Page 12 - Population distribution map of winter villager sites, 1835
- 29-12-04-j
- Pièce
Fait partie de Wilson Duff fonds
74 résultats avec objets numériques Afficher les résultats avec des objets numériques
Page 12 - Population distribution map of winter villager sites, 1835
Fait partie de Wilson Duff fonds
Page 13 - HB knowledge of the Indigenous population figs
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Page 14v - Exploration and survey
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Pages 20-21 - Indigenous occupations
Fait partie de Wilson Duff fonds
Item consists of information used on map on page 14 (item i)
Page 24 - HBC censuses estimates of 1835 population
Fait partie de Wilson Duff fonds
Item consists of a continuation of page 23
Pages 2-3 - Summary of 1835 population distribution estimates
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Item consists of Duff's notes that became the key for the map of "Population and Economic Life." See File 4, page 14 (item i)
Page 12 - Indigenous population trends, 1835-1954
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Page 13 - Indigenous occupations
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Pages 14-17 - 1835 Estimates for BC
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Page 18 - Interior Salish population
Fait partie de Wilson Duff fonds
Item consists of Duff's estimates of Interior Salish populations. This item is a continuation of page 31 (item q)
Page 29 - Writing spread over pages 12, 13, 14, and 15
Fait partie de Wilson Duff fonds
Page 30 - Writing spread over pages 12, 13, 14, and 15
Fait partie de Wilson Duff fonds
Item consists of Duff's handwritten version of page 29 (item p)
Page 16 - Mainland Halkomelem population
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Page 24 - Summary of Interior Salish population
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Wilson Duff interview with Jonathan Johnson at Kispiox
Fait partie de Wilson Duff fonds
Item is an audio recording of an interview by Wilson Duff with Jonathan Johnson about the geography of the Gitxsan village of Kispiox and surrounding region. According to Tribal Boundaries in the Nass Watershed by Neil J. Stewart (MOA Reading Room, call number 12.7c GIT STE), Jonathan Johnson (1902-1968) of Kispiox was from the House of Xhliimlaxha and had knowledge of territories in the Nass watershed, including his father’s territory at Gwinhagiistxw. In interviews that took place on July 6 and 7, 1965, Duff gathered information about house territories in the Nass and Skeena watersheds to produce a map showing territories and numbered sites at Kispiox, see the Wilson Duff fonds at MOA, Box/File# Mc15, File# 10-B-21.
Lecture by Wilson Duff on the exhibition Images: Stone: B.C.
Fait partie de Wilson Duff fonds
Item is an audio recording of a lecture given by Wilson Duff at the National Museum of Man, Ottawa on the exhibition "Images, Stone, B.C.: Thirty Centuries of Northwest Coast Indian Sculpture."
Tsimshian and Tillamook Coast Salish songs recorded by Dr. Viola Garfield
Fait partie de Wilson Duff fonds
Item is a recording with two distinct parts. The first part of the recording features Tsimshian songs recorded in 1932 by the American anthropologist Dr. Viola Garfield (1899-1983) of the University of Washington. The songs in this recording were sung by Lewis Grey (1857-1934) who was born in Port Simpson and was recognized as a shaman by the Nass River tribes and upper Skeen River people. The cylinder number referenced during the recording is #14573. The Dr. Viola Garfield fonds is housed at the University of Washington Special Collections. She carried out field work in the summer of 1932, 1935 and 1937 at the Tsimshian village of Port Simpson, British Columbia. An Ediphone machine provided by the University of Washington Anthropology Department was used to record and store the songs on wax cylinders, which were deposited at the University. The recordings were transferred to the open reel format in 1971. More information is available in Dr. Viola Garfield's book Tsimshian Clan and Society (1939), available in the MOA Reading Room, call number 12.7 TSI GAR.
The second portion of the recording starts at 8:26, when an unidentified male speaker states that the remainder of the tape are Tilamook recordings made by Prof Melville Jacobs of the University of Washington recorded in the Winter of 1933 using an Ediphone cylinder. The speaker states that the first three songs are Tillamook Coast Salish North West Orgeon songs, sung by Clara Pearson, the informant of Elizabeth Jacobs in late 1933, and recorded at Garibaldi, Oregon. The speaker states that two songs are possibly in one of the Muckleshoot Reservation dialects. The speaker states that Song 1, Tit Willow, is possibly sung by the American anthropologist Dr. Erna Gunther.
Accompanying documentation for this recording contains the following text:
B. Johnstone, November 15, 1971
Tsimshian Songs Recorded by Viola Garfield
Tape Two
000 - Song #18 - Louis Gray - Taunting Song
100 - Song #19 - Louis Gray - Nursing Song
145 - Song #20 - Louis Gray - Dancing Society song
180 - Tillamook recordings made by Jacobs in Garabaldi, Ore., 1933.
Ni-sgane’-s are a ganhada chief house of the ginad‚iks tribe