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Pike's Peak. 14,336 feet high. by Bryon H. Gurnsey — VisualArtsDB
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Pike's Peak. 14,336 feet high.
Pike's Peak. 14,336 feet high.
Bryon H. Gurnsey
1872–1875
Genre
Artwork
Museum
J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, CA, US
Styles
Object Record Structure: Whole
Stereographs
More by Bryon H. Gurnsey
Williams' Canon. Gorilla Pass. One Mile From Manitou House, Manitou, Col.
Bryon H. Gurnsey, 1872
[Elwell's Ranch Park Co. Colorado, July 1876]
Bryon H. Gurnsey, 1876
Above the Clouds, Summit of Pike's Peak, July 1st, 1876.
Bryon H. Gurnsey, 1876
Natural Photograph of a Bear on the Rocks of the Purgatoire River. 18 Miles from Las Animas, Colorado.
Bryon H. Gurnsey, 1872
The Gateway, Entrance to the Garden of the Gods, And Pike's Peak Ten Miles Distant. Formation, Red Sandstone. Height...267...
Bryon H. Gurnsey, 1872
Sante Fe, New Mexico. One of the old Pueblos found on the site of Sante Fe when the Spaniards first came to...country, in 1581.
Bryon H. Gurnsey, 1872
[The Gate, On the new Road from Manitou to Garden of the Gods]
Bryon H. Gurnsey, 1872
Natural Monuments in Monument Park. The Sentinel. Nine miles from Colorado Springs, Colorado.
Bryon H. Gurnsey, 1872
Monument Park. The Mammoth Anvil Rock.
Bryon H. Gurnsey, 1872
"Major Domo," 127 Feet High, Glen Eyrie.
Bryon H. Gurnsey, 1872
[Balancing Rock, near Manitou, Colorado. Estimated Weight, 300 Tons. Four miles from Colorado Springs, Colorado]
Bryon H. Gurnsey, 1872
Garden of the Gods. Jupiter Rock, 317 feet high.
Bryon H. Gurnsey, 1872