Sallie Pierce-Harris collection, 1918-1994

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Sallie Pierce-Harris collection, 1918-1994

MS-309


Overview of the Collection

Creator: Pierce-Harris, Sallie Harris, Sallie Van Valkenburgh Van Valkenburg, Richard Smith, Watson, 1897-1993 Pinkley, Frank Fontana, Bernard Cummings, Byron, 1860-1954 Roberts, Alexandra J. Jones, Courtney Reeder, 1915-
Title: Sallie Pierce-Harris collection,
Inclusive Dates: 1918-1994
Quantity: 33.25 cm textual material, 1028 photographic images (258 prints, 321 negatives, 1 contact print, 606 slides), 2 patches
Identification: MS-309
Language: Material in English and Navajo
Repository: Museum of Northern Arizona
3101 N. Fort Valley Rd.
Flagstaff, AZ 86001
928-774-5211 ext. 256 or 269
library@mna.mus.az.us

Biographical Note

[Sarah] Sallie Pierce-Harris (3 April 1911 – 2 May 1994) was born in Victor, Colorado to Colwell A. and Mary L. (Rood) Pierce who were born in Rhode Island and Missouri. The family moved to Patagonia, Arizona in 1912 so Pierce-Harris’ father could work as a mining engineer at the Mansfield Mining Encampment.

Pierce-Harris studied archeology at the University of Arizona in Tucson and was an ardent admirer of Gladys Reichard’s work in the field of Native American studies. When Pierce-Harris graduated with her bachelor’s degree in the 1930s she immediately started doing field work at Chaco Canyon. By 1934, she had been working as a civil works administration position at Montezuma Castle classifying artifacts. It was there that she met her first husband, Jim Brewer, a ranger working for the National Park Service [NPS]. They were married that same year and Pierce-Harris became an “Honorary Custodian Without Pay,” which was the title given to NPS wives who were equally as qualified as their husbands to work as park custodians and archeologists. Pierce-Harris and Brewer spent the first few years of their marriage living in tents at 8 different National Monuments around the Colorado Plateau. Eventually they were transferred to Wupatki National Monument where they were allowed to live in the ruins. Pierce-Harris referred to Brewer as a “roving ranger” and wrote about their experiences in multiple diaries.

Pierce-Harris and Brewer became very close with their Navajo neighbors, especially the Peshlakai clan. In 1936, they sponsored an exhibit of Navajo crafts at the Museum of Northern Arizona, which was very well-received. Pierce-Harris remained in touch with many of her Navajo friends for the rest of her life. In 1939, Brewer took over custodianship of Navajo National Monument from the Wetherill family. The couple moved into the Betatakin ruins and were the first people to inhabit cliff dwelling in over 500 years. During this time Pierce-Harris was invited to help start a publication for the wives of NPS rangers and custodians called The Grapevine, in which women wrote about their experiences and difficulties.

When war was declared in 1941, Brewer enlisted in the Navy. The National Park Service lost most of their custodians and rangers to the war and had no choice but to hire women for war service appointments. Pierce-Harris became the first permanent woman ranger in the Southwest Monuments. She worked at Casa Grande for a year and then was transferred to Tumacacari Mission for the next 6 years. When Brewer returned from the war in 1945, he and Pierce-Harris divorced.

In the early 1950s, Pierce-Harris married a longtime colleague and fellow NPS archeologist, Richard Fowler Van Valkenburg[h]. She was his third wife. Van Valkenburg was working as an archeological researcher for the Navajo Land Claims at the time. Though they did not live together for much of their marriage, they corresponded frequently about his research. They divorced later that decade when Van Valkenburg returned to his second wife.

Pierce-Harris eventually left NPS in the late 1950s after 24 years of service and took a position at the Southwest Archeological Center in Globe. She eventually married her third and final husband, William M. Harris, Jr. In 1968, she retired but continued to be active in environmental organizations, including the Audubon Society. She moved to Prescott in 1981 and passed away in 1994 at the age of 83.


Scope and Content

This collection includes personal papers from Pierce-Harris’ early life, including diary entries and poems, as well as diaries written during the early part of her career as an archeologist and as an Honorary Custodian Without Pay after she married her first husband. Also included are her research notes and draft manuscripts of papers written on the archeology, ethnology, and history of the Navajo and the National Monuments at which she worked. There are also records and publications from the National Park Service and the Department of the Interior, information on the Peshlakai family, Pierce-Harris’ Mexican research, and biographical information and interviews. Notable individuals include A.T. Bicknell, the Wetherill Family, John M. Turney, L.L. Hargrave, Watson Smith, Dorothy Peach-Pollack, Peshlakai Etsedi, Dorothy Newkirk Stewart, and Alexa Roberts. Also included are files of strictly correspondence, personal and professional, often including copies of her responses. These letters span from the early to late 20th century and comprise her years with NPS, her relationships with the Navajo people, her relationship with her husband (Van Valkenburg) and his work with the Navajo Land Claim, and letters regarding her and other’s research of the Southwest. There is also a signed letter from Senator John F. Kennedy. There are also photographs and negatives of areas around the Southwest, mostly Navajo country and the Colorado Plateau. Many of the files were taken on a 1941 trip to various National Parks and Monuments. There are also photographic images of the Peshlakai family and the Van Valkenburgs.


