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| Title | Camp of Auk Indians, Alaska, ca. 1896 |
| Studio Name | Winter & Pond |
| Studio Location | United States--Alaska--Juneau |
| Date | ca. 1896 |
| Notes | The Auk Indians, like other southeast Alaska groups, traveled to fishing camps during the summer months. This photograph of an Auk fishing camp on the beach shows filleted halibut drying in front of the leftmost tent, and a mixture of native-made and commercially purchased items scattered around the campsite. In front of the rightmost tent, a seated woman prepares food near a large pot while a man and child stand nearby. The Auk are a coastal Tlingit people.
Caption on image: "Camp of Auk Indians, Alaska"
Photographers Lloyd V. Winter and Percy E. Pond opened their Juneau, Alaska, studio in 1893, and documented the people and places of southeastern Alaska until the mid-1940s. (Victoria Wyatt, Images from the Inside Passage: An Alaskan Portrait by Winter & Pond, pp. 13-14.) |
| Subjects | Tlingit Indians--Subsistence activities; Tlingit Indians--Structures; Indian encampments--Alaska--Juneau Region |
| Location Depicted | Alaska--Juneau Region |
| Object Type | Silver gelatin prints |
| Physical Description | Silver gelatin print ; good. |
| Negative Number | SHS 1772 |
| Digital Collection | American Indians of the Pacific Northwest Images
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| Collection | Seattle Historical Society Collection |
| Repository | Museum of History and Industry, Seattle
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| Ordering Information | To order a reproduction or inquire about permissions see:
http://content.lib.washington.edu/cdm4/ordering.php
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| Acquisition | Gift of Mrs. William E. Boeing, 1953; acc. no. 1772 |
| Restrictions | http://content.lib.washington.edu/aipnw/copyrights.html |
| Transmission Data | Image/JPEG |