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Collection P 057:
Edward Ellison Southwest photographs
inventory

©2005 by Fort Lewis College Foundation, Center of Southwest Studies account, updated 2008



Links to contents
Preface
Introduction, scope and contents

Administrative information

Biographical note
List of photos 
Digital images to view online

Center of Southwest Studies collection inventories

Center of Southwest Studies

Introduction/ Scope and contents

P 057
Edward Ellison Southwest photographs
Gary Ellison, compiler
Circa 1935-1957; bulk years 1945-1950

This collection consists of hundreds of black and white film transparency negatives, circa 1935-1957, produced by two Ellisons of the Southwestern United States and donated by their family.  Most are by Edward Holcomb "Rocky" Ellison; the remainder are by his father, Eddie Boyden Ellison, who owned and operated the DesArt Shop in the oldest house in New Mexico, in Santa Fe.  The size of most is 2.25 x 3.25" (all of the "Rocky" Ellison photos are in this format); a few are as large as 4 x 5" (these were all produced by Boyden Ellison).  Subjects include Native Americans (especially, potters) Mesa Verde (Colo.), and numerous other scenes in the Southwest, especially in New Mexico.  Other photos in the collection may have been produced by Pic’n Pan Photos (Livermore, Calif.), which was also owned by the Edward Ellison family.

This collection is useful for anyone researching the history of various Southwestern topics and may be helpful for professors and students who are seeking visual materials for classroom instruction and persons who are looking for views of New Mexico landscapes and other scenes in the mid-twentieth century.


Biographical note:

Photographers Eddie Boyden Ellison and Edward Holcomb (Rocky) Ellison

Eddie Boyden Ellison, an entrepreneur and photographer, passed his interests in photography to his son Edward Holcomb (Rocky) Ellison.  They joined together in 1945 to create the DesArt Studio in Santa Fe, New Mexico, which they jointly owned and operated.  This early Santa Fe photographic studio was located in the “Oldest House,” on DeVargas Street.  As part of this endeavor they also lead commercial tours to neighboring attractions in the Santa Fe area.

Edward (Rocky) Ellison took a job at Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory (now Los Alamos National Laboratory) and moved his family to Santa Clara Pueblo.  Here he became interested in photographing the local Pueblos and their customs.  During this time, he and his family became friends with people such as the famed San Ildefonso Pueblo potter Maria Martinez and renowned anthropologist Alice Marriott and Marriott's illustrator Margaret Schoonover.  Later, both he and his father Eddie moved to Los Alamos.  There Eddie  became a photographer for the Los Alamos Times (now the Monitor) newspaper.  He is pictured in the negative donated on 7/25/2005 that is shown at ../images/P057/P05712336Page.htm

After a time, Edward transferred to the Nevada Test Site (an affiliate of the Atomic Energy Commission, the forerunner of the Dept. of Energy) and moved his family to Las Vegas.  While there, the Ellisons spent much of their time taking trips to the Four Corners area to photograph places such as Bandelier National Monument, Mesa Verde National Park, Petrified Forest National Park, and Pioneer State Park, as well as ghost towns in the Southwest.  Eventually he took a job with Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California, from which he retired in 1971.

The photographs by Eddie Boyden Ellison and Edward Holcomb (Rocky) Ellison came to the Center of Southwest Studies through Gary Ellison, the son of Edward Holcomb (Rocky) Ellison.  Curious about his family’s collections, Gary Ellison took a number of the negatives to various museums in the Southwest.  Several of the negatives matched photographs of Maria Martinez in Richard L. Spivey’s book, Maria.  From this starting point, Gary Ellison was able to trace his father and grandfather’s work to the DesArt Studio, and began researching their body of work.

By Patrick Cruz, Center of Southwest Studies student assistant, 12/6/2005, from statements by Gary Ellison, revised 1/30/2008


Administrative information

About the organization of this collection:  The photos are in the order in which the Center received them.  Staff took particular pains to retain the same order these had in their original oak chest, and to note where each negative was filed in the drawers of that chest.  The arrangement is basically by subject .

Acquisition of this collection:  This collection was a gift to the Center of Southwest Studies (accessions 2005:04011.2, 2005:07020.1, and 2005:09022.1).  Gary Ellison is managing the donation of  these photos on behalf of his mother, Betty Ellison.

Processing information:  The Center of Southwest Studies archival staff and consultant Nik Kendziorski produced item level descriptions and archivally re-housed this collection in the fall of 2005.  Todd Ellison, Certified Archivist, Center of Southwest Studies, produced this guide (last revised December 2005).

Digital access: Consultant Nik Kendzioski scanned 89 of these images for the Center of Southwest Studies in 2005-06.  Digitization proves especially effective as a means of access to a collection such as this one (because we have no prints of these photonegatives).


