Relatives/Heritage items
Displaying 3101 - 3120 of 4694 Relatives
Browsing allows you to see all the records for relatives and heritage items in the GKS. You can also search by material made, and/or filter by nations. To search by material made, type the material's name, by example 'leather', in the box below and click “Apply.” You can select multiple nations from the dropdown list by pressing “Ctrl” (on PC) or “Command” (on Mac) and clicking, then select “Apply.”
This ancestor is a pipe bowl made from catlinite that has been carved, and is red-brown in colour. The pipe bowl has an octagonal bowl, and rectangular base with four short grooved lines on the outer sides. The carvings on this bowl show a four-legged animal
This ancestor is a pipe bowl, made from cast pewter. Silver in colour, the L-shaped pipe bowl has a flared bowl, a cylindrical base with a short pointed distal end, and raised grooved collars on the rim and base. This ancestor is currently located in
A twined vegetable fiber Anishinaabe bag with underwater panthers on both sides. First half of the 19th century. Transferred from Andover Newton Theological School.
Anishinaabe canoe model with eight paddles collected by Col. Enos Cutler while stationed near Sault Ste Marie from 1822-25, identified by collector as Lake Superior type
Huron Wendat moosehair embroidered bark purse or container with figures smoking and drinking, tripods with kettles, birds. Analine dyes and style date this to the period c 1860 to 1900
A Huron-Wendat purse or small container with curved concave sides and inward slanting triangular panels, c 1860 to 1900, genre scenes of figures drinking, tripod and kettle, birds
Huron-Wendat woman\'s moccasins with inset vamp and floral decoration in moosehair embroidery, second quarter of the nineteenth century
An Anishinaabe birchbark mokuk embroidered with porcupine quills in floral designs. Collected in 1830 by missionaries from the Andover Newton Theological School.
An Anishinaabe bag of black dyed deerskin with one large and two small underwater panthers embroidered in porcupine quills, early 19th century. Transferred from the Andover Newton Theological School in 1976.
A lidded oval Huron-Wendat birchbark box embroidered in moosehair embroider. Inscription on bottom states it was bought at Montmorency Falls in July 1858.
An Anishinaabe quilled bark handbag with hexagonal sides abd silk ribbon handle and decorative knots. Collected by Enos Cutler and transferred from the Andover Newton Theological Seminary, Newton, Massachusetts
An Anishinaabe calumet, with catlinite pipe bowl and wooden pipe stem. Given to the Peabody Essex Museum by Enos Cutler in 1826.
An Anishinaabe canoe model with two carved standing wooden dolls in canoeing postures and two paddles. Probably collected by Major Enos Cutler, commanding officer at Fort Brady, near Sault Ste Marie, Lake Huron between 1823-25.
An Anishinaabe or \"Chippeway\" wooden club with a triangular point, painted red and black, collected by Major Enos Cutler together with several other pieces, probably during his army service at Fort Brady from 1823-35