Leila Fisher interview at Hoh River
- 3-3-01-3-01-B-34
- Dossiê
- 1978
3078 resultados con objetos digitales Muestra los resultados con objetos digitales
Leila Fisher interview at Hoh River
"Language and the Prehistory of North America"
In World Archaeology Volume 8 #1, by Jay Powell and Dale Kinkade
The Quileute and Hoh Use of the Foreshore in their Traditional Territory,
A report for Jacilee Wray by Jay Powell
Includes Barbara Lane’s report Political-Economic Issues of Indian-White Culture Contact in Western Washington in the 18th and 19th Centuries
Sites of Religions Interest on the Quileute Reservation
Quileute Religion: What the Old People Believed as told by the last of the Heritage Generation
I Need Some Cedar - A big book about carving
Thanks Everybody - a big book of polite things to say at feasts and parties
Welcome to the Crazyhouse! - a big book of school slang
Historical and research photographs
Consists of photographs taken of historical prints and artefacts relating to the Quileute. These were taken at a number of institutions, including Brigham Young University in Utah, the Washing State Archives in Olympia, The Museum of Natural History, the Smithsonian, the Museum of the American Indian Heye Foundation, the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia, and the University of Washington Burke Museum.
File consists of photographs taken of old photographs owned by community members in La Push. Jensen took the photographs in the owner's home and provided the owner with a copy of the image she created.
Canadian Museum of Civilization
File consists of photographs taken of Quileute objects in the Canadian Museum of Civilization collections.
Unidentified Quileute audio reel
Item consists of an interview with informant Fred Woodruff at LaPush.
Item consists of an interview with informant Fred Woodruff at LaPush. Copied in Powell’s notebook # 2:
(0’-186’) page 36-44
(190’-350’) page 51-55
Item consists of oral histories told by informants Fred Woodruff and Hazel Bright, and a song by Hazel Bright, at LaPush.
(1’-88’) Fred Woodruff, “The first man in the moon”
(100’-107’) Hazel Bright, song
(110’- ) Hazel Bright and Mrs. Gonzales, “The name Harwat’ and description of shipwreck”
Application, objectives, and abstract of the project