Arrangement

Materials are arranged in the following series:

Restrictions

Conditions Governing Use

Unpublished and published manuscripts are protected by copyright. Permission to publish, quote, or reproduce must be secured from the repository and the copyright holder.


Related Material

For more information on Richard Van Valkenburg’s work with the Navajo Land Claim see:

For more information on Richard Van Valkenburg's life see:

For more information on Watson Smith please see:

The Doris Duke oral history project at the J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah, consists of transcripts of interviews. The collection includes a report prepared by Harris on Navajo Oral History at Canyon de Chelly.

Publications by Sallie Pierce-Harris include:

MS-246, The David DeHarport collection.
MS-162, the Peshlakai Etsetti collection.
MS-325

Controlled Access Terms

Personal Name(s)
Cummings, Byron, 1860-1954
Fontana, Bernard L.
Hargrave, Lyndon Lane, 1896-1978
Harris, Sallie Van Valkenburgh
Jones, Courtney Reeder, 1915-
Pinkley, Frank
Roberts, Alexandra J.
Smith, Watson, 1897-1993
Van Valkenburgh, Richard F.
Wetherill family

Corporate Name(s)
Sequoia National Forest (Agency : U.S.)
United States. National Park Service.
Yosemite National Park (Agency : U.S.)

Geographic Name(s)
Bryce Canyon National Park (Utah)
Chaco Canyon (N.M.)
Death Valley (Calif. and Nev.)
Fort Apache (Ariz.)
Grand Canyon (Ariz.)
Hopi Indian Reservation (Ariz.)
Hovenweep National Monument (Utah and Colo.)
Hubbell Trading Post National Historic Site (Ganado, Ariz.)
Lake Mead National Recreation Area (Ariz. and Nev.)
Lees Ferry (Ariz.)
Mesa Verde National Park (Colo.)
Navajo Dam (N.M.)
Navajo Indian Reservation
Navajo National Monument (Ariz.)
Wupatki National Monument (Ariz.)
Zion National Park (Utah)

Subject(s)
Navajo Indians
Navajo Long Walk, 1863-1867
Navajo textile fabrics
Yavapai Indians


Administrative Information

Preferred Citation

Sallie Pierce-Harris collection, MS-309 [Box Number]. Museum of Northern Arizona. Flagstaff, Arizona.

Acquisition Information

MS-242 was donated by Pierce-Harris in November 1977.

MS-290 was donated by Pierce-Harris in July 1987.

MS-309 was donated by Andrew Christensen in May 1994.

Processing Information

Processed in November of 2010.


