Box PCA 221
Container
Contains 34 Results:
The open lead, Arctic Ocean--May 1924 [dog team running across broken ice; driver and sled at right]., 1924-05
Item — Box: PCA 221
Identifier: PCA0221-21
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
A dog's life in Arctic Alaska [dog teams in harness resting on snow; people working near sleds].
Item — Box: PCA 221
Identifier: PCA0221-22
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
Sentinels of the Polar Pack, Pt. Barrow, Alaska, 1924. [small icebergs near shore; choppy ocean beyond].
Item — Box: PCA 221
Identifier: PCA0221-23
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
Atop Endicott Mts, head of John River entering Anaktuvuk Pass on March 26, 1926--Detroit Arctic Expedition [Rossman in winter clothes beside camera on tripod; loaded sled at left]., 1926-03-26
Item — Box: PCA 221
Identifier: PCA0221-24
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:
1926-03-26
Rossman--John--Peter--Ahlook Four of a kind [four children holding dolls and standing beside a small structure; all are wearing parkas].
Item — Box: PCA 221
Identifier: PCA0221-25
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
Pt. Barrow--Alaska--Reindeer herd [large herd of reindeer grazing near water in which they are reflected; several herders among them].
Item — Box: PCA 221
Identifier: PCA0221-26
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
Okogoluk from Wainwright--a real fellow [head to waist portrait of older Eskimo man wearing fur parka].
Item — Box: PCA 221
Identifier: PCA0221-27
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 Eskimo assistant at Wainwright, Alaska [head and shoulder portrait of Eskimo man].
Item — Box: PCA 221
Identifier: PCA0221-28
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
Eskimo woman and child, Pt. Barrow, Alaska [head and shoulders portrait of woman and young baby].
Item — Box: PCA 221
Identifier: PCA0221-29
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
[Earl Rossman behind camera on tripod; herd of reindeer in distance.]
Item — Box: PCA 221
Identifier: PCA0221-30
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