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John Frederick Huckel

Birth
Manhattan, New York County, New York, USA
Death
26 Mar 1936 (aged 72)
Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri, USA
Burial
Independence, Jackson County, Missouri, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Son of Rev. William M. and Christiana Huckel. Married to Minnie F. Harvey in 1897 in Leavenworth, Leavenworth Co, KS. He was Vice President of the Fred Harvey System at the time of his death. He died from pneumonia as per his death certificate.

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In 1902, and at the urging of the Fred Harvey’s daughter and Native American art collector, Minnie Harvey Huckel, The Fred Harvey Company began to purchase, display and sell Native American Art via its Indian Department. The Indian Department’s were housed in several of the Harvey hotels.

The Fred Harvey Company collected pottery, basketry, textiles, Kachina dolls, and beadwork, which were sold to major collectors and American and European museums.

The Smithsonian, American Museum of Natural History, Chicago's Field Museum, Natural History Museum of Los Angeles, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Heard Museum in Phoenix, and the Denver Art Museum are all repositories of Fred Harvey Company collections.

The Fred Harvey Company under the leadership of J F Huckel and its agent, Herman Schweizer, purchased entire collections including Marietta Wetherill’s Navajo collection. Additionally, The Company purchased several collections from Navajo trader John Lorenzo Hubbell, and the collection of New Mexico’s Governor L. Bradford Prince which incorporated native pottery, clothing, and Hispanic Santos.

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Harvey and Southwest Native Tourism

Ford Harvey took over the Fred Harvey Company after his father’s death in 1901. The following year marked the birth of the Fred Harvey Indian Department. Along with the Indian Department, Minnie Harvey Huckel proposed the idea of a museum at the Alvarado Hotel in Albuquerque, New Mexico. The Indian Department, under the management of John Frederick Huckel, collected and sold Native American arts and crafts.

The Fred Harvey Company paved the way for Native American tourism in the Southwest. Prior to the creation of the Indian Department, Native peoples took advantage of train stops on their reservations as an opportunity to sell their goods to passing travelers. With the creation of the Indian Department, Native Americans became employed as salespeople and demonstrators at Harvey Hotels across the Southwest. Finally by 1925, “Indian Detours” were offered from train stops. The Detours traveled to various Pueblos as a way for tourists to see Native American culture up close.


Son of Rev. William M. and Christiana Huckel. Married to Minnie F. Harvey in 1897 in Leavenworth, Leavenworth Co, KS. He was Vice President of the Fred Harvey System at the time of his death. He died from pneumonia as per his death certificate.

******************************************
In 1902, and at the urging of the Fred Harvey’s daughter and Native American art collector, Minnie Harvey Huckel, The Fred Harvey Company began to purchase, display and sell Native American Art via its Indian Department. The Indian Department’s were housed in several of the Harvey hotels.

The Fred Harvey Company collected pottery, basketry, textiles, Kachina dolls, and beadwork, which were sold to major collectors and American and European museums.

The Smithsonian, American Museum of Natural History, Chicago's Field Museum, Natural History Museum of Los Angeles, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Heard Museum in Phoenix, and the Denver Art Museum are all repositories of Fred Harvey Company collections.

The Fred Harvey Company under the leadership of J F Huckel and its agent, Herman Schweizer, purchased entire collections including Marietta Wetherill’s Navajo collection. Additionally, The Company purchased several collections from Navajo trader John Lorenzo Hubbell, and the collection of New Mexico’s Governor L. Bradford Prince which incorporated native pottery, clothing, and Hispanic Santos.

******************************************
Harvey and Southwest Native Tourism

Ford Harvey took over the Fred Harvey Company after his father’s death in 1901. The following year marked the birth of the Fred Harvey Indian Department. Along with the Indian Department, Minnie Harvey Huckel proposed the idea of a museum at the Alvarado Hotel in Albuquerque, New Mexico. The Indian Department, under the management of John Frederick Huckel, collected and sold Native American arts and crafts.

The Fred Harvey Company paved the way for Native American tourism in the Southwest. Prior to the creation of the Indian Department, Native peoples took advantage of train stops on their reservations as an opportunity to sell their goods to passing travelers. With the creation of the Indian Department, Native Americans became employed as salespeople and demonstrators at Harvey Hotels across the Southwest. Finally by 1925, “Indian Detours” were offered from train stops. The Detours traveled to various Pueblos as a way for tourists to see Native American culture up close.




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