This photograph is on Album page 11 with the heading "Annual Association of the Eastern Band of Cherokees, Birdtown on Ocona Lufty, Oct. 2, 1904." The location of photograph on the page was deduced from erased Album captions.
The "Turpin's House" was located on Dicks Creek, near Dillsboro, North Carolina. This photograph is featured on Album page 7 under the heading "Tuckaseegee River."
This photograph is on Album page 11 with the heading "Annual Association of the Eastern Band of Cherokees, Birdtown on Ocona Lufty, Oct. 2, 1904." The location of the photograph on the page was deduced from erased Album captions.
A picture of "Walter Calhoun," who was also featured in the Album on page 21 (upper right) with the caption "A caller at my door (Xmas, 1904)." These pictures would have been taken after Kephart moved to the Medlin community in Swain County, North…
The caption on the back of the photograph is in Kephart's handwriting and reads: ''Squaws going to church. Birdtown. Cherokee reserve - Sunday finery.''
The Album caption between this and the adjacent photograph reads: "Hunting coons (got three out of this tree. Snap-shot at twilight)." This photograph is on Album page 23 with the heading "Great Smoky Mts."
Visitors at Kephart's first camp on Dicks Creek, today's Rufus Robinson Road in Sylva, North Carolina. This photograph shows (L to R) Jeff Robinson, James W. Robinson (behind the fence), Rastus Robinson, James Henry Robinson, Joseph T. Robinson and…