Two Native women sitting in front of wood partition wearing fur blankets and scarves, with baskets, a halibut hook, and other crafts displayed. Studio portrait. c. 1900.
Two Native women work against a background of long rows of drying salmon; two males recline in the foreground, with a dog; standing in the back is a man in uniform, identified on verso as Boris Magids [Boris Magids was the postmaster in Deering]...
Two of the women are dressed in warm fur coats, hats, thick socks and foot wear. The woman in the center is wearing a striped blanket coat, scarf and a head band. Two small children are standing in front of the women. All appear to be posing for...
Two reindeer herders hold a reindeer by the antlers; a third man looks on. All are wearing parkas. A group of onlookers is visible in the background. Original photograph size: 2 1/4 x 3 1/4 inch.
Two Unangax^ basket weavers with several baskets and the grass they use to make it. They are standing in front of a rounded structure (maybe a barabara?) with a window between them.
A duplicate of the photograph in UAA's Alan May papers...
Two women and three young children, bundled in winter furs, pose outside for group portrait Note: The mother of the three children has been identified as Carrie Kignak (Mrs. Ernest Kignak)
Two women identified as Nora (left) and Angnolok (right).
Caption: Eskimos are not Indians, but Mongoloids. Both have all inherent reverence for their ancestors, the Japanese possessing the characteristic a degree stronger than the...
Two women that are possibly standing on a blanket- or rug-covered table, with a moose skull on the front and two men also visible. On the right is Charlotte who married Big Steve and on the left is Margaret Lord.
Two women, possibly student nurses, sit against a retaining wall outside a building, possibly a hospital. The building has been identified as the Sitka Pioneers Home by a Sitka researcher and confirmed.
Two young men in Boy Scout uniforms putting up posters in a shop window. Posters: Check your chest. Have an x-ray at the Methodist Church basement starting March 22, 1948. It's free. It's painless. Takes only a few minutes. No...