Color image of Pauline Esteves, a Western Shoshone Indian, standing near a pile of palm leaves on the ground during a peaceful anti-nuclear testing demonstration held on Palm Sunday in the Nevada desert. Other protesters are seated.
Color image of politician Bob Edgar standing near a pile of palm leaves during a peaceful anti-nuclear testing demonstration held on Palm Sunday in the Nevada desert. Other protesters are seated.
Color image of politician Bob Edgar holding up a palm leaf while marching in an anti-nuclear testing demonstration held on Palm Sunday in the Nevada desert.
Color image of protesters at an anti-nuclear testing demonstration in the Nevada desert that was organized by Greenpeace, American Peace Test, and/or a group advocating for Shoshone Indians (possibly called Shoshone Action).
Earl Rockwell and Bill "Limey" Pearson standing with Müller & Yost City Bakery horse-drawn delivery wagon behind the bakery building. The location later became that of the Fortune Club.
Belle Butler (wife of Jim Butler, lower left), and Daisy Rendall (later married to Nevada Governor Tasker Oddie), pose outside of adits at a mine near Tonopah, Nevada where Jim Butler first discovered gold.
Panoramic view of wooden buildings and automobiles in the desert in Gilbert, Esmeralda County, Nevada, 25 miles west of Tonopah, near the Monte Cristo Range of mountains.
An aerial view of Pioche, Nevada during its silver mining boom. The "Million Dollar" Courthouse is the two-story brick building just to the right of the center of the photo. Buildings indentified as a bakery and a restaurant are also seen.
Crowds of people line a street decorated with American flags in Tonopah, Nevada to watch a parade, probably for Independence Day. The Tonopah Club building is seen at left center.
Sitting on the porch from left to right: Donald Cowper Henderson, May Stephen Henderson Murray, Nancy Henderson, and Margaret Henderson Martin. Nancy Henderson died in 1905.