57 second, color and B&W/silent film clip. Shows the male students from Eklutna Boarding School working in the field, clearing the land and hauling lumber.
[Alaska native, male, wearing a woven hat and displaying nose and lip piercings.] Bookplate from: Voyage of naval Captain Sarychev along the North-Eastern part of Siberia, the Arctic Ocean and Eastern Ocean, for eight years, attached to the...
Description: feathers; fur; yarn; cloth; sewn
Descriptive Narrative: Doll size chief's coat made of what appear to be the feathers from three different bird species. Male mallard duck feathers are used on the top of the shoulders and on the...
Group of Alaskan men, women, and children (one holding puppy) from Copper Center area, Alaska. From verso: "Last of tribe all carried off by disease. Male with necklace Sport McAllist[e]r (extreme right). Male with tie John Goodletaw (extreme...
Interior shot. Image shows three ski patrollers, one female, two male, attending to two "patients" strapped to makeshift stretchers made of skis. A fourth patroller standing to the side is partially visible. Original photograph size: 4 1/2" x 3...
Jones, Joe (artist). Size: 10.75 x 8.5 in. Medium: Charcoal on paper Portrait, human head, male. Signed lower right. This is a portrait of the officer who inducted the Eskimos into the Territorial Guard and passed out weapons as he went from...
Male mask; carved wooden face. Snow goggles of wood with faint pink wash are attached; fur mustache and beard; wolf fur ruff; furs are nailed to wood; sinew cord on back for hanging; 16" long. Created in Anaktuvuk Pass, Alaska.
Male students at Eklutna Vocational School, Eklutna, Alaska, dressed for a special occasion. From verso: "Ed Pagano - 1st right." n.d. Original photograph size: 5" x 7".
Mrs. Pullen stands on garden path with hotel in background Message on verso of postcard sent to Jonathan P. Henderson of Moscow, Idaho: "Thought this might be one of your relatives! She looks as though if she has any male relatives, they would...
Caption: Reindeer shed their horns every year. The male shed six weeks earlier than the female, so that during the fawn season the mother may protect the young.