View allAll Photos Tagged Apache

AgustaWestland Apache AH1 (ZJ223). American Airshow, Duxford, 29th May 2016.

Apache Junction, Arizona

 

In the background is Superstition Mountain....

Noodlers flex pen, Noodlers Apache Sunset. Not scanned, but a cell phone snapshot, with borders adfed.

Soldiers from the 1-149th Attack-Reconnaissance Battalion, 36th Combat Aviation Brigade, Texas Army National Guard conduct aerial gunnery training, using AH-64D Apache helicopters, at Fort Hood, Texas, April 17, 2015. Aircrews fired both 30mm rounds and 2.75-inch rockets during the two-week exercise. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Capt. Edwin Vasquez/ Released)

Farnborough International Airshow 2012

Apache the Bald Eagle coming in to land over the new Entrance at ZSL Whipsnade Zoo.

Apache helicopter landing at East Texas Regional Airport yesterday.

Apache Trail, Arizona

Flying through the air!

Boeing AH64 Apache Shobdon Airfield ZJ210

Photo ID: 47007 Apache II

  

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Shipspotting around the world

An Apache helicopter landed on the playground at our school. 600 students got the treat of their lives!

Apache Trail Rd just past Goldfield Arizona.

3 ship of Apaches arrive for a refuel at Warton, before departing down 08..

Apache helicopter details

Based out of Gilze-Rijen in the Netherlands @ RIAT 2011.

One of 8 images from a cotton field in eastern Arizona. This view shows the field just after the harvest is about complete. The sky with the technicolor clouds made me want to pull over to capture photos on this drive along Highway 191. This is near Apache, a town on the reservation between Willcox and Safford. There are 6 macro images of the cotton plants at the end rows which still hang on to the cotton bolls.

This leather purse was sewn by hand, and decorated with beads and fringe. It comes from Tulsa, Oklahoma, and was made by a member of the Apache people.

 

Accession Number: 1967-30-0270

Location: Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States

For more information, photo permissions, or higher resolution images, please contact the Mathers Museum of World Cultures at mathers@indiana.edu.

Artist: Allen Anderson (1908 - 1995)

Apache Flame! From Frontier Stories, Summer 1950

Collector: Robert Lesser

Date: 1950

Medium: Oil on canvas

Dimensions: 30 x 20 1/2 Frame Dimension: 44 x 26 in. (111.8 x 66 cm)

Classifications: Oil Painting

 

Description (from museum):

Allen Gustav Anderson moved from Minnesota to New York in 1940 and began working in the pulp market, painting illustrations for publishers Ace Magazines, Fiction House, Harry Donenfeld, and Martin Goodman. After the war, in addition to painting pulp illustrations, he also created comic book cover illustrations for Ziff-Davis, a publisher of hobbyist magazines such as Popular Aviation.

 

Apache Flame! was created for “A Novelette of the Overland Trail” in Frontier Stories. The Overland stagecoach and wagon train trail traveled through Colorado, Wyoming, Utah, Oregon, and California. It was used until 1869, when the Transcontinental Railroad took over mail and passenger transport to the west. When the trails were used to move settlers to western territories, there was a concern about Native Americans attempting to stem the flow of incomers to their lands. Anderson couched the premier figure of this Frontier Stories cover illustration as a courageous female warrior in the trappings of both 1950s life and the period's fantasies of strong capable women. A bit like an imaginary Annie Oakley (1860–1926) sharpshooter, this powerful woman turns back toward the pursuing Native Americans.

The grand military parade celebrating the Greek National Day.

Close up of an Old Apache Pick-Up Truck, by Chevy, of course! Love all that chrome....

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