John C. H. Grabill

http://dbpedia.org/resource/John_C._H._Grabill an entity of type: Thing

John C. H. Grabill (1849 – 23 August 1903) was an American photographer, known for his historical photographs, most of which were taken in South Dakota. He was born at Donnelsville, Ohio in 1849, the youngest son of David Grabill, a carpenter by his wife Catherine, née Kay. By 1860 the family had relocated to Champaign, Illinois where Grabill spent his formative years. He was involved in mining in Pitkin and Chaffee Counties in Colorado. rdf:langString
rdf:langString John C. H. Grabill
rdf:langString John C. H. Grabill
rdf:langString John C. H. Grabill
rdf:langString Saint Louis, Missouri, United States
xsd:date 1903-08-23
rdf:langString Donnelsville, Ohio, United States
xsd:integer 46580304
xsd:integer 1115977247
xsd:integer 1849
rdf:langString Grabill portrait of the officers of the 7th Cavalry Regiment two weeks after the Wounded Knee massacre
rdf:langString Grabill photograph of Devils Tower, Wyoming
rdf:langString Grabill photograph of Calamity Peak, Black Hills of South Dakota
rdf:langString Grabill's iconic photograph "THE COW BOY" from the Library of Congress
rdf:langString Grabill's photography wagon and horse parked in front of Castle Rock Butte, South Dakota
rdf:langString Ralph Gillespie Grabill
xsd:date 1903-08-23
rdf:langString vertical
rdf:langString American Indian Wars, Sioux, early Indian Reservation Period, Western Americana
rdf:langString Grabill - Calamnity Peak-1 .jpg
rdf:langString Grabill - Castle Rock.jpg
rdf:langString Grabill - Devils Tower-6 .jpg
rdf:langString Grabill-Photo-Wagon-1888.jpg
rdf:langString The fighting 7th officers LCCN99613847.tif
rdf:langString Photographs of the early Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, the Sioux Indians, the aftermath of the Wounded Knee massacre
rdf:langString Photographer
xsd:integer 1892
xsd:date 1885-10-03
rdf:langString ; †1917
rdf:langString Margaret "Maggie" Gillespie
xsd:integer 200
rdf:langString John C. H. Grabill (1849 – 23 August 1903) was an American photographer, known for his historical photographs, most of which were taken in South Dakota. He was born at Donnelsville, Ohio in 1849, the youngest son of David Grabill, a carpenter by his wife Catherine, née Kay. By 1860 the family had relocated to Champaign, Illinois where Grabill spent his formative years. He was involved in mining in Pitkin and Chaffee Counties in Colorado. Grabill had studios in Buena Vista, Colorado, Sturgis, Deadwood, Lead City and Hot Springs, South Dakota and Chicago, Illinois. He was the official photographer of the Black Hills and Fort Pierre Railroad and the Homestake Mining Company in South Dakota. Between 1887 and 1892 Grabill sent 188 photographs to the Library of Congress for copyright protection. These photographs are now in the public domain.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 24222

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