Found 1,568 items associated with Refine Search .
Found 1,568 items associated with Refine Search .
The item search helps you look through the thousands of items on the RRN and find exactly what you’re after. We’ve split the search into two parts, Results, and Search Filters. You’re in the results section right now. You can still perform “Quick searches” from the menu bar, but if you’re new to the RRN, click the Search tab above and use the exploratory search.
View TutorialLog In to see more items.
BRACELET. 38 SMALL SHELLS STRUNG ON A TWO PLY TWISTED VEGETABLE FIBER CORD. AN OLD TAG READS, "A SPECIES OF FRESHWATER SHELL, "MELANIA," A WEST COAST SPECIES". PUGET SOUND, WASHINGTON.Peale catalogue describes # 400 (E2558) and #401 (E8780) as "Shell necklace worn by the natives of the Straits of de Fuca. 401A (E2559) A duplicate made of fresh water shells." E2559 is, at least currently, too small to be worn as a necklace."Straits of de Fuca" presumably refers to the Strait of Juan de Fuca. The Strait of Juan de Fuca is the waterway stretching from the Pacific Ocean on the west to the San Juan Islands on the east, with Vancouver Island to the north and the Olympic Peninsula to the south. Puget Sound is the narrower waters south of the Strait of Juan de Fuca. The international boundary between the United States and Canada runs down the center of the Strait.
From card for E23523-46: "Dec 20, 1972, Bill Holm says that these are definitely Haida."Cultural ID for paddles E23523 - 23546 is somewhat in question. They were catalogued as Clallam, Bill Holm has identified them as Haida, but James Swan in correspondence in the accession file references 24 Bella Bella paddles.
From card: "Whalebone shank; iron wire barb wrapped with spruce root."
FROM TYPED CATALOG CARD: "PINNED TO ONE OF THESE SPECIMENS, ON EXHIBITION IN JUNE 1949 WAS THE FOLLOWING HANDWRITTEN NOTE [note is in James G. Swan's hand]: "MINIATURE HAT WORN BY THE MAKAHS. THE MAKAHS MAKE HATS OF A VARIETY OF PATTERNS, BUT THIS FORM IS THE ONE USUALLY WORN BY THEMSELVES. OTHER KINDS ARE SOLD TO THE WHITES AND ARE SIMPLY IMITATIONS OF THE SHAPE OF OUR STRAW HATS. FROM WHAT I CAN LEARN FROM THE INDIAN TRADITIONS I INFER THAT THE SHAPE OF THIS HAT, WHICH RESEMBLES THE CHINESE HAT, WAS FIRST INTRODUCED BY THE PARTY OF CHINAMEN WHO WERE BROUGHT OVER BY MEARES FROM CHINA IN 1788, AND ASSISTED IN THE BUILDING OF THE SCHR. "NORTH WEST AMERICA" WHICH WAS BUILT IN NOOTKA SOUND IN THE SUMMER OF THAT YEAR. NEAH BAY, W. T. MAY 24, 1856. J.G. SWAN."" [A memo in the accession file indicates that the original of this handwritten note was added to the accession papers in 1949, at the request of Department of Anthropology curator John C. Ewers, and it is indeed in the microfilmed copy of the accession file.] FROM THE MORE RECENT TYPED CATALOG CARD: "NOTES FROM SWAN'S ORIGINAL PAPERS: "MINIATURE HATS WORN BY THE MAKAHS. THE MAKAH MAKE HATS OF A VARIETY OF PATTERNS, BUT THIS FORM IS THE ONE USUALLY WORN BY THEMSELVES. OTHER KINDS ARE SOLD TO THE WHITES AND ARE SIMPLY IMITATIONS OF THE SHAPES OF OUR STRAW HATS. FROM WHAT I CAN LEARN FROM THE INDIAN TRADITIONS I INFER THAT THE SHAPE OF THE HAT WHICH RESEMBLES THE CHINA HAT, WAS FIRST INTRODUCED BY THE PARTY OF CHINAMEN, WHO WERE BROUGHT OVER BY MEARES FROM CHINA IN 1788, AND ASSISTED IN THE BUILDING OF THE SCH. "NORTH WEST AMERICA" WHICH WAS BUILT IN NOOTKA SOUND DURING THE SUMMER OF THAT YEAR. NEAH BAY, W. T. MAY 24, 1865"." From 2 old museum tags with the hats, as of 2008: "Miniature hats - worn during rain. Made from roots of the spruce tree split into fine strands. Inner cap made from cedar bark and grass." "Miniature conical hats such as are worn by the Indians of W. T. Neeah Bay. J. G. Swan."Though the catalogue lists E1036 as consisting of 4 miniature hats, as of 2008 there are 5 miniature basketry hats with this catalogue number. One is plain/undecorated, height 6 cm., diameter 14.5 cm. Four are black-brimmed painted hats, The four black-brimmed hats range from 8 cm. - 11 cm. in height, and from 15.5 cm. - 18 cm. in diameter. The four black-brimmed hats are illustrated Fig. 9, p. 58 in Ostapkowicz, Joanna, 2010, "Nuu-chah-nulth and Makah Black-brimmed Hats: Chronology and Style," American Indian Art Magazine, 35(3).