Burden Basket and Water Bottle

Maker | Apache |
Date of Creation | c. 1880 |
Location | New Mexico |
Materials | Yucca fibers, leather, pine tar, natural dyes |
Institution | New Mexico History Museum |
Credit Line | N/A |
Accession Number | NMHM/DCA 1990.414.007, 1990.414.008 |
Photo Credit | New Mexico History Museum |
This yucca fiber bottle and work basket are both Apache in origin. The bottle is waterproofed with black pine tar and has a leather strap handle. The basket has alternating dyed colored bands and leather fringe around the mouth and base. Both objects were used as props in the photography studio of Ben Wittick. Born in Pennsylvania, Wittick arrived in New Mexico Territory in 1878 as a photographer for the Atlantic & Pacific Railroad. He left behind a wife and six children in Moline, IL, where he operated a photo studio following the Civil War. He later operated studios in Albuquerque, Santa Fe, Gallup, and Fort Wingate. Until his death in 1903, he photographed landscapes, settlements, events, and people throughout the Southwest during a period of immense cultural and economic upheaval. He is best known for his wide ranging photography of Native American subjects, especially his portraits of Pueblo, Navajo, and Apache people, which included unidentified sitters as well as tribal leaders and military scouts on all sides of 1880s conflicts.