Photographer Robert Morrison’s Montana

The artist’s eye for the off-kilter and unusual offers a distinctive portrait of the West at the turn of the 20th century

  • By Donna M. Lucey
  • Smithsonian.com, October 05, 2009
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Women posed together with drinks in hand in bedroom

(Montana Historical Society Research Center Photograph Archives, Helena, MT)


These women could be mistaken for a jolly group of sorority girls having some brazen fun. But look a little closer and you can detect a range of ages: the young women sitting on the floor seem fresher-faced than the trio in back (especially the woman standing). And then there are the keys dangling from the lock in the door, a chilling detail that Morrison clearly took care to include in the frame. Why?

The women were prostitutes, and they doubtless locked themselves in their rooms for business purposes. This is one of a series of photographs Morrison made inside a Miles City brothel, and the working girls were clearly not embarrassed to be caught on camera. Perhaps they knew the photographer—a 1904 map of the town indicates that his photography/sign painting business was just a block from a cluster of “female boarding” houses, the mapmaker’s euphemism for houses of ill repute.

Cowboys and sheepherders joined Fort Keogh’s soldiers in pursuit of Miles City’s illicit pleasures. The cowboy E.C. “Teddy Blue” Abbott wrote in his memoir, We Pointed Them North, that a local prostitute named Connie the Cowboy Queen sported a $250 dress embroidered with brands from all the cattle outfits that passed through town. Some of Abbott’s cowboy brethren would pick out a woman and “marry” her for a week, buying all her meals and squiring her about town. You couldn’t do that everywhere, he wrote, but things were different in Miles City.

Town officials collected lucrative fines from brothels while conveniently ignoring laws banning them. On the other hand, the Englishwoman Evelyn Cameron recalled that when she arrived in 1895 wearing a divided skirt—a fashion hitherto unseen in Miles City—she was threatened with arrest.

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I am quite exited to find this information that you have presented. I have a small collection of glass photographs of WWI era. I was also born in Missoula, Mt. May 1937. I find all of this very exciting. Thank you!

Timothy--
How serendipitous. I'm reading E. Annie Proulx at the moment, so it was especially timely (and lovely)to read your comments about Morrison's wonderfully evocative photographs.
I've greatly enjoyed thinking and writing about these images, and I to continue to explore the mysteries therein.

Looking at these remarkable photographs, and the "thousand words" they immediately evoke, puts me in mind of the Wyoming Stories by E. Annie Proulx. Both artists capture long disappeared lives and events and everyday strangeness that are too often misrepresented or unexplored. More, please!

These photographs are exquisite and utterly fascinating, especially with your insightful commentary! There couldn't be a more appropriate author for a future book which, I hope, will not be long in coming!

People are too judgemental about the past. Old pictures are great because they tell it like it was and allow people to come to their own conclusions. It seems hard for people to understand how different things were then, socially speaking espeically. All over the country & world there are photography enthusiast who have never heard of these photographers and their pictures. Plelase have more!!

Donna - this is fascinating. I want to know so much more about Morrison. Hope a book will be forthcoming.

This strikes me as exceptional photography for its era. Almost surreal in feeling. I want to know more about Morrison and see more images!

In the late 40s I worked in a local grocery story in Ely, Nevada, bagging (or, rather, boxing) for customers, and stocking shelves. One day an attractive young woman came into the store and began to order, what turned out to be, a two month supply of grub. It turned out that she was a bounty hunter going after mountain lions and coyotes. Sorry, no photo to provide for proof.

Donna: Thank you so much for this article about R.C.Morrison. I really enjoyed your viewpoint and background information on the photo's. Wish you could have included a photograph of him.

Donna: What an exciting treasure trove. Thank you and Lory and staff for bringing these fascinating images to light. And thank you for describing them in such a piquant way. I, too, am looking forward to the book.

Donna -

What a gold mine of content that transcends history to become art! I do hope that this will be your next book project. These photographs are an important part of our quirky heritage as Americans. Morrison should definately be included in the canon of photography and you're the one who could do him justice. You're interpretation of the images are as fascinating as the photographs.

Your interpretations of these images are far more than photo captions. Each is an insight into the artistic eye of Robert Morrison with your relish for history and a dash of humor. I only wish that you and Robert and Evelyn Cameron could have sat down for a chat back then. So instead please continue to keep us all inthralled and point out those subtle nuances in the photos that we might have missed. Three Cheers!

Thank you for these. I love the attention you paid to the details of each photograph and to the historical background. The "Savages" print, in particular, was at once heartbreaking and not cliched in the way I had at first expected. The ironies you point out are haunting.

Donna - Does this portend another book? As a born-in-eastern Montana guy, I hope so. Your gift of narrative - with history, humor and pithy quotes - illuminates these images. These are the people Evelyn Cameron didn't photograph - and they are the flip side of her legacy. Montana history (western history) is only complete with both sides of the coin. Thank you for your fine work to help us know whence we come.



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Jones shack along the Yellowstone Coyote carcasses posed in front of A Frasers office Newlyweds in front of small brick church Women posed together with drinks in hand in bedroom American Indians posed in front of a booth with sign advertising SAVAGES Black entertainers on stage with white man Mystic Knights of Bovina Man baptizing woman in a river with people watching Man lying in a coffin Studio portrait of a wolf and a boy holding a chain connected to a wolfs collar

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