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<ead relatedencoding="marc21">
	<eadheader audience="internal">
		<eadid countrycode="US" mainagencycode="TxU-TH" encodinganalog="852$a"
			>urn:taro:utexas.cah.01864</eadid>
		<filedesc>
			<titlestmt>
				<titleproper>A Guide to the W. D. Smithers Collection, 1907-1930</titleproper>
			</titlestmt>
		</filedesc>
		<profiledesc>
			<creation>Original EAD encoding by Jessi Fishman according to TARO 2 EAD 2002 Editing
				Instructions. <date>August 2010</date></creation>
			<langusage>Finding aid written in <language>English.</language></langusage>

		</profiledesc>
	</eadheader>
	<archdesc type="inventory" level="collection">
		<did>
			<head>Descriptive Summary</head>
			<origination label="Creator:">
				<persname encodinganalog="100">Smithers, W. D.</persname>
			</origination>
			<unittitle encodinganalog="245" label="Title:">Smithers, W. D. Collection</unittitle>
			<unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245" label="Dates:">1907-1930</unitdate>
			<langmaterial label="Language:">Materials are written in <language langcode="eng"
					>English.</language></langmaterial>
			<unitid label="Accession No.:">70-38</unitid>
			<physdesc label="Extent:" encodinganalog="300$a">2 ft., 6 in.</physdesc>

			<repository label="Repository:" encodinganalog="852$a">
				<extref href="http://www.cah.utexas.edu" show="new" actuate="onrequest">
					<corpname><subarea> Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, </subarea>The
						University of Texas at Austin</corpname></extref></repository>
			<abstract label="Abstract:" encodinganalog="520$a">Wilfred Dudley Smithers (1895-1981),
				photographer, writer, and photographic historian, was born in San Luis Potosí,
				Mexico. He moved with his family to San Antonio in 1905. The collection contains
				historical narratives and a checklist of photographic descriptions.</abstract>

		</did>
		<bioghist encodinganalog="545">
			<head>Biographical Sketch</head>
			<p>Wilfred Dudley Smithers (1895-1981), photographer, writer, and photographic
				historian, was born in San Luis Potosí, Mexico. He moved with his family to San
				Antonio in 1905. A high school dropout, Smithers volunteered as an apprentice to
				Charles W. Archer, where he learned to take and develop photographs. He built his
				first camera in 1913.</p>
			<p>Smithers worked as a driver for an army mule train from 1915 to 1917 and served in
				the United States Cavalry from 1917 to 1919. Stationed in San Diego, Smithers used
				the newly invented camera gun to train military pilots in aerial combat. After his
				honorable discharge, Smithers worked in Mexico as a pack train driver and returned
				to San Antonio one year later, where he ran a photography studio until 1929. He
				worked as a correspondent and freelancer for the San Antonio <emph render="italic"
					>Light</emph>, the San Antonio <emph render="italic">Express</emph>, and
				Underwood and Underwood news service. His aerial photographs from this time were
				used as official army air corps pictures, and he developed a camera that could
				function unaffected by the blast from airplane propellers. Additionally, Smithers
				earned a living by photographing Mount Rushmore for sculptor John Gutzon Borglum and
				working on Texas films.</p>
			<p>Smithers spent the 1930s living in the Big Bend area of Texas, where he convinced the
				United States Army Air Corps to establish an airfield. He designed his own darkroom,
				which was often used by members of the Army and National Guard. He documented the
				construction of the University of Texas at Austin McDonald Observatory from 1933 to
				1934 and then moved to El Paso. The following year, Smithers worked taking pictures
				of the U.S.-Mexico border for the U.S. Immigration Service and Border Patrol. He
				traveled once again to Mexico on a project for a German university professor before
				he moved to Alpine, Texas, where he sold postcards, slides for academic use, and
				handmade photographic lamp shades. He became a writer, documenting his life and
				experiences, in the early 1960s, and published manuscripts to accompany his photos,
				essays, and other serial pieces. In 1966 he sold many of his photographs,
				manuscripts, and photographic equipment to the University of Texas and bought a new
				camera. Smithers moved to El Paso again in 1974 and two years later published his
				autobiography, <emph render="italic">Chronicles of the Big Bend: A Photographic
					Memoir of Life on the Border</emph>. His work can be found at the Harry Ransom
				Humanities Research Center and the Dolph Briscoe Center for American History at the
				University of Texas at Austin as well as at Sul Ross University in Alpine; the Big
				Bend National Park Visitor Center; the University of Texas Institute of Texan
				Cultures in San Antonio; and the El Paso Public Library. </p>
			<p><emph render="bold">Source:</emph>
				<emph render="italic">Handbook of Texas Online</emph>, s.v. <emph
					render="doublequote">Smithers, Wilfred Dudley,</emph>
				http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/SS/fsm78.html (accessed August 3,
				2010).</p>

		</bioghist>
		<scopecontent encodinganalog="520">
			<head>Scope and Contents</head>
			<p>The W. D. Smithers Collection, 1907-1930, contains historical narratives and a
				checklist of photographic descriptions. The narratives concern the U.S. Army
				(1910-1930) and its activities along the Mexican border, with special emphasis on
				early military aviation in the Southwest. Additionally, the narratives pertain to
				medics, cooks, logistics, horse cavalry, and couriers in the army. Other narratives
				in the collection are concerned with the Pershing expedition of 1916, the National
				Guard and State Militia, customs officials, bandits, ranches, trading posts,
				treaties between the U.S. and Mexico, Mexican religious life, curendaros (folk
				healers), and avisadores. Furthermore, the collection contains a checklist,
				describing photographs associated with the narratives. The photographs can be found
				at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas at
				Austin.</p>