List of Edward Ellison Southwest photographs titles with URL links

The following is an alphabetized listing of the titles of 89 photographs of the Edward Ellison Collection that are available for researchers' use in the Delaney Southwest Research Library at the Center of Southwest Studies,  Fort Lewis College, Durango, Colorado and that have been scanned for online digital access for research purposes.  The collection contains many additional images, which are available for viewing at the Delaney Library at the Center (a light box is available for viewing the negatives).

ARRANGED ALPHABETICALLY BY TITLE

Search suggestion: you can search this web page by name using the Edit-> Find in Page (Ctrl+F) feature on your Web browser.  Then click on the web page address in the right-hand column to view the digital image.

Neg #

Title

Image
Date

Digital File URL (click on it to view this image)

12368

A ranch house at the base of a mountain

194-

12383

Alcove in a sandstone cliff

194-

12384

Alcove in a sandstone cliff and a distinctive cone-shaped butte

194-

12387

An alcove in a sandstone cliff

194-

12388

An alcove in a sandstone cliff

194-

12369

Archaeological site

194-

12370

Archaeological site

194-

12356

Archaeological site, man-made trench

194-

12317

Balcony House in Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12320

Balcony House in Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12322

Balcony House in Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12319

Balcony House in Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12333

Betty and Randall Ellison and a National Park Service ranger standing in Cliff Palace site at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12302

Betty and Randall Ellison posed on a ladder in Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12305

Betty and Randall Ellison standing in Cliff Palace site at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12301

Betty Ellison at Balcony House in Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12300

Betty Ellison at Balcony House in Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12306

Betty Ellison at Balcony House in Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12303

Betty Ellison at Balcony House in Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12304

Betty Ellison standing in Cliff Palace site at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12341

Butte in sunlight

194-

12311

Camping in Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12307

Camping in Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12309

Camping in Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12310

Camping in Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12329

Canyon at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12332

Canyon at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12330

Canyon at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12335

Cliff Palace site at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12315

Cliff Palace site at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12313

Cliff Palace site at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12323

Cliff Palace site at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12331

Cliff Palace site at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12321

Cliff Palace site at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12316

Cliff Palace site at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12334

Cliff Palace site at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12324

Cliff Palace site at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12318

Cliff Palace site at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12314

Cliff Palace site at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12328

Cliff Palace site at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12327

Cliff Palace site at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12361

Dry-laid stone wall

194-

12360

Dry-laid stone wall

194-

12362

Dry-laid stone wall

194-

12336

Eddie Boyden Ellison at work in his photographic dark room in Santa Fe, N.M.

194-

12372

Evidence of partial walls at an archaeological site on a rocky hillside

194-

12338

Garden of the Gods

194-

12337

Hidden Inn at the Garden of the Gods

194-

12378

Historic path at an archaeological site

194-

12339

Kiva in San Ildefonso Pueblo, home of potter Maria Martinez

194-

12366

Landscape of pinon and juniper covered mountains and mesas

194-

12357

Landscape of rocks and trees with man-made walls

194-

12355

Landscape of rocks and trees with man-made walls

194-

12354

Landscape of rocks and trees with man-made walls

194-

12358

Landscape of rocks and trees with man-made walls

194-

12353

Landscape of tree-covered mountains and plateaus

194-

12376

Large mound of stones at an archaeological site

194-

12375

Large mound of stones at an archaeological site

194-

12342

Man kneeling behind a large object

194-

12344

Man with a camera

194-

12364

Numerous rocks surrounding a partial wall

194-

12365

Numerous rocks surrounding partial walls

194-

12340

Oldest House in U.S.A.

194-

12373

Partial wall at an archaeological site

194-

12308

Petroglyphs in Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12363

Pile of rocks surrounding a hole in the ground

194-

12348

Pinon and Juniper landscape

194-

12345

Pinon and Juniper landscape

194-

12343

Pinon and Juniper landscape

194-

12379

Ranch house in a valley

194-

12377

Rock wall remnants at an archaeological site

194-

12350

Sandstone cliffs and mesas

194-

12349

Sandstone hill and ridge

194-

12359

Shallow, rock-lined pit at archaeological site

194-

12371

Stairs carved in rock at archaeological site

194-

12351

Tall white tent in the woods

194-

12352

Tall white tent in the woods

194-

12346

The sun's rays streaming through the clouds

194-

12347

The sun's rays streaming through the clouds

194-

12380

Tree-covered sandstone mesa

194-

12382

Tree-covered sandstone mesa

194-

12381

Tree-covered sandstone mesa

194-

12374

Unidentified strand of material at an archaeological site

194-

12385

View looking out from an alcove

194-

12386

View looking out from an alcove

194-

12326

View of ruins near Spruce Tree House site at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12312

View of Spruce Tree House site at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12325

View of Spruce Tree House site at Mesa Verde National Park

1948

12367

Village or Pueblo in a valley

194-


Doing your own research:
This description of a portion of the collections at the Fort Lewis College Center of Southwest Studies is provided to inform interested parties about the nature and depth of the repository's collections.  It cannot serve as a substitute for a visit to the repository for those with substantial research interests in the collections.

Page last modified: January 30, 2008