- 12-12-01-12-01-03-a036394
- Item
- February 1987
Part of Ronnie Tessler fonds
Image is of Doreen Jensen standing near canoe log, amidst unidentified persons who are milling about.
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Part of Ronnie Tessler fonds
Image is of Doreen Jensen standing near canoe log, amidst unidentified persons who are milling about.
Doreen Jensen and piece of cedar she adzed off log
Part of Ronnie Tessler fonds
Image is of Doreen Jensen holding a piece of cedar bark that she removed from canoe log. She stands holding an umbrella and converses with unidentified persons.
[Doreen Jensen, Bill Reid and guests]
Part of Ronnie Tessler fonds
Image is of Doreen Jensen and Bill Reid conversing with unidentified persons near canoe log.
[Doreen Jensen, Norman and Moya Waters]
Part of Ronnie Tessler fonds
Image is of Doreen Jensen, Norman, and Moya Waters consuming refreshments and conversing.
Dormitory at Elkhorn Residential School
Part of Missionary Society of the Church of England in Canada Slide Collection
Item is a glass lantern slide of a dormitory. Based on the original order of the collection, photograph might have been taken at Elkhorn (Washakada) Residential School. The Elkhorn Residential School started as the Washakada Home for Girls and the Kasota Home for Boys were established in the village of Elkhorn, MB in 1888. Following a fire, the school was rebuilt outside the town in 1895. Ongoing financial problems led to a government takeover of the school. It was closed in 1918 but reopened in 1923, under the administration of the Anglican Church’s Missionary Society. Many students came from northern Manitoba. The leaders of The Pas Indian Band made a number of complaints about the conditions at the school, which was eventually closed in 1949. (National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation)
Part of MOA General Media collection
Image of a double bentwood box. This image may have been from an exhibit at the old Museum of Anthropology dealing with Northwest coast technology.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Image of a double bentwood box. This image may have been from an exhibit at the old Museum of Anthropology dealing with Northwest coast technology.
Double mortuary pole at totem park
Part of MOA General Media collection
Double mortuary pole carved by Bill Reid and Doug Cranmer standing in totem park at UBC.
Part of Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Image of Doug Cranmer and an unidentified woman standing near the end of a partially carved totem pole.
Part of Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Image of artist Doug Cranmer at work, with child seated next to him.
Doug Cranmer and Bill Reid carving
Part of MOA General Media collection
Doug Cranmer and Bill Reid carving at UBC for the Haida House complex at Totem Park. Based on the length of this log, this may have been the beginnings of the Wasgo sculpture.
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Doug Cranmer and his paintings at a North Vancouver art show, possibly in 1964.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Doug Cranmer carving for the construction of the Haida House at UBC.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Doug Cranmer carving what appears to be the Wasgo for the Haida House complex at Totem Park.
Doug Cranmer carving frontal plate Haida pole
Part of MOA General Media collection
Doug Cranmer carving the frontal plate of what was likely a double mortuary pole at UBC in 1962.
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Doug Cranmer at his shop, located at 2706 Granville, in Vancouver. 1965. "Time out"
Doug Cranmer on UBC working on a totem pole
Part of MOA General Media collection
Doug Cranmer working on a totem pole on the UBC campus.
Doug Cranmer standing on the Haida House
Part of MOA General Media collection
Doug Cranmer guiding a pole into place on the Haida House roof.
Doug Cranmer standing on the Haida House
Part of MOA General Media collection
Photo of artists Doug Cranmer guiding a roof beam into place. This photograph was taken during the original construction of the Haida house in Totem Park.
Part of Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Image of Doug Cranmer and another person (likely Roy Hanuse) carving a totem pole at the University of British Columbia.