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Basket2.5E1166
Lidded Basket25.0/15

Finely woven basketry hats elaborately figured with whales, canoes, thunderbirds, and intricate geometric patterns were being made by the Westcoast people when Europeans first arrived on the coast. But these hats are quite different in technique and materials from the late nineteenth- and twentieth- century Makah and Westcoast basketry. White settlers' interest in baskets may very well have been a motivating force in the development of decorated wrapped-twined baskets by the Makah. (Holm, Spirit and Ancestor, 1987)

Culture
Makah
Material
cedar bark, sedge grass, bear grass and seagrass
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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Basket2.5E1348
Basket1998-30/1

S'abadeb-Seattle Art Museum This basket was collected by Judge James Wickersham in 1899 on the Puyallup Reservation. It was made by the mother of Yuckton, an elder of the Kwalhiokwa (Qualhioqua) people of Pe Ell Prairie in western Washington (near Chehalis). Nothing is known of this artist except that her son was a knowledgeable linguist who provided data to George Gibbs and Wickersham. Judge Wickersham lived in Washington Territory from 1883 to 1898 and was a probate judge, city attorney for Tacoma, and a member of the State House of Representatives before moving to Alaska, where he had a successful political career. He was also an amateur ethnologist and collected and catalogued a sizable Native basket collection.

Culture
Athabaskan: Kwalhioqua
Material
cedar root, split root, bear grass, horsetail and leather
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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Lidded Basket1998-29/1

The swamp grass is natural. The dye is red, black, purple, and pink.

Culture
Nuu-chah-nulth: Ohiaht
Material
cedar bark, swamp grass, dye, beach grass and raffia
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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Basketry Table Mat1-10600
Cooking Basket1-285
Basket1-339

The grass is yellow and black.

Culture
Tlingit
Material
spruce root and grass
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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