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Box PCA 221

 Container

Contains 34 Results:

Whaling camp - Arctic Ocean -30 miles off shore. Eskimos on lookout at midnight [boat on shore, men on right].

 Item — Box: PCA 221
Identifier: PCA0221-11
Scope and Contents From the Collection: Earl Rossman inscribed these views to Karl Thiele, a friend and Alaska pioneer who served as Secretary of Alaska from 1925-1933. Several views were taken in Southeast Alaska but most were taken in the Arctic.Earl Rossman recorded his Alaska experiences in the book Black Sunlight; a Log of the Arctic (New York, Oxford University Press, 1926). In 1923, after photographing Southeast Alaska natives and losing the motion picture footage in a sinking boat, Rossman decided to see more...
Dates: 1924-1926

The whalers [boat on shore, men on right near ice formation].

 Item — Box: PCA 221
Identifier: PCA0221-12
Scope and Contents From the Collection: Earl Rossman inscribed these views to Karl Thiele, a friend and Alaska pioneer who served as Secretary of Alaska from 1925-1933. Several views were taken in Southeast Alaska but most were taken in the Arctic.Earl Rossman recorded his Alaska experiences in the book Black Sunlight; a Log of the Arctic (New York, Oxford University Press, 1926). In 1923, after photographing Southeast Alaska natives and losing the motion picture footage in a sinking boat, Rossman decided to see more...
Dates: 1924-1926

Kivalina's Igloo [dogs in snow near igloo].

 Item — Box: PCA 221
Identifier: PCA0221-13
Scope and Contents From the Collection: Earl Rossman inscribed these views to Karl Thiele, a friend and Alaska pioneer who served as Secretary of Alaska from 1925-1933. Several views were taken in Southeast Alaska but most were taken in the Arctic.Earl Rossman recorded his Alaska experiences in the book Black Sunlight; a Log of the Arctic (New York, Oxford University Press, 1926). In 1923, after photographing Southeast Alaska natives and losing the motion picture footage in a sinking boat, Rossman decided to see more...
Dates: 1924-1926

My lead dog [face of husky dog].

 Item — Box: PCA 221
Identifier: PCA0221-14
Scope and Contents From the Collection: Earl Rossman inscribed these views to Karl Thiele, a friend and Alaska pioneer who served as Secretary of Alaska from 1925-1933. Several views were taken in Southeast Alaska but most were taken in the Arctic.Earl Rossman recorded his Alaska experiences in the book Black Sunlight; a Log of the Arctic (New York, Oxford University Press, 1926). In 1923, after photographing Southeast Alaska natives and losing the motion picture footage in a sinking boat, Rossman decided to see more...
Dates: 1924-1926

[A camp on snow with several dog teams in harness; sleds and people].

 Item — Box: PCA 221
Identifier: PCA0221-15
Scope and Contents From the Collection: Earl Rossman inscribed these views to Karl Thiele, a friend and Alaska pioneer who served as Secretary of Alaska from 1925-1933. Several views were taken in Southeast Alaska but most were taken in the Arctic.Earl Rossman recorded his Alaska experiences in the book Black Sunlight; a Log of the Arctic (New York, Oxford University Press, 1926). In 1923, after photographing Southeast Alaska natives and losing the motion picture footage in a sinking boat, Rossman decided to see more...
Dates: 1924-1926

My camp on Arctic Ocean ice [Rossman with dog team and sled; tent on left].

 Item — Box: PCA 221
Identifier: PCA0221-16
Scope and Contents From the Collection: Earl Rossman inscribed these views to Karl Thiele, a friend and Alaska pioneer who served as Secretary of Alaska from 1925-1933. Several views were taken in Southeast Alaska but most were taken in the Arctic.Earl Rossman recorded his Alaska experiences in the book Black Sunlight; a Log of the Arctic (New York, Oxford University Press, 1926). In 1923, after photographing Southeast Alaska natives and losing the motion picture footage in a sinking boat, Rossman decided to see more...
Dates: 1924-1926

[Close up of Rossman and a sled dog.]

 Item — Box: PCA 221
Identifier: PCA0221-17
Scope and Contents From the Collection: Earl Rossman inscribed these views to Karl Thiele, a friend and Alaska pioneer who served as Secretary of Alaska from 1925-1933. Several views were taken in Southeast Alaska but most were taken in the Arctic.Earl Rossman recorded his Alaska experiences in the book Black Sunlight; a Log of the Arctic (New York, Oxford University Press, 1926). In 1923, after photographing Southeast Alaska natives and losing the motion picture footage in a sinking boat, Rossman decided to see more...
Dates: 1924-1926

With Earl Rossman in the Arctic [Rossman, left and 3 other men; harnessed reindeer and sleds].

 Item — Box: PCA 221
Identifier: PCA0221-18
Scope and Contents From the Collection: Earl Rossman inscribed these views to Karl Thiele, a friend and Alaska pioneer who served as Secretary of Alaska from 1925-1933. Several views were taken in Southeast Alaska but most were taken in the Arctic.Earl Rossman recorded his Alaska experiences in the book Black Sunlight; a Log of the Arctic (New York, Oxford University Press, 1926). In 1923, after photographing Southeast Alaska natives and losing the motion picture footage in a sinking boat, Rossman decided to see more...
Dates: 1924-1926

This is how I recorded a dog race at Wainwright -- we came in second [Rossman with camera on dog driven sled; other men and dogs beyond].

 Item — Box: PCA 221
Identifier: PCA0221-19
Scope and Contents From the Collection: Earl Rossman inscribed these views to Karl Thiele, a friend and Alaska pioneer who served as Secretary of Alaska from 1925-1933. Several views were taken in Southeast Alaska but most were taken in the Arctic.Earl Rossman recorded his Alaska experiences in the book Black Sunlight; a Log of the Arctic (New York, Oxford University Press, 1926). In 1923, after photographing Southeast Alaska natives and losing the motion picture footage in a sinking boat, Rossman decided to see more...
Dates: 1924-1926

Crossing an open lead--Arctic Ocean in late May, 1924 [team of dogs directed by man on the left to "mush" through broken ice]., 1924-05

 Item — Box: PCA 221
Identifier: PCA0221-20
Scope and Contents From the Collection: Earl Rossman inscribed these views to Karl Thiele, a friend and Alaska pioneer who served as Secretary of Alaska from 1925-1933. Several views were taken in Southeast Alaska but most were taken in the Arctic.Earl Rossman recorded his Alaska experiences in the book Black Sunlight; a Log of the Arctic (New York, Oxford University Press, 1926). In 1923, after photographing Southeast Alaska natives and losing the motion picture footage in a sinking boat, Rossman decided to see more...
Dates: 1924-05