		</scopecontent>

		<accessrestrict encodinganalog="506">
			<head>Access Restrictions</head>
			<p>The collection is open for research.</p>
		</accessrestrict>

		<controlaccess>
			<head>Index Terms</head>
			<controlaccess>
				<head>Subjects (Persons)</head>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Smithers, W. D. (Wilfred Dudley),
					1895-1981--Archives.</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Baldwin, T. Stith, b. 1865</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Barrier, Rene</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Bliss, Tasker Howard, 1853-1930</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Cano, Francisco, 1887-1943</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Cooper, Leroy G.</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Curtiss, Glenn Hammond, 1878-1930</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Davis, Paul H.</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Doolittle, James Harold, 1896-1993</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Foulois, Benjamin Delahauf, 1879-1967</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Garros, Roland, 1888-1918</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Kearny, Stephen Watts, 1794-1848</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Lahm, Frank Purdy, 1877-1963</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Lindbergh, Charles A. (Charles Augustus),
					1902-1974</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Mitchell, William</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Parmalee, Philip</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Pershing, John J. (John Joseph), 1860-1948</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Rickenbacker, Eddie, 1890-1973</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Villa, Pancho, 1878-1923</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Wright, Orville, 1871-1948</persname>
				<persname encodinganalog="600">Wright, Wilbur, 1867-1912</persname>
			</controlaccess>
			<controlaccess>
				<head>Subjects (Organizations)</head>
				<corpname encodinganalog="610">United States. Army--1910-1930</corpname>
				<corpname encodinganalog="610">United States. Army--History--Punitive Expedition
					into Mexico, 1916</corpname>
				<corpname encodinganalog="610">Mexico. Treaties, etc. United States</corpname>
				<corpname encodinganalog="610">Texas. Militia</corpname>
				<corpname encodinganalog="610">Armed Forces--History--20th century</corpname>
			</controlaccess>
			<controlaccess>
				<head>Subjects</head>
				<subject encodinganalog="650">Photographers--Texas</subject>
				<subject encodinganalog="650">Aeronautics, Military</subject>
				<subject encodinganalog="650">Photography, Military</subject>
				<subject encodinganalog="650">Religious life--Mexico</subject>
				<subject encodinganalog="650">Aerial photography</subject>
				<subject encodinganalog="650">Photography--Texas</subject>
				<subject encodinganalog="650">Photography--Mexico</subject>
			</controlaccess>
			<controlaccess>
				<head>Places</head>
				<geogname encodinganalog="651" source="lcnaf">United States--National
					Guard</geogname>
				<geogname encodinganalog="651" source="lcnaf">San Antonio (Tex.)</geogname>
				<geogname encodinganalog="651" source="lcnaf">El Paso (Tex.)</geogname>
				<geogname encodinganalog="651" source="lcnaf">Laredo (Tex.)</geogname>
				<geogname encodinganalog="651" source="lcnaf">Austin (Tex.)</geogname>
				<geogname encodinganalog="651" source="lcnaf">Marfa (Tex.)</geogname>
				<geogname encodinganalog="651" source="lcnaf">Brownsville (Tex.)</geogname>
				<geogname encodinganalog="651" source="lcnaf">Los Angeles (Calif.)</geogname>
				<geogname encodinganalog="651" source="lcnaf">San Diego (Calif.)</geogname>
				<geogname encodinganalog="651" source="lcnaf">New Mexico</geogname>
				<geogname encodinganalog="651" source="lcnaf">Arizona</geogname>
				<geogname encodinganalog="651" source="lcnaf">Mexico, North</geogname>

			</controlaccess>
		</controlaccess>
		<prefercite encodinganalog="524">
			<head>Preferred Citation</head>
			<p>W. D. Smithers Collection, 1907-1930, Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, The
				University of Texas at Austin.</p>
		</prefercite>

		<relatedmaterial>
			<head>Related Material</head>
			<p>See also the <extref show="new" actuate="onrequest"
					href="http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/uthrc/00286/hrc-00286.html"> Smithers (W.
					D.) Collection of Photographs at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research
					Center</extref>.</p>

		</relatedmaterial>
		<processinfo>
			<head>Processing Information</head>
			<p>This collection was processed by Robert W. Tissing, January 1972.</p>
		</processinfo>
		<processinfo>
			<head>Processing Information</head>
			<p>Basic processing and cataloging of this collection was supported with funds from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC) for the Briscoe Center’s <emph render="doublequote">History Revealed: Bringing Collections to Light</emph> project, 2009-2011.</p>
		</processinfo>
		<dsc type="in-depth">
			<head>Detailed Description of the Papers</head>
			<c01 level="series" id="ser1">
				<did>
					<unittitle>Inventory</unittitle>
				</did>
				<c02>
					<did>

						<unittitle>Contact repository for more information.</unittitle>
					</did>
				</c02>
			</c01>
		</dsc>
	</archdesc>
</ead>
