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Unidentified photographer 
Will S. Soule 
n.d. 
  
Carte de visite 
Cowan's Auctions, Inc 
2010, American History, Including the Civil War, Lot: 440 
  
 
LL/82779 
  
On a cream mount lacking any imprint, penciled Uncle Will Soule below image and Will S Soule, Uncle of Edith G. Whiting on verso.
 
William S. Soule (1836-1908), of Boston, served a full three year enlistment in "A" Co., 13th Mass. Infantry, despite being wounded at Antietam. Already possessing a knowledge of photography due to assisting at his older brother John P. Soule's well-established Boston studio prior to the war, Will traveled west with his equipment in 1867. Having saved up some money working as a store clerk in Fort Dodge, Kansas, and inspired by the publication his photograph Scalped Hunter as an engraving in Harper's Weekly in early 1869, Soule moved on to Fort Sill, Indian Territory to open his own studio. General Philip Sheridan had established the cavalry outpost in January of that year in order to defend attacks on border settlements in Texas and Kansas from within Indian Territory and, with this type of security, Soule was able to photograph Indians as few before him had. He stayed in the area until 1874, when he returned to Boston to again partner with his brother, who helped Will copyright and market the exceptional images. Today, Soule's photographs of Kiowa, Wichita, Comanche, and others, are recognized as some of the most important photographs of their type and reside in several prominent public and private collections. 
 

 
  
 
  
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