William Henry Jackson U.S. Geological Survey photographs
Content Description
Three U.S. Geographical Survey Oversized prints by William Henry Jackson with locations in Echo Canyon and Weber Canyon in Summit County, Utah. Also includes sixteen 5x7 prints of ancient Pueblo ruins in the Four Corners area.
Dates
- Creation: 1869-1874
Conditions Governing Access
No restrictions on access, except: not available through interlibrary loan.
Conditions Governing Use
It is the responsibility of the researcher to obtain any necessary copyright clearances.
Permission to publish material from the William Henry Jackson U.S. Geological Survey photographs must be obtained from the Photograph Curator and/or the Special Collections Section Head.
Biographical / Historical
William Henry Jackson was arguably the premier frontier photographer of his age. Jackson's photographs helped convince congress to create Yellowstone National Park in 1872 and introduced Eastern America and Europe to the landscape of the American West. The 40,000 photographs he took during his lifetime remain an unmatched record of the expansion of the West in the last part of the nineteenth century.
Jackson was born in 1843 and grew up with a love of art and photography. He served as an artist during the Civil War and afterwards worked as a bullwhacker running from St. Joseph Missouri to Montana. Jackson obtained employment in an Omaha, Nebraska photo gallery before opening his own portrait studio with his brother, Edward. In 1869 he photographed construction along the route of the Union Pacific Railroad with Arundel C. Hull. His photographs of the railroad and his studio portraits of local Indians captured the attention of Ferdinand V. Hayden who asked Jackson to accompany him on his 1870 expedition into the Utah and Wyoming Territories. Jackson would receive no salary during the expedition, only expenses, but he became a paid government employee the following year. Jackson remained with the Hayden Survey until 1878. This collection represents only a handful of the more than 2,000 photographs taken during those years.
Jackson went on to document the Pueblo Indians of Arizona and New Mexico, and the ever-expanding empire of the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad in Colorado and Utah. His fame propelled him into a photographic expedition in 1894-95 that took him to England, Egypt, India, Australia, New Zealand, the East Indies, China, Japan, and Russia. Jackson later turned to historical and landscape painting before he died in 1942 at the age of ninety-nine.
Extent
1.25 Linear Feet (1 box)
Language of Materials
English
Abstract
Three U.S. Geographical Survey oversized prints by William Henry Jackson with locations in Echo Canyon and Weber Canyon in Summit County, Utah. Also includes sixteen 5x7 prints of ancient Pueblo ruins in the Four Corners area.
Immediate Source of Acquisition
The items in this collection were purchased from Back of Beyond Books in 2021.
- Title
- Guide to the William Henry Jackson U.S. Geological Survey photographs
- Author
- Finding aid created by Heather Housley and Daniel Davis
- Date
- 2024
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections & Archives Repository
Merrill-Cazier Library
Utah State University
3000 Old Main Hill
Logan Utah 84322-3000 United States
435 797-8248
435 797-2880 (Fax)
scweb@usu.edu