Left to right: Dick Yelth nahwoo (Yéil naawú, Tleix'yaanag'ut) of the Deisheetaan Raven House wearing the Raven Hat. Alfred Perkins Sr. (Kwaal Éesh) of the Deisheetaan Needlefish House wearing the Beaver...
Title from image. Verso: Kootznahoo native boy - c 1900. Robert Willard, Sr. (Déilk’ee, Shnaawtaan, Kichxeitl) Wooshkeetaan Clan, Fort House. Identification courtesy of Harold Jacobs.
Title taken from image. Thirteen men in formal dress. Orthodox priest in center.
Verso, notes of Anna Katzeek: Archie Demetris White, chief of Raven tribe of Hoonah is in tall hat beside priest. Additional information about Archie...
Klukwan cemetery with eight grave houses, one with frog totem decorations. According to Louis Shotridge’s notes, this was designed and carved by a Dakl’aweidí carver named Naakushtáa. The same carver made the screen and houseposts inside the...
Left to right: Mary Perkins (Káaduju.oo), Kiks.ádi Steel House, Sitka; Josephine Patterson (Aklé), Kaagwaantaan Wolf House, Sitka;
Annie Dick (Kaasenák), Chookaneidi, Sitka;
Ray Nielsen (wearing Eagle Shirt), Káa se éesh, Chookaneidi...
Title and identification courtesy of Harold Jacobs. During the 1920's, many of the original totem poles in Kake were burned. After many years of not having totem poles, the residents of Kake, Alaska organized to acquire and place a 132-foot...
Title and identification courtesy of Harold Jacobs. During the 1920's, many of the original totem poles in Kake were burned. After many years of not having totem poles, the residents of Kake, Alaska organized to acquire and place a 132-foot pole...
Title and identification courtesy of Harold Jacobs. During the 1920's, many of the original totem poles in Kake were burned. After many years of not having totem poles, the residents of Kake, Alaska organized to acquire and place a 132-foot pole...
Title and identification courtesy of Harold Jacobs. During the 1920's, many of the original totem poles in Kake were burned. After many years of not having totem poles, the residents of Kake, Alaska organized to acquire and place a 132-foot...
Title and identification courtesy of Harold Jacobs. During the 1920's, many of the original totem poles in Kake were burned. After many years of not having totem poles, the residents of Kake, Alaska organized to acquire and place a 132-foot pole...
Title from verso. Two women walking among grave markers. Many of the graves are marked by orthodox crosses. The cemetary is bordered by a fence woven from saplings.
The image depicts a man in Stetson hat, cowboy boots, pearl-button shirt, and chrome sunglasses, with his Pipeline contract in one pocket and his return airline ticket in the other; posted on wall of Harold's Air Servie office in Galena.
Verso: Employees when Aleuts were at Funter Bay, (l. to r.) Mrs. Hallbaum, Daughter of Mrs. Hallbaum, Gov't nurse, Vi Oberg, Mrs. Halverson, Mrs. McMillian, Agents Wife, Ann Hargrave.
Heurlin, (Rusty) Magnus Colcord (artist). Size: 31.5 x 25.5 in. Medium: Oil on canvas Signed "Colcord Heurlin". This painting was the cover image for the September 1927 issue of Field and Stream magazine.