Able John (73 yrs), Gold River BC
- 25-03-11-a038166
- Item
- August 1972
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Portrait of Able John, who was born at Ehahsitaht but moved to Gold River.
Anthony Carter
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Able John (73 yrs), Gold River BC
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Portrait of Able John, who was born at Ehahsitaht but moved to Gold River.
Anthony Carter
Able John (73 yrs), Gold River BC
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of Able John wearing a mask. An image of John is printed on page 119 of Carter's book "From History's Locker," with the caption: "Able John, born at Ehahsitaht but now living at Gold River. A friendly happy man he carves authentic Nootka masks to supplement his the earnings."
Anthony Carter
Able John (73 yrs), Gold River BC [with boy]
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of Able John and a young boy seated on a porch with carvings.
Anthony Carter
Aboriginal Cultural Stewardship Program (ACSP)
Sub subseries consists of records related to Clavir’s participation in the Aboriginal Cultural Stewardship Program which was developed for Aboriginal people from B.C. to receive training in different cultural centres. Clavir served on the Advisory Committee for the AC Stewardship Program and ran the Conservation section of the program at the Museum of Anthropology. The records include correspondence, a summary report of the program and its participants, and a module outlining the museum’s coverage under the Program.
Aboriginal Cultural Stewardship Program (ACSP) – Publicity
Part of Pam Brown fonds
Aboriginal Cultural Stewardship Program (ACSP) evaluation
Part of Pam Brown fonds
Aboriginal Cultural Stewardship Programme
Part of Pam Brown fonds
Series documents the development and implementation of the Aboriginal Cultural Stewardship Program (ACSP) at MOA, an educational program which Pam Brown designed in 1994-1995. The Aboriginal Cultural Stewardship Program was similar to the Aboriginal Museum Internship Programme in that it provided native participants with practical training in how to develop low-cost, effective displays and resource materials on cultural subjects; ACSP, however, was a more in-depth educational program than AMIP and was six weeks long instead of three. Records in this series include reports, correspondence, press releases, and evaluation forms of interns and the program itself.
Aboriginal Economic System of the Olympic Peninsula Indians, Western Washington
By Ram Raj Prasad Singh, publication of the Sacramento Anthropological Society
Aboriginal fishing panel at UBC Law School - Audio recordings
Part of Pam Brown fonds
Aboriginal Internship, R.B.C.M., 1994-1995 [restricted]
Part of Director's fonds
Aboriginal land ownership and hunting by other tribes on Quileute land,
A report by Jay Powell
Aboriginal Museum Internship Program 1994 Sourcebooks
Part of Pam Brown fonds
Aboriginal Museum Internship Program (AMIP) evaluations
Part of Pam Brown fonds
Aboriginal Museum Internship Programme
Part of Pam Brown fonds
Series includes records relating to Pam Brown’s role as an instructor with the Aboriginal Museum Internship Programme, a three-week program that aimed at teaching native participants the skills necessary to produce inexpensive exhibits and source books for their communities. Records include memoranda, reports, program evaluations by interns, a curriculum outline, and photographs.
Aboriginal Museum Program [restricted]
Part of Director's fonds
Above the Ka[__?] rapids, upper Congo
Part of A.F.R. Wollaston fonds
Image shows a group of canoes on the upper Congo River. Two have people in them rowing.
A.F.R. Wollaston
Part of Reverend Thomas Crosby fonds
Image is a portrait of a man wearing hooded furs and kayaking on a body of water. Wooden structures on the shore are visible in the background. Printed on the verso is the photographer information with the inscription "PHOTOGRAPHIE VON J. M. JACOBSEN ST. PAULI Hackhell's Passage 2te Bernhardstrasse 25 HAMBURG Gesetzlich deponirt. Brevete (S. G. D. G.) Registered." Around the border of the verso is printed " Neuer Pferdemarkt 13. KARL HAGENBECK'S THIERPARK HAMBURG". Handwritten inscription in pencil reads "Abraham in kayak".