Aboriginal American Basketry: Studies in a Textile Art Without Machinery
"From the Report of the United States National Museum for 1902, pages 171-548, with two hundred and forty-eight plates."
"From the Report of the United States National Museum for 1902, pages 171-548, with two hundred and forty-eight plates."
Missionary publication. Content and language reflect the attitudes and policies of the times.
One bound copy of the diary maintained by Mackinlay May 7- August 23, 1890 during a summer journey northward from near Taltheilei on the east end of Great Slave Lake in the company of Wharburton Pike. Pike used the diary freely in his narrative of the journey called The Barren Grounds of Northern Canada. Mention of "Indians" in various situations and circumstances from trading and guiding to getting equipment made or repaired. Frequent mention of caribou and other animals killed and fish caught.
Black and white photograph of students of Dunbow School showing their baking. From the book The Face Pullers: Photographing Native Canadians, 1871-1939 by Brock Silversides.
Originally published as Report of the United States National Museum, 1902, p. 171-548.
Historical note:
Photoengravings of "Rome - S. Peter Place and the Vatican" (p.6); and "Jerusalem - St. Stephan's Gate" (p. 33).Historical note:
Photoengravings of "A View from Rome" (p.6); and "London- Westminster Abbey" (p. 65).