spoon, wooden
spoon, wooden
spoon, wooden
Wooden maple sugaring spoon made by Chief Andrew Blackbird of Harbor Springs, MI. From PMAE catalogue record, "Ladle, carved wood, hooked handle end, shallow bowl"
Odawa; PMAE catalogue record indicated this item is "Southeastern Ojibwa"
PMAE catalogue record
PMAE Catalogue record
Read More About This Relative
wood, maple sugaring (DP and AGG)
carved
circular ladle part; stem widens out to a point (shape of diamond); top of handle has a "hook" on bottom side. There is no evidence of wear.
DP says this kind of extension with points is typical of northwest coast of Lower Peninsula, MI (Harbor Springs to Cross Village).
The object presumably entered the museum as a gift in 1909, thus the object had to of been created before this point.
Provenance
About This GRASAC Record
Gift of Mr. Lewis Hobart Farlow, 1909. Image © President and Fellows of Harvard College, Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, 09-8-10/75054
Cory Willmott, Alan Corbiere, Adrianna Grecci Green and David Penney conducted research on site at the Peabody Museum for Archaeology and Ethnology in July 2007 with help from Susan Haskell and Patricia Capone of the PMAE. Cory Willmott's research was funded by a grant from the American Philosophical Society. Al Corbiere was supported through Ruth Phillips's SSHRC Canada Research Chair Funding. An internal grant from Southern Illinois University Edwardsville provided Cory with an RA, Ceara Horsley, for 2009 and 2010 to work on GRASAC data entry. (CW & CH)
This record was updated by GRASAC Summer RA, Carlie Manners with additional information provided by the PMAE June 2021
45.4318, -84.992
PMAE record states: "North America\United States\Michigan\Emmet County\Harbor Springs"