Gunner working up to fowl. Photographer: Emerson, Peter Henry
Scope & Content:
Genre: Landscape Photography View looking across an expanse of shallow tidal water (possibly at Breydon), with a wild-fowler lying in his gun-punt in the foreground: 'No boat is handier, or more perfectly adapted to its special purpose, than the gun-punt. The draught of water being only a few i...
The fowler's return. Photographer: Emerson, Peter Henry
Scope & Content:
Genre: Landscape Photography View of a wildfowler returning with his catch to a crude boatshed on the edge of the broad: '...Our fowler is returning to the boat-shelter where he houses his punt. Another sportsman has come to have a look at the few birds he has bagged, and to compare notes as to...
Jagd- und Pulverhörner aus Elfenbein [Ivory hunting- and powderhorns]. Photographer: Hanfstängl, Franz
Scope & Content:
Genre: Fine Arts, Photography of Group of four horns, the largest a Roman hunting horn, two Indian powder horns and a smaller 17th-century hunting horn in the form of a sea monster.
The mountain-sheep hunter — Sioux. Photographer: Curtis, Edward Sheriff
Scope & Content:
Genre: Portrait Photography View from a low perspective of a Sioux hunter, holding a gun and standing on a rocky ridge: 'Mountain-sheep, grazing in the most inaccessible parts of the Bad Lands, were sought only by the more ambitious hunters.'
The tiger in India. Photographer: Scott, Allan Newton
Scope & Content:
Genre: Portrait Photography Stereoscopic view, with descriptive text, p. 21: 'The accompanying stereograph represents a well-known veteran of the Indian army contemplating the lifeless remains of his 101st tiger. It is taken in the neighbourhood of Hyderabad. ' Published in part no. 68, Februar...
The Indian cheetah. Photographer: Scott, Allan Newton
Scope & Content:
Genre: Portrait Photography Stereoscopic view of a European posed with a dead cheetah, with descriptive text, p. 59. Published in part no. 74, August 1864. Not published in Scott's 'Sketches in India; taken at Hyderabad and Secunderabad, in the Madras Presidency' (Lovell Reeve, London, 1862).