Chief Kiteek's House - Naas River B.C.
- 89-a039249
- Item
- [1893-1911]
House with totem pole viewed from side
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Chief Kiteek's House - Naas River B.C.
House with totem pole viewed from side
Totem - when birds were semi-human
Totem pole outside house. Parts of totem pole have been hand-coloured yellow.
Two Haida chiefs wearing blankets and headdresses.
Man dressed in blanket and headdress
A man wearing a blanket and headdress
Hydah [Haida] chief, Skidegate, Q.C.I.
Haida chief wearing button blanket
Group photograph outside of St. George's Residential School
Parte de Ewen MacLeod collection
Parte de Frederich H. Maude fonds
Photograph depicts a group of people gathered in a pueblo somewhere in the American Southwest.
Parte de Frederich H. Maude fonds
Photograph depicts a Hogan in Arizona made out of branches and logs with a group of people in front. The hogan is the sacred home structure of the Navajo.
Parte de Frederich H. Maude fonds
Photograph depicts a group of children on a cliffside, somewhere in the American Southwest (likely Arizona).
Parte de Frederich H. Maude fonds
Photograph of what appear to be terrace houses somewhere in the American Southwest, likely in Arizona.
Parte de Frederich H. Maude fonds
Photograph depicts who Maude refers to as Edward, Maude's guide and interpreter in Arizona.
Parte de Frederich H. Maude fonds
Photograph depicts several Hopi Pahos, or prayer sticks.
Oraibi- Interior of Hopi House
Parte de Frederich H. Maude fonds
Photograph depicts what Maude describes as a flashlight photograph of the interior of the house of their host, Seanmia. Two women are grinding corn on the metate.
Parte de Frederich H. Maude fonds
Photograph depicts a group of people sitting on a set of cliffside steps, likely somewhere in Arizona.
Parte de Frederich H. Maude fonds
Photograph depicts a group on a staircase trail, likely in Walpi, Arizona.
Hopi woman with squash blossom whorl
Parte de Frederich H. Maude fonds
Photograph depicts a woman wearing squash blossom whorls in her hair, a common Hopi hairstyle.
Zuni Dick's wife making pottery
Parte de Frederich H. Maude fonds
Photograph depicts a Zuni (A:shiwi) woman identified as Dick's wife making pottery, likely at the Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico.
Zuni men making shell necklaces
Parte de Frederich H. Maude fonds
Photograph depicts two Zuni (A:shiwi) men identified as Dick and his brother-in-law making shell necklaces. A note on the back of the photograph describes how Dick is using a Zuni drill and his brother-in-law is rubbing down the rough edges of the shell beads on a flat stone.
Parte de Frederich H. Maude fonds
Photograph depicts a cliffside village, likely the Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico.
Parte de Frederich H. Maude fonds
Photograph depicts the base of a rock formation, with grass and trees, which Maude has identified as El Morro. He is likely referring to the El Morro National Monument, a great standstone promontory. The site is known as A'ts'ina ("place of writing on the rock" in Zuni) or Inscription Rock because of inscriptions that travellers have left on the rocks for several centuries.