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Satchels (3)E168255-0

FROM CARD: "BASKET. CEDAR BARK. CHECQUER WEAVING."

Culture
Tlingit
Made in
Alaska, USA ?
Holding Institution
National Museum of Natural History
View Item Record
Earrings, Abalone Haliotes Shell - Man's (6)E209576-0
Grass-Stems For Basket MakingE209587-0
Neck GirdleE233455-0
Stone Carving, Bear BowlE221181-0

LEDGER SAYS SENT TO MUSEO DE LA PLATA. 1905. Since original object is still in the collections, perhaps it was a cast that was sent instead?From card: "Of marble, held a long time in the Tagwayta family of the Hootz-ah-tai gwan through many generations of chiefs. See Cat. No. 229785 under Anthropological Lab. for 3 casts. Illus. in the Far North catalog, Nat. Gall. of Art, 1973, p. 195. [Identified there as a ceremonial bowl or mortar.] Loan: Dec. 31, 1964 R. H. Lowie Museum, Retd: Feb. 15, 1966. Loan: Natl. Gallery of Art October 20, 1972, Retd: May 29, 1973. Loan: The Art Gallery of Greater Victoria 12/3/75; Returned 3-25-76. Loaned to the Art Institute of Chicago 6/22/77; Returned 12/1/77. Lent to Musees Royaux d'Art et d'Histoire (Brussels), 8-18-92; Loan Returned, 1-26-93."Collector Emmons in accession record information (which has been added to the catalogue card) attributes this piece as: "held a long time in the Taqwayta (accession record) / Tagwayta (catalogue card) family of the Hootz-ah-tai gwan through many generations of chiefs." It can be assumed that the Taqwayta/Tagwayta family probably refers to the Teikweidi clan. Provenance for this object is probably similar/same to that of E221184, i.e. purchased by Emmons in 1903 from a member of the Teikweidi clan in Killisnoo or Angoon, Alaska (see remarks for E221184).

Culture
Tlingit and Hutsnuwu
Made in
“United States: Alaska: Killisnoo Island ? / Killisnoo ? / Admiralty Island ? / Angoon ?” ?
Holding Institution
National Museum of Natural History
View Item Record
Shell, KnifeE168352-0

FROM CARD: "FOR BASKET MAKING. ILLUS. IN PROCEEDINGS, USNM, VOL. 60; PL. 12, NO. 10; P. 48."Provenience note: List in accession file (this object is # 15 on list) appears to attribute this to the Hutsnuwu Tlingit of Angoon. List identifies this object as a "Woman's knife of blue mussel shell used by women for basket making."Listed on page 114 in "The Exhibits of the Smithsonian Institution at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, California, 1915", in section "History of the Jackknife".

Culture
Tlingit and Hutsnuwu
Made in
Angoon, Admiralty Island, Alaska, USA
Holding Institution
National Museum of Natural History
View Item Record
Bullet Pouch Of BasketryE204780-0

FROM CARD: "TRUNCATED CONE OF ORNAMENTAL TWINE BASKETRY, FITTING INTO A SIMILAR ONE OF THE SAME IN PLAIN AND PURPLE BANDS."

Culture
Tlingit
Made in
Alaska, USA
Holding Institution
National Museum of Natural History
View Item Record
MaskE217414-0
Red Ocher "Tsuklh"E209918-0
Polishing Handle-ShaperE168340-0

Provenience note: List in accession file (this object is # 3 on list) appears to attribute this to the Sitka Tlingit of Sitka. List also identifies object as "Horn of the mountain goat in preparation of manufacture for spoon handle. It has been partially shaped and roughly cut, and is now ready to be worked down and ornamentally carved."

Culture
Tlingit and Sitka
Made in
Sitka, Baranof Island, Alaska, USA
Holding Institution
National Museum of Natural History
View Item Record