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Microsoft Word - Great Plains Migration LP_6_26.docx STANFORD HISTORY EDUCATION GROUP XXXXXXXXXXsheg.stanford.edu Document A This photograph shows a family in front of their sod home. There were few...

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Microsoft Word - Great Plains Migration LP_6_26.docx


STANFORD HISTORY EDUCATION GROUP XXXXXXXXXXsheg.stanford.edu
Document A

This photograph shows a family in front of their sod home. There were few trees on the
Great Plains, so wood for building was scarce. Homesteaders constructed walls for their
homes by stacking 3” thick slabs of sod cut from the prairie. Because photographs were
are, subjects often took a portrait seriously, dressing in their best clothes.




Title: Melanthan Price, West Union, Custer County, Ne
aska.
Date: 1886
Photographer: Solomon Butcher




STANFORD HISTORY EDUCATION GROUP XXXXXXXXXXsheg.stanford.edu
Document B

The photograph shows a father with his three children in front of their home. Butcher
eported that the mother of the children had died and that the photograph was taken just
after a heavy rainstorm. The roof had just collapsed under the weight of the wet sod on
the top of the home.




Title: Three motherless children and a caved-in soddy [sod home]
Location: Custer County, Ne
aska
Date: 1887
Photographer: Solomon Butcher








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Document C

This photograph shows the Shores family. Je
y Shores, who is seated second from the
ight, had been enslaved decades earlier. Thousands of African Americans moved to
the Great Plains from the South in the 1870s and 1880s for the opportunity to own land
– and in hopes of escaping the oppression and injustice they experienced in the South.


Title: The Shores family near Westerville, Custer County, Ne
aska.
Date: 1887
Photographer: Solomon Butcher











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Document D

Parents with their three children standing in front of their home. Butcher typically asked
those he photographed to face the sun to improve the lighting for the image, which is
why his subjects often appear to be squinting or looking down slightly. Because any
movement would cause the image to be blu
y, the subjects typically posed for the
photographs, remaining still.




Title: Starting a New Family Northwest of West Union, Ne
aska.
Location: Custer County, Ne
aska
Date: 1886
Photographer: Solomon Butcher







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Document E

This photograph shows a family with their livestock. Butcher reported that the family
wanted to take the photograph with their piano so that their relatives back East would
see it. However, they did not want their family to see the state of their house, so they
asked to move it outdoors for the photograph.


Title: The David Hilton family near Weissert, Custer County, Ne
aska.
Date: 1887
Photographer: Solomon Butcher



STANFORD HISTORY EDUCATION GROUP XXXXXXXXXXsheg.stanford.edu
Guiding Questions

1. What does each photograph suggest about what life was like for homesteaders
on the Great Plains in the 1880s?



Document A






Document B






Document C






Document D






Document E








STANFORD HISTORY EDUCATION GROUP XXXXXXXXXXsheg.stanford.edu
2. What other evidence might you want to examine if you wanted to determine
whether these photographs were accurate representations of life in the
tenements?











3. When evaluating whether a historical photograph is useful as evidence,
historians consider various questions, including:

• When and where was the photograph was taken?
• Who took the photograph? What was their perspective on the events or
people being photographed, and how might that have influenced what
they chose to shoot?
• Why was the photograph taken? Might the photographer have wanted to
portray a scene in a particular way?
• Under what circumstances was the photograph taken? How might these
circumstances have limited or enabled what the photographer captured?
• What technology did the photographer use, and how might that have
influenced the image created?

Considering the questions above, why might Butcher’s photographs be useful
evidence about life for homesteaders on the Great Plains?














STANFORD HISTORY EDUCATION GROUP XXXXXXXXXXsheg.stanford.edu
Considering the questions above, what about the photographs might cause you
to question whether they are useful evidence about life for homesteaders on the
Great Plains?










4. Butcher took the photograph below in 1900, about 13-14 years after Photos A-E.
The photograph supposedly depicts a man firing a gun at another man’s feet to
make him “dance”. Butcher posed the scene and later altered the photograph to
make it look like white smoke was coming out of the man’s gun.



Does the fact that Butcher posed and altered a photograph in 1900 affect your
evaluation of the reliability of Photographs A-E?
Answered Same Day Jul 15, 2021

Solution

Sanjukta answered on Jul 16 2021
150 Votes
Running Head: HISTORY
HISTORY 5
American History
Part 1:
1.
Document A
It can be depicted from this picture that the homestead life can be extremely sad and miserable along with it lonely. Furthermore, there were not many neighbours so there was no such scope for the interaction also.
Document B
In this particular document it is highlighted that living in the situation of homestead can be extremely rough. It is needless to say that if an individual loses someone with whom they were close to then then they lose one part of them and also one family member is also less from the family.
Document C
It is the document that clearly showcases the fact that what life looks like when living with fear especially for the Black people. However, they are uncertain about their future as they have experienced a lot of injustice in the South still there is a ray of hope for them as they a
ived in a new land that is full of opportunities.
Document D
It is the document that highlights the fact that while living during the homestead the butcher was extremely particular about the picture that was clicked as he did not want it to be blu
y so all of the family members remained composed and still.
Document E
It is the...
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