The Killer Whale: A family crest
- 132-1-C-B-a040719
- Item
- 1966
Part of MOA General Media collection
Display from the exhibit "The Killer Whale." Shows masks.
The Killer Whale: A family crest
Part of MOA General Media collection
Display from the exhibit "The Killer Whale." Shows masks.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Display for the exhibit "Northwest Coast themes and variations." Shows several items featuring the killer whale including a drum, two masks, two feast dishes, rattles, model totem poles, and other objects.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Display for the exhibit "Northwest Coast themes and variations." Shows several items featuring the killer whale including a drum, two masks, two feast dishes, rattles, model totem poles, and other objects.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Display for the exhibit "Northwest Coast themes and variations." Shows several items featuring the killer whale including a drum, two masks, two feast dishes, rattles, model totem poles, and other objects.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Display for the Museum of Anthropology. Uncertain relation to exhibits. Possibly for Japanese and Chinese history exhibit that may have been in place between 1967 and 1969. Shows dolls, images, and clothing related to Kabuki theatre.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Panel from exhibit "Tribal Control of the Supernatural".
Part of MOA General Media collection
Display for the exhibit "Tribal Control of the Supernatural."
Part of Jean Telfer fonds
Brief history and description of the Morley Indian Residential School, likely written by Telfer.
The indian mission church and house, Nanaimo
Part of Reverend Thomas Crosby fonds
Image depicts an exterior view a church inside a fenced yard, outside of which is a group of people. A handwritten inscription below the image reads "407 The Indian mission church and house, Nanaimo Where Sallosalton lived with Mr Crosby".
Part of MOA General Media collection
Display for exhibit "Melanesian Culture." Shows bowls, a large textile, and other items.
The house at Nausori [Fiji] [we both saw?]
Part of A.F.R. Wollaston fonds
Image shows a grass roofed house next to a river, with two women and two children passing by.
A.F.R. Wollaston
Part of MOA General Media collection
Panel for the exhibit "The Shaman of the Northwest Coast." Shows photographs and a print.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Display and panel from exhibit "Tribal Control of the Supernatural." Includes tomahawk pipe and plains pipe.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Display and panel from exhibit "Tribal Control of the Supernatural." Includes tomahawk pipe and plains pipe.
The Hawthorns and Vincent Massey
Part of MOA General Media collection
Harry Hawthorn (viewer's left) and Audrey Hawthorn (viewer's right) entertain Vincent Massey (Governor General of Canada, centre) during the Governor General's visit to the University of British Columbia in 1956.
The Hawthorns and Vincent Massey
Part of MOA General Media collection
Harry Hawthorn (viewer's left) and Audrey Hawthorn (viewer's right) entertain Vincent Massey (Governor General of Canada, centre) during the Governor General's visit to the University of British Columbia in 1956.
A close-up image of a harbor seal on a wharf. According to the documentation included with the filmstrip, the description of the image states " Meet Charlie, a harbor seal, who lives in our cove. Charlie is eleven years old now, but she was a baby when this slide was taken. She was brought into the cove by seal hunters who had killed her mother. A local family adopted and raised Charlie, feeding her with a baby bottle until she was able to catch her own food. She lives year round in the cove, suns herself on our wharfs, and plays with the local children. Sometimes she sneaks into a fish camp and helps herself to a choice salmon. Everyone in Kyuquot loves Charlie."
Part of Robert Reford fonds
Item is an image of a baby in a baby stroller at the entrance of a house. According to annotations, photograph was taken at Norway House, Manitoba
The Haida House and Mortuary House in their original positions
Part of MOA General Media collection
The Haida House and Mortuary House with accompanying totem poles in what appear to be their original positions before being moved in to the grounds of the new Museum of Anthropology.
Part of Lorna R. Marsden fonds
Photograph of the Greate Stele in Aksum, Ethiopia. This photograph was taken by Lorna R. Marsden during her visit to Aksum, where she purchased several original paintings in shops and from roadside sellers that she later donated to the Museum of Anthropology in 2016.