Colored photograph of an automobile on a dirt road near Galena Summit, Ketchum, Idaho. This would later be the Galena Highway, now known as Idaho Route 75, Sawtooth Scenic Byway section.
An aerial photo of the city of Boise taken directly overhead. This photo includes part of modern day North End, Morris Hill, Depot Bench, Boise State University and Downtown areas.
An aerial photo of the city of Boise taken directly overhead. This photo includes part of modern day North End, Morris Hill, Depot Bench, Boise State University and Downtown areas.
An aerial photo of the city of Boise taken directly overhead. This photo includes part of modern day North End, Morris Hill, Depot Bench, Boise State University and Downtown areas.
Nell Shipman (as Faith Diggs) and Alfred Allen (as Mark Leroy) in a scene from "The Grub-Stake." Alfred Allen (1866-1947) appeared in more than 100 films between 1915 and 1929.
Mark Leroy (at left, portrayed by Alfred Allen) introduces Faith Diggs (Nell Shipman) to the dance hall crowd in a scene from "The Grub-Stake." The third actor (right) is unidentified.
Cast and crew of "The Grub-Stake" filming aboard ship. To the right are actors Alfred Allen (portraying Mark Leroy) and Nell Shipman (Faith Diggs). The figure standing above the rest appears to be the film's director Bert Van Tuyle.
Nell Shipman's friend and confidante, Belle Angstadt (in bed), in the center of the scene during the filming of Shipman's lost film "Wolf's Brush," at Angstadt's Lone Star Ranch, on the shores of Priest Lake, Idaho. At the far left Lloyd Peters...
Members of Nell Shipman's movie company visit with Belle Angstadt and members of her family at Angstadt's Lone Star Ranche on Priest Lake, Idaho. Angstadt and Shipman are seated in front; Shipman's son Barry is crouching at the left. Shipman used...
Scattered in the lava ash were hundreds of bear tracks that could be traced for miles. The rumor of a dwarf grizzly bear was one of the initial reasons why Robert W. Limbert wanted to explore the unnamed Craters of the Moon area since the mid-1910s.