Box 36
Contains 87 Results:
Photograph of Zane Grey in woods holding staff, between 1910 and 1940
Photograph of Zane Grey holding rifle overlooking Tonto Rim, between 1910 and 1940
This photograph shows Zane Grey in silhouette with a rifle overlooking the Tonto Rim, dating from between 1910 and 1940.
Photograph of Zane Grey with Native American family, 1913
This photograph shows Zane Grey with Native American mother, father, and baby sitting in front of a woodpile. This may be an image of Nasda Begay, a Piute Indian who guided Grey’s party to Rainbow Bridge in 1913, and his family. He reportedly died in the 1918 influenza epidemic.
Photograph of Zane Grey with horse overlooking Piute Canyon, between 1913-1929
This photograph shows Zane Grey in a hat and chaps holding the reins of a dark, saddled horse, overlooking Piute Canyon on the way to Rainbow Bridge. Dating from between 1913 and 1929.
Photograph of Zane Grey looking across Death Valley, California, 1919 March
Photograph of Zane Grey with black bear cubs at Tonto Basin, between 1910 and 1940
This photograph shows Zane Grey with two black bear cubs in the snow at the Tonto Basin, dating from between 1910 and 1940.
Photograph of Zane Grey with horse overlooking valley, 1917 September
This photograph is of Zane Grey in a hat and chaps holding the reins of a dark, saddled horse, on a grassy mountainside. In "Tales of Lonely Trails," Grey describes this location as “the grassy uplands with Whiteley’s Peak (CO) in the distance." Dated September 1917.
Photograph of Zane Grey roping a mountain lion, 1908
This photograph shows Zane Grey roping a mountain lion called "Kitty" in the Grand Canyon in 1908. The image was published in "Field and Stream" magazine in January 1909.
Photograph of Zane Grey with his horse at campsite in Tonto Basin, 1929
This photograph shows Zane Grey with his horse, Brutus in the Tonto Basin in 1929.
Photograph of Zane Grey on horseback in Arizona, between 1920-1929
This photograph shows Zane Grey holding his hat aloft while sitting on his horse, Don Carlos, in Arizona, dated between 1920 and 1929.