Starting a Cockfight, Manila, Philippine Islands
Collection: Asia

Title

Starting a Cockfight, Manila, Philippine Islands

Subject

Cockfighting

Manila (Philippines)

Description

On verso:
No. 268, CLIFF DWELLINGS, HANCOS CANYON, ARIZONA.
In Arizona,. New Mexico and Southern Colorado, especially in the valleys leading north and south from the San Juan-River, tributary to the Colorado River, the cliff dwellings are found, some of which are inhabited to this day. These homes were built in the recesses of these cliffs at a height often of several hundred feet from the ground. The paths that led to them have nearly all been destroyed by the crumbling away of the rocks. Here and there a house is found to consist' of 'two stories, and by cutting away the soft rock some of the dwellings were made very roomy. The outer walls were built up of rock and finished with a plaster of clay. The windows and doors have wooden lintels and were closed with skins or cloth. As the soil of these regions is absolutely barren, the inhabitants must have lived by hunting and fishing. The Pueblo Indians are probably descendants of the race of cliff dwellers, who ages ago constructed these strange houses.
A8523

Creator

Ingersoll, T. W. (Truman Ward)

Source

Canton Township Carnegie Library, Canton KS, USA

Publisher

Canton Township Carnegie Library, Canton KS, USA

Date

1903

Format

image/jpeg

Language

English

Type

Stereographs

Identifier

267



Citation
Ingersoll, T. W. (Truman Ward), “Starting a Cockfight, Manila, Philippine Islands,” Digital Canton, accessed April 24, 2024, https://canton.digitalsckls.info/item/569.
Original Format

Stereograph

Physical Dimensions

7 x 3.5 inches