration in Mexico. Guilford Graham Hartley can be seen holding his jacket in the photograph.
Contributed By:
Archives and Special Collections, Kathryn A. Martin Library, University of Minnesota Duluth
"Dip Needle trip between Grand Rapids and Cuyuna Range" is written at the bottom of the photograph. Guilford Graham Hartley can be seen dressed in buckskin on the right in the photograph.
Contributed By:
Archives and Special Collections, Kathryn A. Martin Library, University of Minnesota Duluth
The gharcholu is the first sari the bride receives from her inlaws and is worn at certain ceremonial times throughout her life. If she precedes her husband in death tradtionally it was her funeral shroud. Cotton