Dominic Joe, Duncan, B.C., Cedar bark hat
- 25-03-02-a037843
- Item
- May 1967
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Portrait of a man (Dominic Joe) wearing a straw hat.
Anthony Carter
Dominic Joe, Duncan, B.C., Cedar bark hat
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Portrait of a man (Dominic Joe) wearing a straw hat.
Anthony Carter
Dominic Joe, Duncan, B.C., Cedar bark hat
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Portrait of a man (Dominic Joe) wearing a straw hat.
Anthony Carter
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 Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Image of Doug Cranmer and another person (likely Roy Hanuse) carving a totem pole at the University of British Columbia.
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.
Part of Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Image of Doug Cranmer carving two totem poles at the University of British Columbia.
Part of Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Doug Cranmer, Roy Hanuse, UBC 1973
Part of Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Image of Doug Cranmer and Roy Hanuse carving two totem poles at the University of British Columbia.
Douglas Kenny, Jules Léger, and Michael Ames
Part of MOA General Media collection
From viewer's left, University President Douglas Kenny, and Museum of Anthropology Director Michael Ames, at the opening of the Museum of Anthropology.
Downed trees and old oil cans, Hazelton area
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of a pile of old oil cans and other trash, near a hillside that appears to have been logged, in the Hazelton area of BC.
Anthony Carter
Dutch-Wall Chart Sect. C #10 Expo 67 H.B. Hawthorn
Part of MOA General Media collection
View of a wall chart in the Netherlands pavilion on Saint-Helene Island in Montréal for Expo 67.
Dwelling house, H.B.C. Post, Kimmirut
Part of Robert Reford fonds
Item is an image of a building. According to annotations, the house was part of the Hudson Bay Company post at Kimmirut (former Lake Harbour) in the Qikiqtaaluk Region, Nunavut
Dzunuk'wa feast lid and feast dish on display in Montréal
Part of MOA General Media collection
A Dzunuk'wa feast lid and feast dish from the Museum of Anthropology on display for the Northwest Coast exhibit of "Man and His World" in Montréal.
Eagle & Whale carving by Ellen Neel, North Vancouver
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of a Eagle & Whale carving by Ellen Neel, North Vancouver.
Anthony Carter
Eagle & Whale carving by Ellen Neel, North Vancouver
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of a Eagle & Whale carving by Ellen Neel, North Vancouver.
Anthony Carter
Eagle & Whale carving by Ellen Neel, North Vancouver
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of a Eagle & Whale carving by Ellen Neel, North Vancouver.
Anthony Carter
Eagle + grizzly pole of Yan (L.), Flower pole of Yan (R.)
Part of E. Polly Hammer fonds
Eagle chief's pole of Tanu (original), Fulton Street Park, Prince Rupert, B.C.
Part of E. Polly Hammer fonds
Early MOA activities and curatorial research
Part of MOA General Media collection
Subseries consists mainly of photographs collected by MOA for curatorial research, as well as some photographs documenting MOA activities and/or people. Photographs in this subseries were collected in 1976 or earlier. Subject matter of the photographs includes Northwest Coast material culture, people, and geography; MOA history; MOA events; UBC Totem Park; and, a smaller number of non-Northwest Coast cultures.
See attached pdf document for photograph list.
An image showing a person eating. According to the documentation included with the filmstrip, the description of the image states "Mary-Lou looks like she is enjoying the tuut-suup [sea urchin]!"