Dr. Daniel S. Neuman Photograph Collection, 1911-1920
Content Description
The collection portrays life in Nome, Alaska, during the early 1900s, including images of the sled dog races which began there. Original photographs from the Canadian Arctic Expedition, 1913-1918, identifies Northwest Territory Inuit from Coronation Gulf, Cape Bathurst, Dolphin and Union Straits, and Bernard Harbor. An album created by Dr. Neuman while serving at the Dept. of Interior, titled: "Photomicrographs of Anatomical studies of Cysticercus, taken from Alaskan reindeer," contains micrograph images of tapeworms found in reindeer around Nome. Eskimo tools, implements, and art objects collected by Dr. Neuman are represented in a large number of photographs. Neuman donated many artifacts from his collection to the Alaska State Museum. Other photographers represented in the collection include, Hazo Arctic Studio (Nome), F.H. Nowell, Lomen Bros., H.G. Kaiser, H.O. Butler, Case & Draper, Dobbs.
Dates
- 1911 - 1920
EAD
PCA0307Biographical / Historical
Daniel S. Neuman was born in St. Petersburg, Russia in 1869. He earned a degree in chemistry from the University of Kiev and then traveled to America with his father. In 1895 he graduated from medical college in Denver and earned his license to practice medicine in Colorado that same year. He married an Irish nurse, Grace Bailey, and their daughter Elizabeth was born in 1898. Eight years later Grace died and he married her sister Frances, also a nurse.
Dr. Neuman had a private practice and was on the faculty of the medical school at the University of Colorado until 1910. His medical specialty was the treatment of eye disease. In 1910 he became a physician with the U.S. Department of Health and Education in Nome, Alaska. He conducted research into the cause of an eye disease that inflicted the Inupiat Eskimos. He traced the disease to a parasite in the Inupiats’ reindeer herd. In 1917 he was appointed to the Board of Medical Examiners for the Territory of Alaska. He also served on the Draft Exemption Board and as Federal Physician for the Nome District.
He wrote and contributed to several books, including the Medical Handbook and Animal Stories From Eskimo Land. Dr. Neuman was an avid collector of Eskimo artifacts and artwork, and was known for his lectures about his extensive collection. He frequently published articles in the Nome monthly magazine, The Eskimo, regarding the Alaskan Eskimos’ life and history. He also collected and compiled Eskimo folk tales that were adapted and published by Renee Riggs, wife of Governor Thomas Riggs, in 1923.
Dr. Neuman left the Arctic in 1920 for health reasons and settled in Juneau where he was active in the Alaska Historical Association. During this time period, the Alaska Historical Library and Museum purchased Dr. Neuman’s collection of some 3,000 Yup’ik and Inupiat Eskimo artifacts, which helped establish Juneau’s first museum. Sometime in 1923, ill health forced him to a warmer climate. He settled in Napa, California where he grew grapes and tobacco until he died in 1935.
Extent
1,172 Photographic Prints
Language of Materials
English
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Dr. Neuman's granddaughter, Frances M. Wells, of Eureka, California, donated the collection in 1989. Many of the artifacts he collected may be seen at the Alaska State Museum.
Existence and Location of Copies
Photographs digitized and available for viewing via Alaska's Digital Archives: 0001-0007, 0009-0010, 0012, 0016-0017, 0019-0020, 0022-0023, 0025-0039, 0041-0042, 0044-0050, 0056-0058, 0061-0062, 0065-0066, 0068, 0070, 0074, 0076, 0078-0090, 0094-0097, 0100-0104, 0106-0127, 0129, 0131-0132, 0134, 0136-0140, 0142, 0144-0159, 0161-0164, 01667-0169, 0171-0175, 0180-0183, 0185-0186, 0191, 0193-0201, 0203, 0212, 0214, 0228, 0232-0233, 0235, 0248, 0250, 0253, 0275, 0293, 0313, 0317, 0333-0334, 0350, 1910367-0372, 0648-0649, 0681, 0688, 0713a, 0718, 0866-0867, 0869, 0888, 0892, 0896, 0907, 0912, 0925-0926, 0943, 0949, 0956, 0973-0977, 0980, 0982-0987, 0990-0993, 0995-1012, 1069, 1077-1081, 1086-1088, 1098, 1103-1105, 1156-1165; (3-)album5; COVER
Materials Specific Details
462-559 Photomicrographs of Anatomical studies of Cysticercus, taken from Alaskan reindeer. By Daniel S. Newman M.Ch.M.D. Nome, Alaska. 1912. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Education, Alaska School service.
Processing Information
A finding aid is available. Gloves must be worn when viewing the collection. The photos arrived in four albums. The first album (#'s 1-291) is stored flat in a separate box with acid-free tissue paper separating the pages. The second and third albums had deteriorated and the photos removed and placed mounted on acid-free paper and placed in Mylar. The Library received two more albums at a later date. These were treated for mold and stored in separate boxes.
- Title
- Finding aid for the Dr. Daniel S. Neuman Photograph Collection, 1911-1920
- Status
- In Progress
- Author
- Processed by: Marilyn Kwock (1989) ; Sondra Stanway (2001) ; ArchivesSpace finding aid by: Sandy Johnston 2019 May ; Inventory added by: Sandy Johnston
- Date
- 2020 June
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- Undetermined
- Script of description
- Code for undetermined script
- Language of description note
- English
Repository Details
Part of the Alaska State Library - Historical Collections Finding Aids Repository
PO Box 110571
Juneau AK 99811-0571 US
907-465-2920
907-465-2925
907-465-2151 (Fax)
asl.historical@alaska.gov