The Library has digitized and cataloged more than 2,500 items from the Poley collection. In addition to the digitized material, the Library owns hundreds of hand-colored lantern slides used by Horace Poley during public lectures.
The Poley Family, Home, and Later Years

The Poley family and their home; the Poleys in later years.

Horace Swartley Poley created a major collection of photographic images of Native Americans in the southwestern United States. Born in Norristown, Pennsylvania in 1864, Poley moved to Colorado in the 1880s and was a resident of Colorado Springs for sixty-two years. Poley started a commercial photo studio in 1892 and remained an active photographer until 1935. In addition to his photographic work, Poley served as head of the U.S. Postal registry department in Colorado Springs. During summer vacations, Poley served as photographer with archaeological expeditions in Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, and southwest Colorado. He recorded landscapes, cityscapes, and events in the Pikes Peak region of Colorado. Poley was noted for his travelogue lectures employing his images in "magic lantern" shows.

The Denver Public Library obtained the Poley collection in 1937. In a letter to the Library dated Feb. 20, 1935, Mr. Poley described the collection:

The actual size of these hand-colored lantern slides is 3 1/2 x 4 inches. Projected onto a screen, their beauty dazzled attendees at Mr. Poley's lectures.
[For a 493K .gif of a lantern slide, Click Here.]
Poley Lantern Slides

Horace S. Poley Gallery
The images used in the Horace Poley gallery, including the lantern slides, are not in the database. For information, contact our photo curator, at photograph@denver.lib.co.us

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