Container List

Series 1: Research & Writings 1926-1994 26.25 cm textual material, 2 patches
This series includes personal papers from Pierce-Harris’ early life, including diary entries and poems, as well as diaries written during the early part of her career as an archeologist and as an Honorary Custodian Without Pay after she married her first husband. Also included are her research notes and draft manuscripts of papers written on the archeology, ethnology, and history of the Navajo and the National Monuments at which she worked. There are also records and publications from the National Park Service and the Department of the Interior, information on the Peshlakai family, Pierce-Harris’ Mexican research, and biographical information and interviews. Notable individuals include A.T. Bicknell, the Wetherill Family, John M. Turney, L.L. Hargrave, Watson Smith, Dorothy Peach-Pollack, Peshlakai Etsedi, Dorothy Newkirk Stewart, and Alexa Roberts.
BoxFolder
11 Navajo Weaving: correspondence, clippings, dye recipe, 1936-1937, 1988-1991
12 Wupatki/Navajo Diary, 1936-1940
13 "Roving Ranger" Diary, 1937
14 Navaho Diary, 1940-1941
15 Wetherill Family: correspondence, clippings, articles, 1940-1991
16 NPS [National Park Service]: employee publications, correspondence, clippings, 1941-1977
17 NPS [National Park Service] Patches, undated
18 "The Grapevine": member surveys, 1942
19 Archeology: notes, clippings, correspondence, articles [2 folders], 1952-1979
111 John M. Turney: DOI [Department of the Interior] Administrative Papers, 1954-1962
BoxFolder
21 Southwest Ceramics, 1955-1985
22 Dating Bottles From Mining Camps, 1958-1973
23 "The Navajo Occupation of Wupatki National Monument": correspondence, photographs, manuscript, 1961-1989
24 L.L. Hargrave: correspondence, manuscripts, obituary, 1962, 1978
25 Sallie Van Valkenburg [Pierce-Harris] Interview, 1964-1978
26 A.T. Bicknell Retirement, 1960
27 SWAC [Southwest Archeological Center] Archeologists Meeting, 1966
28 Course Outline: Southwestern Indian Arts, 1981
29 Watson Smith/Wupatki: correspondence, clippings, photographs, 1983-1991
BoxFolder
31 Yavapai: notes, correspondence, articles, clippings, 1984-1989
32 "Broken Rainbows": clippings, correspondence, articles, 1985-1986
33 Dorothy Peach-Pollack: biographical article, correspondence, obituary, 1987
34 Loan Agreement with SWAC [Southwest Archeological Center], 1970
BoxFolder
61 Personal Writings, 1926-1960s
62 "Adobe Notes", 1930
63 "The Long Walk to Bosque Redondo As Told by Peshlakai Etsedi": notes, correspondence, 1937, 1991
64 Mexico Research, 1946-1953
65 Dorothy Newkirk Stewart: correspondence, memorial booklet, 1954-1956
66 SWNM Slides Inventory, 1956
67 Peshlakai Genealogy, 1964-1991
68 Reports, Correspondence, Journal Entries, and Notes Regarding the Navajo and Hopi, 1968
Series 2: Correspondence 1918-1987 7 cm textual material
This series includes files of strictly correspondence, personal and professional often including copies of her responses. These letters span from the early to late 20th century and comprise her years with NPS, her relationships with the Navajo people, her relationship with her husband (Van Valkenburg) and his work with the Navajo Land Claim, and letters regarding her and other’s research of the Southwest. There is also a signed letter from Senator John F. Kennedy.
BoxFolder
35 Correspondence: Frank Pinkley, 1918-1986
36 Correspondence: MNA [Museum of Northern Arizona], 1934-1939, 1984
37 Correspondence: Byron Cummings [Arizona State Museum], 1934-1952
38 Correspondence: NPS [National Park Service], 1945-1964
39 Correspondence: Richard Van Valkenburg, 1952-1954
310 Correspondence: miscellaneous, 1952-1975
311 Correspondence: letters from Navajos, 1953-1981
312 Correspondence: Bernard Fontana [University of Arizona],
Series 3: Southwest Photographs 1932-1981 1028 photographic images (258 prints, 321 negatives, 1 contact print, 606 slides)
This series includes photographs and negatives of areas around the Southwest, mostly Navajo country and the Colorado Plateau. Many of the files were taken on a 1941 trip to various National Parks and Monuments. There are also photographic images of the Peshlakai family and the Van Valkenburgs.
All nitrate negatives are stored in the nitrate freezer
BoxFolder
313 Photographs: Chaco Canyon, 1932
314 Photographs: Wupatki, 1934-1936
BoxFolder
41 Photographs: Peshlakai Camp, 1935-1936
42 Peshlakai Camp Photographs: correspondence, inventories, 1977-1981
43 Photographs: Navaho Country, 1936
44 Photographs: Albuquerque/Cuba Aztec Stage, 1938
45 Photographs: Bluff City, 1938-1939
46 Photographs: Bryce Canyon, 1941
47 Photographs: Death Valley, 1941
48 Photographs: Lake Mead, 1941
49 Photographs: Lee's Ferry, 1941
410 Photographs: Nevada, 1941
411 Photographs: North Rim, Grand Canyon, 1941
412 Photographs: Sequoia National Park, 1941
413 Photographs: Yosemite, 1941
414 Photographs: Zion National Park, 1941
415 Photographs: Fort Apache, Kinishba, Vabino, 1943
416 Photographs: Oraibi and Walpi, undated
417 Photographs: Navajo National Monument/Twin Caves, undated
418 Photographs: Hennikininic Castle, undated
419 Photographs: Grand Canyon, undated
420 Photographs: Hovenweep Castle, undated
421 Negatives: Navajo [2 folders], undated
BoxFolder
52 Photographs: Navajo Christmas Party at Wupatki/Miscellaneous Native American, undated
53 Photographs: Heiser Springs Sheep, undated
54 Photographs: Hubbell Trading Post, undated
55 Southwest Slides [2 folders], 1948-1957, 1948-1964
57 Photographs: Emmett & Sarah Peshlakai, 1949
58 Photograph: Clyde Peshlakai, undated
59 Photographs: Chaco Canyon/Mesa Verde National Park, 1952
510 Richard Van Valkenburg Photographs: family, Navajo, 1952-1953
511 Photographs: Honanski, 1958
512 Photographs: Navaho Dam Project Hogan/Pot Creek Pueblo, 1959