Box PCA0088-Box1
Contains 86 Results:
Salmon Bay. [Native women and children sitting on a beach in front of a camp.*]
no. 7915. Per Steve Henrikson, Curator, Alaska State Museum 2/1996: 10. Tlingit (?) Fish Camp at Salmon Bay (north coast of Prince of Wales Island). A Tlingit or possibly Kaigani Haida woman and children sitting on the beach in front of a subsistence camp. They are surrounded by log structures, a temporary shelter covered with slabs of cedar bark, a canoe covered with blankets, and a skiff.
Sitka. [Native women sitting on boardwalk selling berries in front of A.T. Whitford Building. Steamship ANCHOR in harbor.]
no. 7974.
Sitka Training School for Indian Children. [Children and teachers in front of school buildings. Note sign: “Sitka Home Mission”]
no. 7666.
Sitka. [View of Sitka and Native Village. Looking northwest from the top of Castle Hill, showing the parade ground, cannery, Governors house, Russian block house, native cemetery, and the Sitka native village.*]
[View of Sitka Native Village. *]
Per Steve Henrikson, Curator, Alaska State Museum 2/1996: 13a. View of Sitka Native Village. An enlarged view of the governor's house and Native village. It was taken from Castle Hill at a slightly different time than #13. Governor's house undergoing roof repairs.
Sitka. *
Per Steve Henrikson, Curator, Alaska State Museum 2/1996: 14. View of Sitka Sound from Sitka. Looking south from Castle Hill looking over numerous islands in Sitka Sound, with The Pyramids mountain range in the distance. (NOT SILVER BAY)
Sitka Training School for Indian Children. [On "Lover's Lane" near the Indian River, Sitka.]
no. 7936.
By Indian River, near Sitka, Alaska, 1887 *
no. 7691. Per Steve Henrikson, Curator, Alaska State Museum 2/1996: 16. On "Lover's Lane" near the Indian River, Sitka. Trail in what is now Sitka National Historical Park.
[Untitled. Woman wearing a hat and period dress standing under a tree.] *
no. 7335. Per Steve Henrikson, Curator, Alaska State Museum 2/1996: 17. On "Lover's Lane” near the Indian River, Sitka. Large rotting tree may be the "witch tree," said to be the traditional location for extracting confessions from accused witches among the Tlingit.
[Untitled. Man wearing hat and carrying rifle walking toward a heavily forested section of land.] *
no. 7339. Per Steve Henrikson, Curator, Alaska State Museum 2/1996: 18 and 19. Trail is probably now part of Sitka National Historical Park