clothing. Lacking employment when the
Lewis and Clark Exposition ended, Florence and Louis Shotridge took a series of temporary jobs during the years from 1906 to 1913 and hired a tutor to improve their English skills. They joined Antonio Apache's Indian Crafts Exhibition in
Los Angeles in 1906, as well as a variety of other Indian craft fairs. They performed with a traveling Indian grand opera company in 1911, with Florence playing piano and Louis singing in baritone. They also attended the World in
Cincinnati Exposition in 1912. In 1912, Florence and Louis Shotridge visited New York and then
Philadelphia, where they stayed with the
University of Pennsylvania anthropologist
Frank Speck. The Penn Museum director,
George Byron Gordon, hired Louis Shotridge on a temporary basis, and later in 1915 gave him a full-time job as an Assistant Curator and cataloguer of the American section of the
Penn Museum. Florence worked at the Museum in a voluntary capacity, helping Louis with his work and guiding groups of schoolchildren on tours of the museum. She often dressed in
Plains (not Northwest)
Indian clothing to appeal to visitors who called her the "Indian Princess". Meanwhile, Louis took classes in the
Wharton School of Business where he aimed to develop skills as an entrepreneur that he could use in Alaska. At a time when the Penn Museum was expanding its public outreach programs, Florence and Louis Shotridge performed Native American folkways for Penn Museum visitors. Photographs show that Florence and Louis Shotridge sometimes wore Plains Indian outfits, with leather, beadwork, and feathered decorations, which were quite different from the Tlingit clothing of Alaska. Florence, in particular, often led groups of schoolchildren through the museum while she dressed up in Native American outfits. In 1916, Florence and Louis Shotridge set out for Alaska on a collecting trip funded by the retail magnate and Philadelphia philanthropist,
John Wanamaker. The Shotridge Expedition was the first anthropological expedition led by Native Americans. The expedition entrusted Louis and Florence with the task of collecting ethnographic objects and gathering detailed information on myths and religious beliefs. Because of the
tuberculosis she had contracted years before, Florence spent this trip in ill health and ultimately died in Haines, Alaska, in a house that the Shotridges had built. == Publications ==