Totem pole or house post, Anthony Island
- 51-01-29-a039466
- Item
Part of Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
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Totem pole or house post, Anthony Island
Part of Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Totem pole or house post, Anthony Island
Part of Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Part of MOA General Media collection
This totem pole was carved by Mungo Martin while he was at UBC. It honours Chief Kwekwelis, Mungo Martin's maternal grandfather.
Part of MOA General Media collection
This totem pole was carved by Mungo Martin while he was at UBC. It honours Chief Kwekwelis, Mungo Martin's maternal grandfather.
Part of MOA General Media collection
This totem pole was carved by Mungo Martin while he was at UBC. It honours Chief Kwekwelis, Mungo Martin's maternal grandfather.
Part of MOA General Media collection
This totem pole was carved by Mungo Martin while he was at UBC. It honours Chief Kwekwelis, Mungo Martin's maternal grandfather.
Totem pole in the Museum of Anthropology
Part of MOA General Media collection
Totem pole on display in the Museum of Anthropology.
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts a completed totem pole wrapped in plastic and enclosed in a wooden packing crate.
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts a totem pole inside a wooden packing crate.
Totem pole in forest, Anthony Island
Part of Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Part of Missionary Society of the Church of England in Canada Slide Collection
Item is a hand-tinted glass lantern slide of a totem with a building in the background and a boat in the foreground with low tide. Based on the original order of the collection, photograph might have been taken in Alert Bay.
Part of Stanley E. Read fonds
Image depicts a close up showing the details of the lower figures on a totem pole, probably the Snag-of-the-Sand-Bar pole from the House of Chief Skogum Laxhe. The bottom figure is is the monster Hagwelawrh, who lives under the water and causes the Sand-Bar to raise with his back. See also image a034836 for another view of this pole.
Part of Stanley E. Read fonds
Image depicts a totem pole that features a human figure at the base and three other human figures, aligned horizontally across the pole. Other wooden structures can be seen in the background. Read's note indicates that a possible explanation for this pole can be found in Barbeau, p. 149, which suggests that the three humans carved in this pole may be Hrpugweelan, a crest of Ksemgitgeegyaenih, a Larhsail chief.
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts an unidentified carver working on a totem pole.
Totem pole carved by Mungo Martin in Totem Park
Part of MOA General Media collection
Shows a totem pole carved by Mungo Martin standing in Totem Park at UBC.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Image of a totem pole by Charlie James. This totem pole was originally completed in 1915, and was later restored by Mungo Martin. It stood in Totem Park at UBC until it was moved to the Great Hall in the Museum of Anthropology.
Totem pole being secured in the Great Hall
Part of MOA General Media collection
A worker on a ladder secures a totem pole that has recently been moved in the Museum of Anthropology's Great Hall.
Part of Stanley E. Read fonds
Image depicts a totem pole located in a valley with mountains in the distance. The pole is probably from the Kitwanga or Kispiox villages in the Skeena Valley. This pole features a fish on top and a series of ravens interspersed with human-like characters below that. One section of the pole is not carved.
Part of Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts a frontal view of the base of a small-scale totem pole in front of a door. A seated human figure is visible. See items a034476 - a034482 for other views of this pole.
Part of MOA General Media collection
A totem pole standing at UBC. This totem pole was originally carved by Charlie James and was lated restored by Mungo Martin. It stood in Totem Park at UBC until it was moved into the Great Hall at the Museum of Anthropology.