Lone Tree Ranch and Stage Station
Fallon, MT: Photo by E.J. Cameron, [1912]. Real photo postcard [14 cm x 9 cm] / [5.5" x 3.5"] 'E.J. Cameron' backstamp. Unused. Nice condition. Pencil identification on the reverse. Item #8166
Bird's-eye view of the Lone Tree Ranch. Cameron views are rare and sought after.
Evelyn Jephson Flower (1868-1928) was born August 26, 1868, near Streatham, England. The Flower family was tied to England's elite, her half-brother Cyril Flower became Lord Battersea in 1892. Evelyn and Ewen Cameron were married in the fall of 1889 and spent their honeymoon in Montana. Both were avid hunters and were lured to Montana by English magazines that boasted of the abundant wildlife, the ease of living on the plains, and the fiscal rewards of polo pony raising. The Camerons moved to Montana in 1893 and established the Eve ranch near Terry to breed and train polo ponies.
Evelyn Cameron, in addition to her work on the ranch, took a keen interest in photography. In 1894 she purchased her first camera, and learned basic photographic techniques from one of her boarders. Photography served many purposes for Evelyn, it relieved some of the loneliness of living on the plains, provided much needed income, allowed her to work with Ewen on his wildlife studies, and provided an avenue for meeting and learning about her neighbors. She was especially fascinated with the strength and perseverance of the Russian-German immigrants. Her photographs captured the experiences of men and women on the plains of Eastern Montana in starkly vivid and candid terms. Cowboys, women, ranchers, farmers, children, itinerant workers, sheep herders, and the stark landscape all found their way into her photos. Her work was carried in magazines throughout the country. Unlike Ewen, whose wildlife interests took him farther and farther from the ranch, Evelyn was fascinated with the ranching lifestyle.
Price: $400.00