Bill Groethe

William McAndrew Groethe
Born (1923-11-02) November 2, 1923
Rapid City, South Dakota
Residence Rapid City, South Dakota
Nationality United States of America
Other names Bill Groethe
Occupation photographer and photo printer and finisher
Years active 1930s-present
Known for 1948 photo of Battle of the Little Bighorn survivors
Home town Rapid City, South Dakota
Spouse(s) Alice
Awards William Groethe Day in South Dakota, photos displayed in the Smithsonian Institution
A photo of Lawrence County, South Dakota, taken by Groethe during work for the Historic American Buildings Survey

William McAndrew "Bill" Groethe (born November 2, 1923) is the photographer who took the famous pictures on September 2, 1948, of the last eight survivors of the 1876 Battle of the Little Bighorn.[1]

People in the photo are Little Warrior, Pemmican, Little Soldier, Dewey Beard, High Eagle, Iron Hawk, Comes Again, and Nicholas Black Elk. John Sitting Bull, present in the photo though not a survivor, represented his adoptive father Sitting Bull. Groethe was the only professional photographer who came to the 1948 reunion of the Battle of the Little Big Horn survivors.[2] The picture hangs in the Smithsonian Institution, and Bill still sells autographed copies from his store First Photo in Rapid City, South Dakota.

Groethe resides in Rapid City, South Dakota. Over many decades, beginning in the 1930s, he took photographs of the construction of the Mount Rushmore National Monument, the South Dakota Badlands, the Lakota prophet Black Elk, and the Native American survivors of the Battle of the Little Bighorn. Bill was mentored by fellow Rapid City photographers Carl Rise, a neighbor who gave Bill his first camera, and Bert Bell, who Bill apprenticed with at age 12.[2] Groethe began selling his work at age 16.[3] He served in the Second World War as a photo reconnaissance technician for the Army Air Force.[1]

Bill Groethe's pictures are housed and displayed at the Rapid City Airport, the Smithsonian, Mount Rushmore, Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument Visitor Center, a theme park in Imachi City, Japan, and many other museums and private collections.

On August 17, 2009, Bill was honored by the City of Rapid City and the State of South Dakota, which declared September 2, 2009, as William M. Groethe Day in honor of the 61st anniversary of the Little Bighorn photo.[3]

References

Notes

  1. 1 2 Kent, Jim (September 2, 2009). "Bill Groethe day in South Dakota". Retrieved January 18, 2015. Archived January 18, 2015 at the Wayback Machine.
  2. 1 2 "Bill Groethe photographs of surviviors of the Battle of the Little Big Horn, 1948". Smithsonian Institution Research Information System. Retrieved January 18, 2015.
  3. 1 2 Governor honors longtime photographer at the Wayback Machine (archived August 21, 2009).

Bibliography


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