
Peter Jorgensen, Fred Nelson, and Chris Callesen, Seven Falls, South Cheyenne Canon, Colorado; digital image 2014, privately held by [personal information withheld], 2014.
The reverse side of the photograph, mounted on heavy card stock, provides printed detail about the South Cheyenne Canon, famed for its natural beauty and sites of historical interest. The Seven Falls Photo & Curio Co. was responsible for this photograph, which was “taken at the foot of the famous Seven Falls.” It was possible to order duplicates by referencing the number shown on the photograph. (The number on the mat came only recently.) Given the number 716, it seems that plenty of these souvenir photographs must exist; I spotted several on eBay and on The Henry Ford Online Collection.
Did the men ride to the Falls on the burros? As of 1911, there was, in fact, a Cheyenne Burro & Carriage Co. in operation,2 so if they weren’t part of the package when the men paid for their photograph, they may have opted to rent the burros independently to ease their exploration of the area – or just for fun. The same may go for their sombreros!
SOURCES
1 Harold W. Jorgensen, “Olsen, Niels,” in Ben Van Osdel and Don Binder, editors, History of Yankton County, South Dakota (Yankton, South Dakota: Curtis Media Corporation and the Yankton County Historical Society, 1987), 53.
2 “Colorado Springs City Directories: 1879-1922,” images, Pikes Peak Library District (http://ppld.org/colorado-springs-city-directories-1879-1922 : accessed 26 March 2014); citing “Colorado Springs, Colorado City and Manitou City Directory, 1911 (Colorado Springs: The R. L. Polk Directory Company, 1911),” 224.
I love this photo of the three amigos. I presume it’s a “found” photo? Great work deducung the story behind it, and I like the responsible referencing!
Thanks for your comment! This is actually a photo from a family collection (the man in the center is my second-great-grandfather) but it’s one that is new to me. I have written about several “found” photos as well – those are always fun to research!
This photograph enlarged so beautifully in feedly, I could almost see the buttons on their shirts and the whiskers on the donkeys. Because the men’s suits look so clean and dust-less I wonder if the donkeys and sombreros were part of a photo op — a photographer set up somewhere along the way with donkeys and sombreros at the ready. You’ll probably never know but it’s a great photograph.
Thanks for your comment, Nancy! I’m glad the photo showed so well in Feedly – that’s what I use, too. You make a very good point about how clean the men’s suits seem to be!
I have a similar picture taken by the same photography company in the same spot. My great-grandmother and her sister are riding mules and posed at the foot of Seven Falls.
How neat! Must have been quite the tourist destination. Thanks for sharing!
My name is Chris Callesen and my father is David Lawrence Callesen. My Grandfather is Lawrence Callesen and his Father is Hans Christian Callesen who went by Chris Callesen. My father was born in Yankton South Dakota. This is my Great Grandpa. 🙂
Hi Chris, Funny to hear from another Chris Callesen! Unfortunately, I do not believe the Chris Callesen pictured here is your great grandfather Hans Christian Callesen, although I think this may be your uncle and perhaps adoptive great grandfather. The Chris pictured here was Christian Nissen Callesen (1854-1929), and as far as I’ve learned he had no biological children who survived to adulthood. However, he and his wife did adopt several children, including a nephew (perhaps great-nephew?) named Lawrence Callesen. According to a biography in The Yearbooks of the Old Settlers Association of Yankton County, Chris and his wife took Lawrence into their home in 1917 after Lawrence’s mother died a few days after his birth. In the 1920 census, Lawrence Callesen lived in the household of this Chris Callesen and according to the census was his nephew. Do you think this could be the connection? I’m happy to email you the information I have if you’re interested!
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