bag, cedar bark
bag, cedar bark
bag, cedar bark
This relative is an Anishinaabe woven cedar bark bag. It is decorated with a diminishing chevron pattern. It was collected by Amos H. Gottschall at Red Lake Minnesota between 1871 and 1902. Upon his death, his collection was likely left to the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia (ANS) in 1937. ANS gifted the collection to the Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology in 1997, where it currently resides.
This nation attribution is based on museum documentation.
The information in this record is from museum documentation.
Read More About This Relative
cedar bark; black pigment.
The bag is woven from strips of cedar bark.
This bag is decorated with black and tan diagonal checkerwork which forms diminishing chevron patterns.
This attribution is based on the period when Gottschall was in the area where this bag was collected.
Provenance
This bag was collected by Amos H. Gottschall at Red Lake Minnesota between 1871 and 1902. Upon his death, his collection was likely left to the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia (ANS) in 1937. ANS gifted the collection to the Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology in 1997, where it currently resides.
Gottschall, Amos H. Priced and Descriptive Catalogue of the Utensils, Implements, Weapons, Ornaments, Etc., of the Indians, Mound Builders, Cliff Dwellers: Typical Collections No. 2. 1909. (See: II 420)
About This GRASAC Record
Maker, Name unrecorded. Bag, cedar bark. GRASAC ID 26477. University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, 97-85-481.
This record was augmented by Joy Kruse on August 9, 2024.
48.053019915, -95.00786709
Museum documentation.